📍 Where Is Nassau?
Nassau is located in The Bahamas.
Turquoise water, pirate history, island time
Nassau is located in The Bahamas.
Nassau is the easiest possible introduction to the Bahamas — minimal language barrier, the US dollar accepted everywhere, and water in a shade of turquoise that looks digitally enhanced even in person. It's also a city with real pirate history, not just resort marketing: this was once a genuine haven for privateers and smugglers, and the old colonial fort and downtown streets still carry that history. Stay a few nights and the island-time pace starts to feel less like a slogan and more like how things actually move here.
Make the most of your time on the ground.
A short flight or boat charter from Nassau reaches the famous swimming pigs of Exuma and some of the most photographed water in the Caribbean.
Check Availability →Boat excursions from Nassau combine swimming pigs, nurse shark encounters, and snorkelling stops across the same day trip.
View Experiences →Nassau's 18th-century fort and the hand-carved 65-step Queen's Staircase are the easiest way to see the island's pirate-era and colonial history without leaving downtown.
See Activities →Guesthouses and budget hotels away from Cable Beach from $70–100/night — still close enough to walk or short-taxi to the main beaches.
Check Prices →Beachfront 3–4 star resorts along Cable Beach from $150–250/night, with pools and direct beach access as standard.
Compare Options →Atlantis and other landmark resorts on Paradise Island from $350/night — full water parks, casinos, and marine habitats included.
View Luxury Hotels →Dry, warm, and the most popular window — also the most expensive and crowded with cruise traffic.
Shoulder season — still warm and largely dry, with noticeably lower prices than peak winter.
Hurricane season — generally fine, but worth monitoring forecasts, especially August through October.
Nassau isn't a budget destination by Caribbean standards, but timing and neighbourhood choice make a real difference.
Eating where locals eat — fish fry stalls and casual conch shacks — costs a fraction of resort dining. The straw market and local jitney buses are both far cheaper than taxis for getting around.
Lynden Pindling International Airport (NAS) has direct flights from most major US East Coast cities, plus connections from Canada and parts of Europe. The airport sits about 20–30 minutes from downtown Nassau and Cable Beach by taxi; cruise visitors arrive directly at Prince George Wharf in the heart of downtown.
Day 1 — Downtown Nassau: Fort Charlotte, the Queen's Staircase, and the colourful colonial streets of downtown.
Day 2 — Paradise Island: Atlantis resort, its marine habitats and water park, and Cabbage Beach nearby.
Day 3 — Pig Beach Excursion: Full-day boat trip to Exuma's swimming pigs, nurse sharks, and snorkelling stops.
Day 4 — Beach & Relax: A slower day at Cable Beach, finishing with sunset drinks and conch from a local shack.
Plan now, travel smarter — book before peak season pushes prices up.