Sandyport Beach Resort, Nassau and New Providence
Family-friendly waterfront resort with spacious rooms and plenty of exciting outdoor activities
room only
Overview
- Well-appointed accommodation including hotel rooms, studios, and suites
- Fantastic scuba diving, with PADI courses, shipwrecks, shark feeds, and reef exploration led by legendary Stuart Cove’s dive centre
- Fun activities for the family with pool complex, spa, and activities just for kids
- Multiple dining options, plus en-suite kitchens and free supermarket shuttle
Sandyport Beach Resort promises a relaxed, family-friendly escape with spacious guest rooms and sparkling facilities backed by a white sand beach and turquoise lagoon. This sprawling seaside property has plenty of space for exploration, relaxation, and adventure - with sports and activities of all kinds including a generous pool complex, day spa, and island hopping excursions. And if you’re visiting Nassau for its world-class scuba diving, you’re in for a treat. Sandyport partners with the region’s top-rated dive centre, Stuart Cove’s - famous for shark encounters, shipwreck exploration, and PADI instruction with some of the sport’s leading instructors.
Rooms
Hotel room
2 x Queen beds, sleeps 2
Air conditioning, Ensuite bathroom, Fan...from $348 /night
Resort checklist
Meal plans:
- Breakfast
- Half Board
- Full Board
Diving in Nassau and New Providence
- SharksYear round
- Eagle rayYear round
- TurtlesYear round
- Schooling reef fishYear round
- Walls & pinnaclesYear round
- WrecksYear round
- PlanesYear round
- Caves & cavernsYear round
Nassau is the most popular diving destination in the Bahamas, famous for its flourishing reefs and plunging walls. Many of the area's most pristine sites begin as shallow light-filled gardens that slope gradually toward plummeting drop-offs where pelagics like turtles, eagle rays, and sharks patrol. These waters are home to all creatures great and small, from seahorses and jawfish to pelagic predators, including tiger sharks.
Nassau's shark diving
When it comes to scuba diving in Nassau, sharks are easily the number one attraction. At the Stuart Cove's Sharks Arena, Caribbean reef sharks gather by the dozen, offering plenty of excitement for a two-tank trip, with outstanding visibility and depths of just 12 metres. Here, local experts use bait and some hand feeding to lure these powerful predators in close while divers rest comfortably on the bottom.
If you'd rather see sharks in a more natural setting, head to Shark Buoy. Anchored in deep water, this chained piece of a sonar testing station attracts numerous pelagic species like jacks from the open ocean. Reef sharks, and other local shark species then gather to feed. Silky sharks are also sometimes seen aggregating here during summer months - with the best chances for an encounter in June.
Diving Nassau's wrecks
Nassau is home to an exciting collection of sunken vessels, with options for everyone. The Bahama Mama wreck is one of the most famous, a battered ex-party boat sunk in 1995 that offers a few easy options for penetration and depths of just 15 to 18 metres. The Cessna wreck, also known as the Nari-Nari, was purpose-sunk in just 18 metres of water for a Hollywood film and is often dived along with a nearby wall, famous for its resident population of reef sharks.
The nearby James Bond Wrecks are often dived as a two-tank experience. The RAF Vulcan bomber was used in the Thunderball movie of 1965. Later, the neighbouring Tears of Allah shipwreck was featured in the 1983 film Never Say Never Again. Both boast dense coral cover and an impressive amount of marine life! Lastly, the Ray of Hope, Nassau's newest wreck sunk in 2003, offers the best options for penetration. It is perfect for wreck speciality certification, and its exterior has started to attract life, slowly transforming into an artificial reef.
Exploring the Lost Blue Hole
This is one of Nassau's most fascinating dive sites - a collapsed sinkhole with sheer limestone walls and incredible underwater formations, including massive stalactites. The Lost Blue Hole stretches well beyond the recreational diving limits - most tours max out at around 30 metres. There is plenty of wildlife in and around this submerged site, with sand flats and turtle grass shallows playing host to some of the Bahamas' best macro. The sinkhole's ledge is well-known for its napping nurse sharks and loggerhead turtles, while seasonal aggregations of silky sharks can be found just outside.