This short film is a quick look into the reborn Sandals Dunn’s River, shot on location this weekend.
Ocho Rios has a new electricity this week, the kind that signals a turning point for the island of Jamaica. After weeks of preparation and tight coordination across communities and tourism partners, the reborn Sandals Dunn’s River has officially reopened, marking one of Jamaica’s most important hospitality moments of 2025 — and effectively launching the island’s post Melissa tourism comeback.
Much of the island escaped the worst of the storm, and here along this bright stretch of the north coast, you’d hardly know a storm had passed. What you find instead is light, color, and a resort that feels as if it’s launching for the very first time.
Sandals used this moment to welcome nearly 400 travel advisors and industry partners to its home country for a special “Back to Jamaica” immersion event, the first large-scale industry gathering on the island since the storm. This immersive 4-day experience was built around one purpose: to show, not tell, that Jamaica is ready for the season. The island’s beauty, resilience, and rhythm take center stage, shining through with a clarity that underscores its readiness ahead of the Dec. 6 reopening of Sandals and Beaches Resorts in Ocho Rios and Negril.
A Celebration With Purpose
The renovated property is glowing, polished, and poised as the industry arrives for a preview. Sandals’ return has quickly become a symbol of Jamaica’s broader recovery effort, folding celebration into a moment that carries real meaning. The “Back to Jamaica” initiative is both festive and forward-looking, reaffirming confidence not just in the resort but in the entire tourism product of the island.
During today’s cornerstone business session, Sandals Resorts International Executive Chairman Adam Stewart underscored the importance of firsthand experience. “Seeing is believing,” he said, reminding attendees that much of Jamaica was largely unaffected by the storm. He told advisors that walking the roads, meeting the people, visiting attractions, and feeling the island’s spirit themselves is what reveals the truth on the ground. Jamaica, he said, has never looked more beautiful, and the gratitude of its people has never been stronger.
Donovan White, Director of Tourism at the Jamaica Tourist Board, noted that it had only been 38 days since Hurricane Melissa. Recovery is ongoing, he said, but deeply collaborative, driven by communities, government teams, tourism workers, and international partners.
Forward demand remains strong. He thanked Sandals Resorts International for its continued partnership and emphasized how important it is for the industry to spread the message that Jamaica is open, vibrant, and eager to welcome visitors. While a narrow corridor of the island experienced notable damage, the vast majority remains untouched and fully ready for the season.
A Resort Reborn
The work of the Sandals Foundation has added another layer of meaning to the week. Many advisors traveled with gifts for local children, and the Foundation has been distributing them across the region. The gesture reflects the culture of connection that defines hospitality in Jamaica and makes this reopening feel deeply rooted in the island’s community.
Sandals Dunn’s River
The resort feels entirely transformed. From the moment you step onto the property, everything appears sharpened, refreshed, and newly imagined. Public spaces gleam with the sheen of a major relaunch. Pools feel newly sculpted. Gardens appear hand-finished, with foliage shaped and polished for the winter season. Suites are airy and modern, blending soft coastal color with clean lines that echo the calm of the north coast. The beachfront is serene and restored, with the familiar clarity of the Ocho Rios coastline returning in full.
Restaurants feel newly energized, lounge spaces have a soft, just-opened glow, and the day-to-night energy across the resort moves with confidence. Even travelers who knew Dunn’s River before will find a refreshed rhythm here, an elevated version of the experience that feels both familiar and distinctly new.
What I Liked
There is a pride in the air, a shared understanding among staff and guests that this reopening is bigger than one resort. It restores momentum for Jamaica, bringing together beauty, effort, and renewal. The refreshed suites, the restored beach, the energized dining program, and the elevated service all speak to a resort that used its downtime to push forward, not simply rebuild. Some of the other standouts? The rum bar, which has about an impressive a selection as you’ll find at an all-inclusive resort in the Caribbean (including rare ones like the Angostura 1787).
From the guest perspective, the experience is seamless from the moment of arrival. The grounds look flawless. Service is smooth and warm. The resort feels tuned for the season, ready for travelers who return with high expectations and the desire to reconnect with Jamaica.
How to Get There
Travelers arrive along Jamaica’s northern coast, moving through a scenic drive that leads directly into the revived energy of Ocho Rios. The moment you reach Sandals Dunn’s River, the transformation is unmistakable. The resort is glowing again, the island is ready, and the celebration is already well underway. You can either fly to Sangster International Airport in Montego Bay and take a transfer to Ocho Rios, or fly directly to Ian Fleming International Airport in greater Ocho Rios (American Airlines actually flies nonstop here, too out of Miami, for about $355 roundtrip right now, according to Google Flights).
Prices at Sandals Dunn’s River
With demand high, you can find rooms for about $1,682 per night, all-inclusive based on double occupancy right now.
