Passport Q
Jennifer Allen  4 hours ago
3 MIN READ

Bimini sits just about 50 nautical miles east of Miami, closer to the United States than many Americans realize. The 7-mile-long island is the westernmost district of The Bahamas, long familiar to anglers and private boaters but less visible to mainstream travelers. For decades, it served as a fishing stop, a cruise port of call or a destination for those who already knew it well.

Bimini sits just about 50 nautical miles east of Miami, closer to the United States than many Americans realize. The 7-mile-long island is the westernmost district of The Bahamas, long familiar to anglers and private boaters but less visible to mainstream travelers. For decades, it served as a fishing stop, a cruise port of call or a destination for those who already knew it well.

That may be changing. Expanded commercial air access began Feb. 14, 2026, when American Airlines launched three-times-weekly nonstop service from Miami International Airport to South Bimini. What visitors find on arrival is not a corridor of high-rises or a sprawl of mega-resorts; Bimini remains compact, navigable and closely tied to the water that surrounds it.

A 7-mile island best explored by golf cart

Bimini stretches roughly 7 miles from end to end, and golf carts are the preferred way to get around. Visitors move between beaches, small restaurants and marinas without long drives or traffic to contend with. The airport, town and shoreline sit within minutes of one another, which keeps the island feeling immediate.

Alice Town remains the commercial center. Small shops, marinas and neighborhood cafes line the main strip, and much of the daily activity happens within a few blocks of the sea. There are no large shopping districts or themed entertainment complexes. Most businesses operate locally, and most encounters feel impromptu: a conversation at a dock, a stop at a roadside stand, a short ride to the next stretch of sand.

Conch is on nearly every menu

Conch appears across Bimini without ceremony. In small cafes along the main road, it goes into salads with lime juice, onion, and sweet pepper, or is lightly battered and fried for fritters and cracked conch plates that arrive on simple platters, often eaten outdoors within view of passing boats and golf carts.

Behind many of those cafes, glistening mountains of shiny pink conch shells rise in open yards and along back fences. The shells remain on land; fishermen say returning them to the water can deter live conch from repopulating the same areas. Over time, the piles grow high enough to be visible from the street, bright against the sand and sun, a byproduct of a fishery that continues to shape the island's economy.

Water within reach

The sea is rarely more than a short walk or golf cart ride away. Shallow banks and reef systems have supported sportfishing here for decades. In calm conditions, underwater visibility can exceed 80 feet, drawing snorkelers and divers to coral reefs and to the limestone formation commonly referred to as the Bimini Road.

The water shifts from pale turquoise in the shallows to deeper blue offshore, and nearly every road seems to end at a dock, a marina or a stretch of beach. For visitors, access to the shoreline requires little planning; it is part of the island's layout.

Resorts World Bimini and Bimini Beach add capacity

At the northern end of the island, Resorts World Bimini provides the largest concentration of visitor infrastructure. The 305-room property includes six bars and restaurants, two expansive pools and a casino overlooking the ocean.

Resorts World Bimini Beach offers private beachfront access, pool areas, bars and cabana rentals reserved for guests. Because the property spans a sizable footprint, a tram service connects accommodations, marina areas, dining venues and the Day Club, allowing visitors to move easily across the grounds.

Nearby, Fisherman's Village links resort guests with excursion operators and retail spaces, providing an entry point into the broader island rather than isolating visitors within hotel walls.

A small island at a turning point

For years, Bimini's visitor mix leaned heavily toward cruise passengers and private boaters; extended stays were secondary. With commercial flights now feeding directly from Miami, the island enters a different phase, one where overnight visitors can arrive without charter planning or ferry schedules.

Whether that shift changes the character of the island remains to be seen. For now, Bimini still runs on golf carts, small cafes and steady marina traffic. The resort has the scale to welcome more guests; the town retains its size. The balance between the two will define what comes next.

Jennifer Allen is a retired chef turned traveler, cookbook author and nationally syndicated journalist; she's also a co-founder of Food Drink Life, where she shares expert travel tips, cruise insights and luxury destination guides. A recognized cruise expert with a deep passion for high-end experiences and off-the-beaten-path destinations, Jennifer explores the world with curiosity, depth and a storyteller's perspective. Her articles are regularly featured on the Associated Press Wire, The Washington Post, Seattle Times, MSN and more.

by Jennifer Allen

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


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