

Rates from $130/night incl. continental breakfast & return airport transfers.
5th Night Free for Beachfront and Oceanview units
Call toll free 1-877-774-5486 for promos.
$1500/week or $250/night for Sunset Cottage + FREE Ferry Tickets + Car Rental.
40% off suites for travel until April 30 or 30% off from May 1 to Dec 20
All inclusive packages for divers and non-divers in gorgeous Grand Turk.
Call for Best Available Rates.
Weekly vacations available starting from $1820 USD incl. tax All Inclusive.
20% OFF Standard Junior Suites all Winter long.
Enjoy each 5th night free from April 1 to Dec 19.
3rd, 4th or 5th night free depending on travel dates.
Summer Cottage Villa in Turks $1400/week - steps from self-guided bonefishing.
Rooms from $250/night, champagne upon arrival.
Each 5th night free when you travel from April 14 to December 17.
Get each 4th Night FREE plus Breakfast & Transfer, in the heart of Grace Bay.
FREE CAR + 30% off from mid April to mid Dec, 2012.
Free car rental when you stay at least 5 nights.
Discounted Nightly Rates from just $95/night.
25% Discount off all rooms until February 18.
25% Discount off all rooms until February 18.
Stay at least 4 nights & enjoy a free rental to explore North/Middle Caicos.
20% Discount plus champagne, strawberries, spa, dinner.
Get 30% off when you travel between May 1 to October 31, book by May 31st
20% Discount PLUS Free Nights and Resort Credits.
35% Discount of Best Available Rates.
Each 4th night free for travel April 15 - Dec 18, 2012.
Enjoy your 4th Night Free on any room type!
Enjoy each 5th Night Free throughout 2012.
Get each 4th night free or pay-5-stay-7 from May to October.
Each 5th Night Free plus airport transfers and welcome drinks.
Stay 7, Pay 5 plus 2 Kids up to 15 years old stay free.
Free nights for stays between May and November.
Fantastic Free Night Deals with free vouchers too.
Call toll free 1-877-774-5486 for best rates & promotions.
Huge discounts up to 60% discount off select rooms.

The Turks and Caicos have been inhabited for hundreds, possibly thousands, of years and evidence of that life can be found throughout our islands.
The Turks and Caicos National Museum in Grand Turk is an ideal way to get a snapshot of the history for the islands, from the original Taino and Lucayan Indian inhabitants who Columbus found when he first arrived, to colonial era settlers who thrived off the salt industry, to the 20th century fishing and boating industries that sustained the islands before tourism arrived in the 1980s.
On Grand Turk there is also a famous lighthouse, a former US Coast Guard base, as well as a monument to the US Space Program, honoring John Glenn’s splashdown there in 1962 after the first manned space mission in history.
On Providenciales, visit the ruins Cheshire Hall where English loyalist Thomas Stubbs settled on Providenciales and started his plantation. They produced sea island cotton here which was quickly preferred by the expanding textile industries of England.
Historical points of interest can be found in Middle Caicos at Bambarra beach (home of the first African settlers in Turks & Caicos, who arrived here as a result of a shipwrecked slave trader in 1842. When they made their way to land, they were granted freedom under British law). Walk the 2-mile Crossing Place Road to get a true sense of the way island life used to be.
On North Caicos, Wade's Green Plantation, gives visitors glimpse into plantation life dating back to1789 when Wade Stubbs was one of the most successful planters. While the plantation was composed of over 3,000 acres of agricultural land, the area you will visit is the plantation town, where Wade Stubbs and his associated plantation staff and family resided.
The Boiling Hole on South Caicos is a natural historic site is situated amidst the salt ponds, and was very significant in the salt production era of the Turks and Caicos, pumping water back and forth between the sea and the ponds.
Salt Cay is a registered worldwide heritage site and visitors can get a glimpse into how the salt industry sustained the Turks & Caicos, as well as the Bermudian architecture of the day at sites such as The White House and The Brown House.
Even our uninhabited island can give visitors a taste of our history. On West Caicos, for example, an old railroad system is still present, used by settlers in the 1800s who grew sisal for a period of time. Off Fort George Cay, you can see remains of cannons, presumably used by the English to fend of pirates.
