19 Best Sights in Anguilla
We've compiled the best of the best in Anguilla - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.
Cove Bay
Follow the signs to Smokey's at the end of Cove Road, and you will find water that is brilliantly blue and sand that's as soft as sifted flour. It's just as spectacular as its neighbors Rendezvous Bay and Maundays Bay, though this one is more secluded. You can walk here from Cap Juluca for a change of pace, or you can arrange a horseback ride along the beach. Weekend barbecues with terrific local bands at Smokey's are an Anguillian must.
Meads Bay
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Road Salt Pond
Before there was tourism, Anguilla relied heavily on salt production. At 100-acres in size, Road Salt Pond is the largest enclosed body of water on the island. Filled with highly mineralized salt, it's a very therapeutic and shallow pond. Ideal for bird watching, it's considered an "Important Bird Area" by the local government and hundreds of species have been spotted. For visitors who want to get their hands dirty (or rather, wet), Quest Salt Picking Experience will take them into the pond to pick the salt.
Shoal Bay
Aurora Entertainment Park
This 6.8-acre outdoor oasis features over 600,000 gallons of nonstop waterpark fun, plus pickleball, basketball, volleyball, and tennis courts; 18-holes of minigolf; food trucks; a kid's club; and more. Relax in a lounge chair (or a cabana if you're feeling fancy) along the huge lagoon-style pool, shoot down one of three epic waterslides, or coast through the lazy river with a drink in hand that you've ordered from the shade-covered swim up bar. There's also a climbing wall and a splash pad. With activities for all ages, the park promises a grand time for the whole family.
Bethel Methodist Church
Not far from Sandy Ground, this charming little church, which celebrated its 140th anniversary in 2018, is an excellent example of skillful island stonework. It also has some colorful stained-glass windows.
Captain's Bay
Fountain National Park and Caverns
Although the prehistoric cavern, 50 feet below the surface, itself is not open to the public, there is an interesting exhibit with information and artifacts of the ancient Amerindian inhabitants of the island. Thousand-year-old carved fertility figures and petroglyphs in the rock surround the pool, which is believed to have been a pilgrimage site; it's the oldest known and longest used such ceremonial cave site in the Caribbean.
Island Harbour
Island Harbour
Anguillians have been fishing for centuries in the brightly painted, simple, handcrafted fishing boats that line the shore of the harbor. It's hard to believe, but skillful pilots take these little boats out to sea as far as 50 or 60 miles (80 or 100 km). Late afternoon is the best time to see the day's catch, and there are a couple of good, laid-back beach restaurants here.
Little Bay
Rendezvous Bay
Road Bay
Sandy Ground
Almost everyone who comes to Anguilla stops by this central beach, home to several popular open-air bars and restaurants, as well as boat-rental operations. This is where you catch the ferry for tiny Sandy Island, 2 miles (3 km) offshore for about $40 round-trip.
Sandy Hill
You can park anywhere along the dirt road to Sea Feathers Bay to visit this popular fishing center. What's good for the fishermen is also good for snorkelers, with a coral reef right near the shore. The beach here is not much of a lounging spot, but it's a favorite spot for local families to picnic. For those with creative culinary skills, it's a great place to buy lobsters and fish fresh from local waters in the afternoon.
Sandy Island
Shoal Bay West
This glittering bay bordered by mangroves and seagrapes is a lovely place to spend the day. The 1-mile-long (1½-km-long) beach offers sublime tranquility with coral reefs for snorkeling not too far from shore. Punctuate your day with lunch or dinner at beachside Trattoria Tramonto and you can use their chairs and umbrellas. Reach the beach by taking the main road to the West End and bearing left at the fork, then continuing to the end. Note that similarly named Shoal Bay is a separate beach on a different part of the island. There's parking and toilets.
Wallblake House
Anguilla's only surviving plantation house, Wallblake House was built in 1787 by Will Blake (Wallblake is probably a corruption of his name). The place is associated with many a tale involving murder, high living, and the French invasion in 1796. On the grounds are an ancient vaulted stone cistern and an outbuilding called the Bakery, which wasn't used for making bread at all but for baking turkeys and hams. You can visit the thoroughly and thoughtfully preserved house and grounds only on a guided tour, usually offered two days a week. It's also the information center for the Anguilla Heritage Trail. Call for tour reservations.