7-Bedroom Casa de Campo® Villas

7-Bedroom Family & Couples Villas at the Resort

Seven-bedroom villas at Casa de Campo® sleep fourteen — the bridge tier between the family-of-eight 4-bedroom and the multi-generational 8-bedroom. Seven bedrooms gives every couple their own door, with spare rooms for adult children, grandparents, or the friends who came along; two families can travel together without sharing space or bathrooms. It’s the size where parallel agendas can run side-by-side (the golfers heading to Teeth of the Dog, the moms at Minitas Beach, the toddlers in the pool) without anyone tripping over anyone else. It’s also the size where the villa’s location starts to define the trip: a 7-BR on a Punta Águila cliffside and a 7-BR in the Los Mangos beach pocket are different products even when the floor plan is similar.

Caribbean Paradise Homes represents three 7-bedroom villas at Casa de Campo®, each positioned for a different version of the trip: Los Mangos in the Los Mangos pocket (entry-tier at $2,900/night with a one-acre lawn, pool pavilion, and a short walk down to Minitas Beach); Villa Esperanza in Vistamar ($2,900/night with a private par-3 hole tucked into the back garden, three kitchens, and a sweeping marble staircase); and Casa Aguila at the southwestern tip of Punta Águila ($10,400/night with a cliffside terrace overlooking open Caribbean on three sides, pavilion-style bedrooms linked by covered walkways, and a lap pool the length of the lawn). Each is 7 bedrooms sleeping 14. Each includes a cook handling all the meals.

Below: the three villas, what a group of fourteen actually looks like at Casa de Campo® across a week, how to choose between Los Mangos beach-pocket, Vistamar golf-and-garden, and Punta Águila cliffside, and the logistics worth knowing before you book.

7-bedroom villa at Casa de Campo® Resort, Dominican Republic

The Arrival

Two SUVs pull up the driveway. Maybe three if grandparents flew in separately. Twelve to fourteen guests step out into Caribbean light, and the first hour is its own ritual.

At Los Mangos, the doors open onto a one-acre lawn with a pool pavilion at the far end and Minitas Beach a short walk down the road. The kids drop their bags and head for the lawn before luggage is even unloaded. The cook is already in the kitchen.

At Villa Esperanza, the sweeping marble staircase greets you, and within a few minutes someone has wandered down to the back of the property and discovered the private par-3 green tucked into the garden. The golfers have already started talking about a morning round.

At Casa Aguila, the drive ends at the southwestern tip of Punta Águila — open Caribbean on three sides, no neighboring villa in your sightline. The youngest kids run barefoot across the lawn toward the cliff edge and stop a long way short of the rocks. The grandparents take the rocking chairs on the terrace. The cook is already in the kitchen.

Different settings, same first hour: people find their bedrooms, change clothes, and end up outside. The villa absorbs everyone without anyone having to share a bathroom.

The Split Day

By the second morning, the day splits naturally. Seven bedrooms isn’t enough mass for a true compound-style sprawl, but it’s plenty for parallel agendas to run without collision.

Some mornings the golfers head out early. Teeth of the Dog — ranked the Caribbean’s top course by the World Golf Awards — tees off from the resort core, with The Links and Dye Fore (atop Vista Chavón) in easy reach. From Los Mangos that’s a four-minute cart ride. From Villa Esperanza the practice green is in the garden. From Casa Aguila it’s a short ride along the peninsula.

Meanwhile, the other half of the group goes its own way. Minitas Beach, a short walk from Los Mangos and a short ride from Casa Aguila, has chaise lounges and a beach restaurant; the kids are in the water within minutes. The Equestrian Center runs trail rides. The pool stays staffed at the villa, so the people who don’t want to leave don’t have to.

Lunch is rarely a full group affair. Some come back to the villa for a quiet sandwich on the terrace; some eat at La Cana by the marina or at one of the resort restaurants. By mid-afternoon, the group reconverges at the pool. The cook has lunch leftovers laid out for anyone who skipped the restaurant. Two families have spent the day apart and are happy to be in the same place again.

For groups larger than fourteen, see our 8-bedroom villas — same trip structure with more sleeping capacity.

7-bedroom villa at Casa de Campo® Resort, Caribbean rental Dominican Republic

Through the Trip

The All-Hands Meal

At least one night during a 7-bedroom stay, everyone eats together — fourteen at one table, sometimes sixteen with extras. The cook handles it. That’s the moment the villa earns its rate.

At Los Mangos the long teak table sits under the pool pavilion, breeze coming off the Caribbean, kids on one end, grandparents on the other. At Villa Esperanza the dining hall under the cathedral ceiling fits all fourteen comfortably and the marble staircase is the photo backdrop. At Casa Aguila dinner is on the cliff-edge terrace as the sun goes down, fire pit lit by dessert.

The menu is whatever the family wants — fresh fish from the docks, slow-cooked goat, Dominican classics, or a kid-friendly second tier alongside. The cook shops in advance based on the meal plan the concierge sends a week before arrival. Wine pairings, dietary accommodations, late-night antojos: all arranged before the family lands.

The all-hands meal is where the trip stops being two families coexisting and becomes one trip everyone remembers. Aggregators will sell you the bedroom count. We staff the dining room.

The Wind-Down

The third night, the rhythm settles. The kids have figured out where the snacks are. The adults know which terrace catches the breeze in the late afternoon. The cook knows who likes their coffee strong.

At Los Mangos the wind-down happens on the back lawn with the pool lit blue and the older kids playing a slow game of cards under the pavilion. At Villa Esperanza it’s on the upper terrace overlooking the practice green, with the par-3 lit just enough for one last chip shot in pyjamas. At Casa Aguila it’s the fire pit on the cliff with the toddler already asleep and the rest of the family on the teal sofas, no one in a rush to go inside.

By the second half of the week, the trip stops being a stay at the villa and becomes the villa. The staff have learned the family’s preferences and run the day in the background. The concierge has already booked Sunday brunch at Minitas, the boat ride out to Catalina Island, the spa morning for the moms. Nobody is checking their phone for the next reservation. That’s the part the photos don’t capture and the part that brings two families back the next year.

How to Choose Between the Three

Three 7-bedroom villas, three different trips. The choice usually comes down to where the family wants to be at sundown.

Pick Los Mangos when the family is beach-and-pool oriented and wants a one-acre lawn that the kids can roam without being right next to a cliff or a road. Closest of the three to Minitas Beach. Entry-tier rate. The villa that delivers a classic Caribbean estate week without the premium of the cliff sites.

Pick Villa Esperanza when at least two people in the group are serious golfers — having a par-3 in the garden changes the trip. Three kitchens means the cook can prep dinner while a second crew is making breakfast for the kids. The Vistamar setting is quieter than the resort core and the estate plot gives the trip a sprawling, country-house feeling.

Pick Casa Aguila when the view is the point and two families want pavilion-style privacy. Bedrooms in their own pavilions linked by covered walkways — kids have somewhere to retreat, grandparents have somewhere quiet, parents have a lap pool the length of the lawn. Premium rate, but for the right group nothing else at the resort delivers this combination of cliff-edge view and child-friendly layout.

If the trip is larger than 14 guests, step up to our 8-bedroom villas or 10-bedroom villas. If smaller and tighter on budget, our 6-bedroom collection covers groups of 10–12.

What Is Typically Included

Full-time staff that scales with the villa: cook (handling all the meals — breakfast, lunch, dinner), housekeeper, and a waiter added for the table service that fourteen guests require. Casa Aguila also includes a dedicated daytime butler. Pre-arrival planning with your Caribbean Paradise Homes specialist covers menu preferences, dietary requirements, group celebration details, kids’ preferences, and any external vendors (additional bartenders, in-villa spa, baby-gear rental) the trip needs.

Cook capacity at 7-BR scale: the cook handles all the meals for the full fourteen-guest count without external catering for standard breakfast / lunch / dinner. For event-scale meals — a multi-course tasting menu for a milestone celebration, a Dominican criollo welcome feast, a sushi station for the all-hands meal — your specialist coordinates additional kitchen staff via the resort’s catering network. The standard cook service is not “breakfast and one main meal”; it’s all the meals, every day of the stay.

Logistics, Distances & Pricing

4-bedroom villa at Casa de Campo® Resort, Dominican Republic

Distance summary for the 7-BR shortlist:

  • Minitas Beach Club (the resort’s primary beach + beach service): a short walk down for Los Mangos (~1 mile, walkable for some guests); ~7 minutes by cart from Villa Esperanza (Vistamar); ~7–10 minutes from Casa Aguila (Punta Águila cliffside)
  • Teeth of the Dog (ranked the Caribbean’s top course by the World Golf Awards): ~4 minutes by cart from Los Mangos; ~5 minutes from Villa Esperanza; ~5–7 minutes from Casa Aguila
  • The Links: ~5 minutes by cart from all three (resort core); Villa Esperanza also has its own private par-3 hole in the back garden
  • Dye Fore (Pete Dye’s clifftop course atop Vista Chavón): ~12–15 minutes by cart from all three
  • Casa de Campo® Marina: ~7–10 minutes by cart from Los Mangos and Villa Esperanza; ~10–12 minutes from Casa Aguila
  • Altos de Chavón: ~10–15 minutes by cart from all three

Pricing range: $2,900/night at Los Mangos and Villa Esperanza (entry/mid-tier) → $10,400/night at Casa Aguila (premium Punta Águila cliffside). The $7,500/night spread reflects positioning — all three are 7 BR sleeping 14 with cook included; Casa Aguila’s rate adds the pavilion-style bedroom layout, dedicated kids’ rooms, and the cliff-edge view.

Booking lead times: 7-bedroom villas at Casa de Campo® book 3–9 months ahead in high season (December–April). For Christmas/New Year, Easter, and Thanksgiving weeks, 6–12 months ahead is typical. Summer and shoulder-season windows often have shorter lead times. Direct booking with Caribbean Paradise Homes since 2003 means no booking-platform fees.

Rates are indicative only and subject to change based on exact dates, occupancy, villa selection, and availability at the time of booking.

Plan Your Stay

Planning a beachfront Caribbean stay?

We’ll match you with the best available 7-bedroom villas and guide you through the best options for your group.

7-bedroom villa at Casa de Campo® Resort, Caribbean rental Dominican Republic

Featured 7-Bedroom Villas

Our 7-bedroom collection sleeps 14 guests across the resort (up to 16 with extra beds) — from Los Mangos, a one-acre Los Mangos estate with a pool pavilion and short walk to Minitas Beach, to Villa Esperanza, a Vistamar villa with its own private par 3 hole in the back garden, to Casa Aguila, a cliffside sanctuary above the Caribbean with a playroom and bunk room built for the kids. Each villa includes private pool, full staff and resort access. Compare the full 7-bedroom lineup on our accommodation page.

Los Mangos 7-bedroom villa with one-acre lawn, pool pavilion, walk to Minitas Beach Casa de Campo®
Featured
From$2,900/night
Los Mangos

One-acre estate 7-bedroom villa in Los Mangos with pool pavilion and short walk to Minitas Beach — entry-tier comfort for two families or a multi-generational group of fourteen (sleeps up to sixteen with extra beds).

14 7 7
Reserve
Villa Esperanza 7-bedroom villa with private par 3 hole, three kitchens, Vistamar Casa de Campo®
Featured
From$2,900/night
Villa Esperanza

Estate 7-bedroom villa in Vistamar with a private par 3 hole at the back of the garden, three kitchens, and a sweeping marble staircase — distinctive character for multi-family weeks and small celebrations.

14 7 7
Reserve
Casa Aguila 7-bedroom cliffside villa with lap pool and playroom, Punta Águila Casa de Campo®
Featured
From$10,400/night
Casa Aguila

Cliffside 7-bedroom estate in Punta Águila with a long lap pool, dedicated playroom, and bunk room built for the kids — premium multi-family tier above the Caribbean.

14 7 7
Reserve

Frequently Asked Questions

How many guests can a 7 bedroom villa accommodate?

A 7-bedroom villa at this Caribbean resort typically sleeps 14 guests on double occupancy, with extra beds and pull-outs taking some properties to 16. The size sits in the sweet spot for two families travelling together, a small celebration party, or a golf foursome with non-playing partners — large enough for everyone to have their own bedroom, small enough that mealtimes still feel like one group.

Are 7 bedroom villas staffed?

Yes — almost all 7-bedroom villas in our portfolio include a housekeeper and cook as standard, with select villas also including a butler or waiter at this size. Private chef service can be added to any 7-bedroom booking, and on multi-week stays it is one of the most popular concierge add-ons.

Is this a good size for families?

It is genuinely the most popular size for families travelling with children. Seven bedrooms typically gives parents, grandparents, and three children their own spaces, with a sixth zone — a TV room, library, or covered terrace — that becomes the kids’ base on rainy afternoons. Villas like Los Mangos (7br with one-acre lawn, walking distance to Minitas Beach) and Villa Palms (7br fairway-front in Las Palmas with wide kid-friendly lawn) are repeat bookings with our multi-family guests season after season.

Are these villas close to the beach or golf?

Our four 7-bedroom villas span the resort. Los Mangos walks to Minitas Beach from a one-acre lawn in Los Mangos. Villa Esperanza is in Vistamar with its own private par 3 hole in the back garden. Villa Palms is fairway-front in Las Palmas, lawn wide enough for the kids. Casa Aguila sits on the cliffside above the Caribbean in Punta Águila with a long lap pool. Tell us what your group values most and we will match the location to that.

Do 7-bedroom villas at Casa de Campo® have private pools?

Every 7-bedroom villa in our portfolio has a private pool. Most also include a separate jacuzzi, an outdoor dining terrace large enough for the full group, and a golf cart so guests can reach the beach, the marina, or the pro shop without coordinating transport.

What is the minimum stay for a 7-bedroom villa rental at Casa de Campo®?

Three nights is the baseline outside peak season. Christmas, New Year, Easter, and Thanksgiving weeks rise to a 7-night minimum across most 7-bedroom villas, and the most-requested properties book 6–12 months in advance for those weeks. Caribbean Paradise Homes confirms exact minimums on each villa shortlist before you commit.

 

 

Begin Your
Villa Rental
Experience

Tell us a bit about your plans, and one of our villa specialists will personally curate a selection of homes tailored to your group, preferences, and budget—typically within a few hours. There’s no commitment at this stage, just a conversation to help you explore the right fit. Our villa specialists have personally stayed in and vetted every property in our portfolio. Availability can shift quickly, especially during peak travel periods.

Rental Inquiry

2 + 14 =