Search “best villa rental Casa de Campo” and you get two kinds of answer: the resort’s own page, and a wall of global listing sites — each reselling the same handful of properties they’ve never set foot in. None of them can tell you which villa actually suits your group, because none of them are on the resort. We are. Caribbean Paradise Homes has placed guests inside Casa de Campo since 2003, and we represent 77 villas across the 7,000-acre property — each one personally walked before it goes on this page.
The Arrival
There’s no buffet line and no front desk. The cook is already in the kitchen, and breakfast happens on your schedule, on the terrace, with whoever is awake. Every CPH villa comes staffed — a housekeeper, a cook who handles all the meals, a butler and waiter on the larger estates. You arrive to a stocked kitchen and a golf cart in the drive, and the resort opens up from there.
The Split Day
By midday the group has usually split. Someone’s gone to Teeth of the Dog — ranked the Caribbean’s top course by the World Golf Awards — someone’s at Minitas Beach, someone hasn’t left the pool. This is the rhythm a hotel can’t give you: the group scatters across the resort and reconvenes at a house that’s yours, not a lobby you share with strangers. The villas that work best are the ones with more than one outdoor zone, so the splits don’t crowd each other.
The evening is where the villa earns its keep. One table, the full group, the cook sending out course after course while the light goes off the water or the fairway. It’s the meal nobody has to drive to, book, or split a check for. At a beachfront villa the sound is the waves; on the Vista Chavón bluff it’s the Marina lights coming on below. That single nightly dinner — unhurried, private, everyone present — is the thing guests tell us they remember.
The Wind-Down
By mid-week the routine sets in, and the difference between the villas on this list and the rest of the 77 stops being a feature checklist. It’s fit. Farallon is a different trip from Villa Coral, and a group of twelve golfers needs a different house than two families with small kids. The next section is how to land on the right one.
How to Choose
If the trip is the beach — sand at the door, not a view of it — lead with Casa Bahia Azul, then Minitas Garden for the walk-to-the-beach value pick. See all beachfront villas.
If it’s a golf week, base the group where the courses are: La Florentina sits on Dye Fore, and the Punta Aguila villas are a short cart ride from Teeth of the Dog. Browse all golf villas.
If it’s a big group or an event, size is the first filter: Villa Farallon sleeps 24 with a separate annex; Casa Cana and Villa Palmeras both sleep 16 around one table. Compare the large-group villas and read the destination wedding guide.
If it’s a family week on a budget, Villa Coral is the entry point and Minitas Garden gets you closer to the beach. See all family villas. Still deciding? Our how to choose the right villa guide walks the full decision.
Considering the wider country? See our guide to luxury villa rentals in the Dominican Republic.
What Is Typically Included
Every CPH villa stay comes staffed — a housekeeper and a cook who handles all the meals as standard, with a butler and waiter added on the larger estates. A concierge comes with the house. Food is billed at cost, typically $40–$80 per guest per day. Resort registration applies to every stay; our access fee guide and what’s actually included page cover the detail.
Logistics, Distances & Pricing
The shortlist spans the resort — from the Punta Aguila and Punta Minitas headlands on the sea, to the Vista Chavón and Rio Arriba bluffs over Dye Fore, to the inland golf pockets of Barranca and Las Palmas. Every villa is a short ride from Minitas Beach, the three courses, and the Marina; exact drive and walk times are on each villa page.
Rates run from $2,500/night for Villa Coral to $12,300/night for Villa Farallon — the spread reflects size, position, and season. See our cost of a Casa de Campo villa guide. On timing: peak weeks (Christmas, New Year, Easter) book 12–18 months ahead; the rest of high season 6–12 months. Shoulder season (May–November) opens up the calendar and the rates — see our best time to visit guide.
Plan Your Stay
Planning a Casa de Campo villa stay?
We’ll match you with the best available villas and guide you through the best options for your group.
Villas We Recommend Most
Our top picks across beach, golf, and large-group trips — three of the eight villas we put forward most often, each one we represent directly and have walked in person. Browse the full collection on our accommodation page.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the single best villa rental at Casa de Campo?
There isn’t one — there’s a best villa for your trip. Villa Farallon is the trophy address if you want the most dramatic oceanfront and room for 24. For a family of ten on a beach week, Casa Bahia Azul or Minitas Garden is the better stay, and for a golf group La Florentina beats both. Tell us the group and the plan and we’ll name the one.
How do you decide which villas make the shortlist?
We rank by fit, not by who pays for placement. Every villa here is one we represent directly and have walked in person — we put forward the ones that consistently deliver for a given trip type, whether that’s a beach week, a golf trip, a large-group event, or a family stay, across price points from $2,500 to $12,300 a night. Tell us your group and dates and we’ll narrow the eight to the two or three worth your time.
How many villas does CPH represent, and are they all on the resort?
77 villas, every one inside the gates of Casa de Campo in La Romana — beachfront, oceanfront cliff, golf-side, and garden positions across the property. We don’t list anything we haven’t personally vetted.
What is included in the rate, and what is extra?
The staffed house — housekeeper, cook who handles all the meals, concierge — is included, with butler and waiter on the larger estates. Food is billed at cost (roughly $40–$80 per guest per day). Resort registration is separate.
How far ahead do I need to book the best ones?
For Christmas, New Year, and Easter, 12–18 months. For the rest of high season, 6–12 months. The named villas on this page are the first to go — if your dates are fixed, start the conversation early.
How does Casa de Campo compare to Punta Cana or Cap Cana for a villa trip?
Casa de Campo is the older, more residential resort — golf-led, gated, with a working marina and Altos de Chavón. It trades the all-inclusive scale of Punta Cana for privacy and a real neighbourhood feel.




