Oceanfront at Casa de Campo® means the Caribbean Sea is the dominant fact of the day. The pool overlooks it. The dining table catches the trade winds off it. The primary suite wakes up to it. Caribbean Paradise Homes represents three oceanfront positions on the resort — each one a different version of that same fundamental relationship between villa and sea, ranging from ten-bedroom clifftop estate to six-bedroom Caribbean-view residence. The price band reflects that — oceanfront sits at the top of the rate ladder, and the trade-off for that band is the view stays with you from the first coffee on the terrace to the last drink at the fire pit.
Caribbean Paradise Homes represents three oceanfront villas at Casa de Campo®, each positioned for a different version of the trip: Villa Farallon on the Punta Águila clifftop ($12,300/night, 10 bedrooms sleeping 24, the resort’s largest oceanfront estate for big multi-family groups and milestone celebrations); Casa Aguila also on Punta Águila ($10,400/night, 7 bedrooms sleeping 14 with pavilion-style layout and explicit kids’ rooms, the family-and-friends premium choice); and Casa Al Mare ($9,200/night, 6 bedrooms sleeping 12 with cliffside Caribbean views, the entry-tier oceanfront experience). Each sits directly above the Caribbean. Each includes a cook handling all the meals.
Below: the three villas, what oceanfront life actually feels like at Casa de Campo® across a week, how to choose between the three cliff positions, and the logistics worth knowing before you book.
The Arrival
The arrival. The cars roll up the driveway and the first thing every guest does is walk to the edge. At Villa Farallon the lawn ends at the cliff with the Caribbean three sides open and no neighboring villa in your sightline — the kids stop short of the rocks, the adults pour the first drink and walk to the parapet, and the group photo gets taken in the first hour. At Casa Aguila the same first-edge moment happens at the lap-pool terrace, with the cliff turning south to face the bay. At Casa Al Mare the great room opens to the sea-facing terrace and the conversation about the first round of drinks happens with the sound of waves already filling in behind it.
By dinner the cook has the table set on the sea-facing terrace, the candles are lit, and the trade wind has dropped off enough for the long table to feel still. The first night is when the trip stops being a stay and starts being a Caribbean week. The view is the actor — everything else in the villa is supporting cast.
The Split Day
The split day. By the second morning, the day finds its rhythm around the sea. At first light the sun comes up over the Caribbean and the early risers take coffee to the terrace before anyone else is awake. Mid-morning the sea is at its calmest and the swimmers head down for the morning dip — at Casa Aguila the lap pool stretches the length of the lawn; at Villa Farallon and Casa Al Mare the cliff position means the resort beach is a short ride away rather than a step off the terrace. By noon the trade winds have picked up, the umbrella goes up on the terrace, and the long lunch on the back terrace is the canonical mid-day moment.
While part of the group sticks with the view, the rest splits to the resort. Teeth of the Dog — ranked the Caribbean’s top course by the World Golf Awards — tees off at the resort core, with The Links sharing the address. From the three Punta Águila/cliffside villas it’s a short cart ride. The Spa, the Equestrian Center, and Minitas Beach Club all sit within easy cart distance. By mid-afternoon the group is back at the villa, the second swim of the day, and the trade winds have softened for sundown.
For groups larger than 24 guests, see our 12-bedroom collection. For families wanting the explicit kid-friendly oceanfront option, see our family villas page.
Through the Oceanfront Week
The Signature Oceanfront Moment
The signature oceanfront moment. Once a day — usually at sundown, sometimes at sunrise — the whole group ends up at the cliff edge with drinks in hand. At Villa Farallon that’s the parapet at the southwestern tip of Punta Águila where the cliff turns three sides open and the sun drops directly into the Caribbean. At Casa Aguila it’s the fire pit on the cliffside terrace with the youngest already in pyjamas. At Casa Al Mare it’s the sea-facing terrace with the lights of La Romana visible across the bay after dark. The cook has dinner ready on the terrace twenty minutes later. The conversation lingers because no one wants to leave the view.
The all-hands meal on the cliff terrace is the photo every oceanfront stay produces. We’ve placed hundreds of families and groups in these villas since 2003 — this is the moment that brings them back the next year.
The Wind-Down
The wind-down. By mid-week the cliff has become routine. The kids know which terrace catches the breeze in the late afternoon. The adults know which lounger is in the shade by 4pm. The cook knows who likes their coffee strong. At Villa Farallon the late-night zone is the fire pit on the cliff; at Casa Aguila it’s the media room in the kids’ pavilion while the toddler sleeps; at Casa Al Mare it’s the sea-facing living room with the wind picking up outside.
The second half of the week is when the trip stops being a stay at an oceanfront villa and becomes the villa itself. The staff have settled into the family’s rhythm. The concierge has the Sunday brunch booked, the boat ride to Catalina Island scheduled, the spa morning on the calendar. The aggregator photo doesn’t capture this part. We tell you about it because we’ve been there.
How to Choose Between the Three
Three oceanfront villas, three different oceanfront trips. The choice usually comes down to group size, the dramatic scale of the cliff, and how much explicit kid logistics the trip needs.
Pick Villa Farallon when the group is 16–24 guests and the trip wants the resort’s most dramatic oceanfront positioning. Ten bedrooms sleeping 24 sits at the southwestern tip of Punta Águila with Caribbean three sides open; the cliff parapet is the photo moment of the week. The villa scale supports a milestone celebration or a multi-family-week with full staff. Premium-tier oceanfront rate; the largest oceanfront footprint we represent.
Pick Casa Aguila when the trip is two families together with kids spanning toddler to teen. Seven bedrooms sleeping 14 with pavilion-style layout means the toddler can nap in one pavilion while the older kids play in another. Dedicated kids’ playroom and bunk room with crib. Lawn safely set back from the cliff. The right oceanfront villa when family logistics matter as much as the view.
Pick Casa Al Mare when the group is 8–12 guests and wants oceanfront without the large-estate footprint. Six bedrooms sleeping 12 on a cliffside Caribbean-view position — entry-tier oceanfront rate but the same fundamental relationship between villa and sea. Best fit for a multi-family week, a milestone anniversary, or a group of three couples who want the Caribbean as the backdrop without 24-guest logistics.
If oceanfront is the priority but the trip is smaller than 12 guests, ask us about smaller direct-oceanfront options. If the view matters but the cliff doesn’t (the Vista Chavón inland-clifftop villas overlook the Chavón River, not the Caribbean), see our ocean-view villas collection.
What Is Typically Included
Full-time staff that scales with the villa: cook (handling all the meals — breakfast, lunch, dinner), housekeeper, and waiter added for the table service at larger group sizes. Casa Aguila and Villa Farallon also include a daytime butler on standard. 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, sommelier, kids’ nanny) the trip needs.
Cook capacity at oceanfront scale: the cook handles all the meals for the full guest count without external catering for standard breakfast / lunch / dinner. For event-scale meals on the cliff terrace — a milestone-anniversary tasting menu, a sundown welcome cocktail, 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
Distance summary for the oceanfront shortlist:
- Minitas Beach Club (the resort’s primary beach): ~2.3–2.5 mi short cart ride from all three Punta Águila clifftop villas
- Teeth of the Dog (ranked the Caribbean’s top course by the World Golf Awards): ~1.8 mi short cart ride from all three; The Links shares the same address
- The Spa & Fitness Center: ~1.8 mi short cart ride from all three (same address as the golf pro shop)
- Casa de Campo® Marina: ~4.7 mi drive from all three
- Altos de Chavón / Dye Fore: ~5.0 mi drive from all three
- Equestrian Center: ~1.8–2.5 mi short cart ride from all three
Pricing range: $9,200/night at Casa Al Mare (6 BR sleeping 12, entry-tier oceanfront) → $10,400/night at Casa Aguila (7 BR sleeping 14 with explicit kids’ design) → $12,300/night at Villa Farallon (10 BR sleeping 24, the largest oceanfront estate). All three include a cook handling all the meals; Villa Farallon and Casa Aguila add a daytime butler on standard. Rates exclude the 18% service fee and the resort registration fee.
Booking lead times: Oceanfront villas at Casa de Campo® book 6–12 months ahead in high season (December–April). For Christmas/New Year, Easter, and Thanksgiving weeks, 12–18 months ahead is typical — oceanfront fills earliest of any villa tier. Summer and shoulder-season windows have shorter lead times. Direct booking with Caribbean Paradise Homes since 2003 means no booking-platform fees.
Plan Your Stay
Planning a beachfront Caribbean stay?
We’ll match you with the best available oceanfront villas and guide you through the best options for your group.
Featured Oceanfront Villas
Our oceanfront collection ranges from six-bedroom cliffside Caribbean-view residences to ten-bedroom oceanfront estates for 24 guests across the resort — from Casa Bliss, a Links-side villa built around an open-air central courtyard, to Casa Ceiba, a Barranca garden retreat anchored by a centenary tree, to La Fabulosa, a direct-oceanfront villa on the 8th hole of Teeth of the Dog — ranked the Caribbean’s top course by the World Golf Awards. Each villa includes private pool, full staff and resort access. Compare the full oceanfront lineup on our accommodation page.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do oceanfront villas have direct beach access?
Some do, while others are positioned on cliffs with direct water views but no beach entry.
Are oceanfront villas less private?
They can be more exposed compared to garden view or elevated ocean view villas, depending on location.
Are these the most expensive villas in Casa de Campo®?
Yes. Oceanfront properties command the highest prices due to location and limited availability. See our editorial pick of the 7 best beachfront villas at Casa de Campo® for the most requested true beachfront options.
What is the difference between oceanfront and beachfront villas at Casa de Campo®?
Oceanfront villas are positioned along the waterfront with sea views and water proximity. Beachfront villas have direct sandy beach access — rarer inventory at Casa de Campo®. Most oceanfront villas are a short golf cart ride from Minitas Beach, which has a dedicated swim area, beach club, and watersports.
Can you swim directly from an oceanfront villa at Casa de Campo®?
Some oceanfront villas offer calm water access for wading or launching a kayak. For open-water swimming, Minitas Beach — with a dedicated swim area, beach club, and watersports — is the resort’s main spot and easily reached by golf cart from any oceanfront villa.
What is the minimum stay for an oceanfront villa rental at Casa de Campo®?
Most oceanfront villa rentals require a minimum of 3 nights, rising to 7 nights during peak periods such as Christmas, New Year, and Easter. Contact Caribbean Paradise Homes for current availability and rates.




