Travel: Inside Fiji's adult-only resorts
The boutique luxury havens in Fiji take playing Cupid very seriously, amping up the romance quotient with blandishments

The country is an archipelago of 333 islands strewn in the South Pacific Ocean, of which only a little over a third are inhabited, with a population of 884,887. According to the Fiji Bureau of Statistics, the volume of tourists who visit the country is almost as large as its own population. It received 870,309 tourists in 2018, with the tourism industry generating a revenue of about $917.51 million.
“India is one of the key emerging markets for Tourism Fiji,” says Kathy Koyamaibole, regional manager Asia, Tourism Fiji. “We have seen a stable growth of 15 percent year-on-year in Indian arrivals. In 2018, we had 5,901 tourists from India, a 14 percent increase compared to the previous year. We aim to further the initiatives we are carrying out in the Indian market to continue the double-digit growth.” The initiatives include efforts to raise awareness about this idyllic nation where romance flows like a languorous river.
There is a ‘Garden of Eden’ quality about the Fijian islands and the Adults Only resorts have harnessed and enhanced this feel with a ‘child-free’ ambience (most resorts allow teens aged 16 and above, while others allow teens aged 18 and above). Throw in richly appointed villas ensconced in lush foliage, private plunge pools, outdoor showers and thatched pavilions with day beds, and you have a sure-shot recipe for romance.
The initiative seems to have yielded results. “For five consecutive years we have been voted as the most romantic resort in Fiji by TripAdvisor travellers,” claims Belle. The 36 beachfront villas and bures (indigenous thatched dwellings) are wrapped in the tranquillity that lovers seek, and snuggle amid tropical vegetation.
Likuliku Lagoon Resort Fiji is located on the Malolo Island in the Mamanuca group of islands and was the first retreat in Fiji to have bures cantilevered over a turquoise-blue lagoon. A separate bathing pavilion with lagoon views, private access to the beach, and the feeling of being adrift make these over-water bungalows an exclusive sanctuary. Spread over 77 acres, the uber luxe retreat also has beachfront and garden bures.
“Likuliku is one of a handful of true luxury Adults Only resorts, and we sit in a much sought-after niche,” says Samantha Muspratt, director of sales and marketing of Ahura Resorts Fiji, the management company of the resort, which opened in 2007. “Over the past few years, we are seeing existing resorts doing renovations and additions to their product offering to include Adults Only areas they have seen the demand and potential for it.” Likuliku was an Adults Only resort from the planning stage itself. “The benefits of the Adults Only concept are: Privacy, intimacy, serenity, relaxation, romance, and solitude,” adds Muspratt.
For these resorts, being child-free is not enough each strives to create a unique selling proposition, such as being nestled in a rainforest, or providing breathtaking oceanfront views, or creating a supreme sense of isolation. For instance, Namale Resort and Spa is a rainforest and oceanfront retreat on Fiji’s second largest island of Vanua Levu. “Namale has an almost wild topography with different outcrops and vantage points that afford some romantic dining opportunities,” says Bill Keefe, co-general manager. Among its experiences are lolling in a heart-shaped Jacuzzi, aptly called The Lovers’ Deck, which is hewn into a cliff overlooking the ocean, or having breakfast or lunch at the Blow Hole Deck, which looks out over the ocean spurting out of humped volcanic rock, like a giant fountain. The resort had started out 30 years ago as the family retreat, comprising four bures, of US-based author and motivational speaker Tony Robbins. It was expanded over time, and was eventually converted into an Adults Only resort. Hollywood actors Russell Crowe, Tom Selleck and Meg Ryan, and designer Donna Karan are some of its celebrity guests.
The Royal Davui Island Resort, perched on a rocky island in Beqa Lagoon off the main island of Viti Levu, embodies the free island spirit. The boutique luxury resort is sculpted into a hill that hangs over a lagoon and has 16 villas and bungalows, each with its own private, climate-controlled plunge pool and an outdoor deck with a swim-up bar from where you can gaze at the Beqa Lagoon. Some villas snare views of magical sunsets and others, of sunrises over the Pacific Ocean.
Like the Namale resort, the Matangi Private Island Resort too had origins that were very different from its current status. In 1878, it was bought by the great grandfather of current owners Flora Douglas, who now runs it with her husband Noel. “It was initially a coconut plantation,” says Douglas, until they took a leap of faith in 1986 and converted it into a private island resort. Located on 240 acres, the island is in the northern part of the Fijian archipelago.
The resort is set against the backdrop of a forest, while in front the ocean curls up invitingly. Couples can opt for split-level tree houses that have a castaway feel but come with frills like an outdoor lava rock shower and Jacuzzi, and a sun deck with sea views. They can go on picnics at Horsehoe Bay, on the western coast of the island. Listed in the book 1000 Places to See Before You Die by Patricia Schultz, the bay is private, with its own beach and a jade-green lagoon.
When it’s time to leave paradise, the staff of the resort, in Fijian tradition, gathers around, holding aloft garlands and then breaks into a melancholy Fijian love-cum-farewell song, ‘Isa Lei’. Their voices soar in the air as the speed boats of couples skim the waves and pull away.
First Published: Feb 15, 2020, 08:05
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