Romantic island getaways from the Caribbean to the South Pacific to help start—or stoke—the flame.
Whether you’re after all-out luxury or sand-between-the-toes casual,  there’s a romantic island for you. And while many of these dream  destinations have “remote” and “secluded” as their principle selling  points, others are surprisingly close to home. (One you can practically  see from the Hollywood sign.)
No matter whether you’re a new couple just getting to know each other  or you’re celebrating your golden anniversary, these romantic islands  will help you holiday happily ever after.
Rangali Island, The Maldives
Of the 1,192 islets that make up this island nation in the Indian  Ocean, roughly 1,000 are uninhabited. Suffice to say, your chances of  finding romantic seclusion are pretty high. Like most of the resorts  here, the Conrad Maldives Hotel occupies its own private atoll, called  Rangali Island. The romance factor kicks in before you even arrive,  thanks to a seaplane ride over the shallow, impossibly clear lagoon.  Soon enough, you’re dining in the underwater restaurant and kicking back  in the over-water spa.

Molokai, Hawaii
A conspicuous absence of international hotel chains is just one reason this idyll—situated east of Oahu  in the Hawaiian archipelago—draws romantics from all over. Hike to  remote waterfalls, kayak secluded rocky coastlines, and ride donkeys  into the lush valleys, or just laze beachside. (Head for the golden  sands of secluded three-mile-long Papohaku Beach, at the far-west end of  the island.) With just one traffic light on the island, the only  gridlock you’ll encounter is caused by colonies of curious sea turtles  frolicking in the outrageously clear waters.

Capri, Italy
Sure, noon in Capri Town can be a tourist swarm, but the bulk of visitors depart on the last ferry back to Naples or Sorrento—leaving  the island blissfully free for lovers. And this dramatically craggy  outcrop, a Mediterranean Garden of Eden splashed with floral color and  perfumed by lemon trees and herb gardens, has remained a magnet for the  A-list since antiquity, when Emperor Tiberius set up camp here.


St. Lucia, Caribbean
If the Caribbean Sea were a catwalk, St. Lucia would be its most  bankable supermodel. This 27-mile-long island is lush, mountainous, and  blessed with gorgeous beaches and verdant cocoa plantations. The  jade-green twin peaks of the Pitons, jungle-swathed volcanic plugs that  rise from a silvery ocean on the southwest coast, are the Caribbean’s  most striking backdrop.

Bocas del Toro, Panama
Located in the Caribbean Sea near the border with Costa Rica,  this group of islands is all about low-key relaxation with a Latin  American flavor, pitch-perfect for sybarites who don’t want to pack a  designer bikini. The main island of Colon has a buzzy downtown full of  waterfront bars and laid-back nightclubs, while the smaller islands  offer deserted beaches, rainforests, mangroves, and coral reefs.

Catalina Island, California
Just 22 miles southwest of Los Angeles,  Santa Catalina has a certain Mediterranean flavor. Yachts jostle in a  glinting harbor, sorbet-colored homes cascade down the hillside, and the  secluded coves are ready-made for romance—including the aptly named  Lover’s Cove, east of Avalon.

Santorini, Greece
Sweeping views over a picture-perfect caldera—the result of a  volcanic eruption around 1600 B.C.—is just one factor in Santorini’s  romantic charm. Gorgeous, striated cliffs and black-sand beaches don’t  hurt, either. Head to the famously picturesque village of Oia  (book a room at the 18-suite Mystique) with its classic whitewashed,  cliff-edge architecture, blue-domed churches, and stone houses overhung  with bougainvillea canopies.

Barbuda, Caribbean
If your idea of Eden is unpaved roads, truly deserted beaches,  and nary a nightclub, this 68-square-mile island in the Eastern  Caribbean is for you. Barbuda features just a handful of high-end  hotels, including Coco Point Lodge, on its own 164-acre peninsula  fronting glorious pink-sand beaches. Take a boat trip to the Frigate  Bird Sanctuary on a lagoon in the island’s northwest and ogle the 5,000  namesake birds that call it home.

Laucala Island, Fiji
The South Pacific fantasy of swaying palm trees and extravagantly  lush scenery reaches its fullest expression here. There are just 25  cottages on this privately owned resort, which occupies the entire  island, each with a private pool, dining pavilion, and outdoor hot tub  and shower. While the resort attracts deep-pocketed travelers, don’t  expect glitzy lobbies. The emphasis is on rustic, pared-back luxury;  every detail seems crafted to appeal to couples, including the lagoon  pool with its man-made “islands” big enough for two.

Pamalican Island, The Philippines
You’ll find only one resort here—Amanpulo, set on its own private island southwest of Manila  with just 40 secluded pitched-roof traditional villas, strung along a  pristine beach with sand so white it’s blinding. Beachcombers can  navigate the entire island on foot in less than two hours, keeping their  eyes out for baby sharks, kingfishers, and sea turtles, which lay their  eggs here between March and October.

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