Punta Cana, Dominican Republic
Bávaro
The Bávaro beach strip Punta Cana packages actually book: which stretch of sand is which, the real airport-transfer time, and the excursions worth leaving the all-inclusive for.
In short
Bávaro at a glance
Bávaro is the long white-sand strip that the words 'Punta Cana' really mean for most UK package holidays: an almost continuous run of all-inclusive resorts along Playa Bávaro and Playa El Cortecito, 20 to 40 minutes north of Punta Cana airport (PUJ). It regularly ranks among the Caribbean's best beaches, and for a resort week the honest advice is simple — pick the right stretch, pre-book a transfer in, and let the all-inclusive do its job. The sand isn't uniform, though: Cabeza de Toro at the south end is calm and reef-sheltered, the central Bávaro and El Cortecito strip is the liveliest with the only walkable beach town, and Arena Gorda and Macao to the north are broader and breezier with more surf. Two or three excursions are worth leaving for — the catamaran day to Saona Island, the Hoyo Azul cenote at Scape Park, and a buggy run to wild Macao Beach — but the security picture is the same as the rest of the country, so book through your rep, not a beach tout, and keep valuables off the sand.
Bávaro is what people actually mean when they book “Punta Cana”: a near-continuous run of all-inclusive resorts along several kilometres of white sand, 20 to 40 minutes north of Punta Cana airport. The beach is the whole pitch, and it earns it — Playa Bávaro lands on best-of-Caribbean lists most years, the water is warm and shallow, and for a resort week the smart move is to lean into that rather than fight it. The one decision that shapes your trip is which stretch of the strip you book.
Because the sand isn’t uniform. At the south end, Cabeza de Toro is calm and reef-sheltered with the shortest transfer; the central Bávaro and El Cortecito section is the liveliest and the only part with a walkable beach village, where you can step off the resort for a fish lunch and a look at the fishing boats; and up north, Arena Gorda and Macao broaden out, breezier and with the surf that draws the buggy tours. Pick the stretch that matches what you want and you’ve made the trip’s biggest call.
Beyond the sand, two or three days are worth leaving for: the catamaran out to Saona Island from Bayahibe, the vivid blue Hoyo Azul cenote at Scape Park near Cap Cana, and a buggy run to undeveloped Macao Beach. The caveat is the same as for the rest of the country — crime is high, so book excursions through your rep rather than a beach tout, agree the price up front, and keep phones and jewellery off the sand. Get that right and Bávaro delivers exactly the easy, warm Caribbean week it’s sold as.
Towns & places in Bávaro
The route
Bávaro is a resort week, and the sensible plan treats it as one: settle into the beach, do two or three day-excursions, and don't pretend you're touring a country with a high crime rate. This is a 7-night skeleton with the worthwhile trips built in — stretch it to 10–14 nights by slowing down, not by changing bases. Excursion prices are per person and assume booking through your rep or a reputable operator rather than a beach tout.
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Day 1
Land at PUJ, transfer to the strip, do nothing
From Punta Cana airport it's a 20–40 minute pre-booked transfer north to your Bávaro resort (longer to Uvero Alto). With a 4–5 hour time shift and a 9-hour flight from Gatwick behind you, the first afternoon is for finding your bar and an early night, not an excursion.
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Days 2–3
Settle into Playa Bávaro
Bávaro's reason for being is the beach — soft white sand and warm, shallow water along Playa Bávaro and Playa El Cortecito. Use the resort's free non-motorised watersports, walk the 20 minutes into El Cortecito village for a non-resort lunch and a look at the fishing boats, and keep phones and jewellery off the sand. This is the part the all-inclusive does well.
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Day 4
Saona Island catamaran day
The signature Punta Cana excursion: a full day to Saona Island in Cotubanama National Park, usually a catamaran out and a fast boat back via the natural pool sandbar (~£55–80pp). It runs from Bayahibe, about 1h15–1h30 each way by road from Bávaro, so it's a long day — book through a reputable operator, take only what you need, and expect a lively party-boat atmosphere on the way home.
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Day 5
Scape Park & Hoyo Azul, or a Macao buggy run
Two good options close to home. Scape Park at Cap Cana (~25 minutes south) has the Hoyo Azul cenote — a vivid blue sinkhole pool — plus zip-lines and caves (~£90pp). Or do a half-day buggy/ATV trip to wild, undeveloped Macao Beach at the north end of the strip (~£40–60pp), the surf beach the resorts don't reach. Pick one and keep the other day for the beach.
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Days 6–7
Slow beach days, then transfer out
Keep it slow: last swims, settle any resort extras, and leave a buffer for the transfer back to PUJ — afternoon UK-bound departures mean a midday checkout and pickup. If history is calling, the long day trip to Santo Domingo's Colonial Zone is doable (~2h+ each way on Highway 3) but better given its own two nights than rushed from the beach.
Where to base yourself
Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.
Cabeza de Toro (south end)
££ mid-rangeThe quietest, most reef-sheltered stretch, with calm shallow water and a marina; close to the airport (~20 minutes) and to Scape Park, but the smallest cluster of resorts and no real beach village. Good for couples who want flat water and a short transfer over nightlife.
Best for: Calm water, short transfer, couples
Central Bávaro / El Cortecito
££ mid-rangeThe busy heart of the strip and the only part with a walkable beach village — El Cortecito's shops, local restaurants, fishing boats and excursion sellers sit right behind the sand. The widest choice of family, adults-only and value resorts, and the easiest place to leave the all-inclusive for a meal. The trade-off is more vendors and footfall on the beach.
Best for: First-timers, families, anyone who wants to walk to shops and bars
Arena Gorda & Macao (north end)
££ mid-rangeA broader, breezier beach with bigger surf and some of the largest new resorts (the Hard Rock and big family complexes sit here), running up towards wild Macao Beach. Emptier sand and often better value per star, at the cost of a longer transfer and fewer things within walking distance.
Best for: Big resorts, families, breezier beach
Uvero Alto (beyond the strip)
££ mid-rangeA separate, newer cluster of large resorts ~45–60 minutes north of the airport, beyond Macao, with emptier beaches and strong value but a longer transfer and almost nothing within walking distance. Best if you intend to stay put for the week.
Best for: Quiet, all-in stays where you won't move much
Cap Cana (south of the airport)
£££ premiumThe upmarket gated enclave south of PUJ with a marina, golf and the smartest hotels (Eden Roc, the Sanctuary, Margaritaville), plus Scape Park on the doorstep. Pricier and more polished than Bávaro proper, with a calmer Juanillo beach. A short transfer (~15–20 minutes) and a different, quieter vibe.
Best for: Premium stays, golf, marina dining
Getting around Bávaro
For a Bávaro week you mostly don't move: a pre-booked airport transfer in, the resort and its beach for most of the trip, and a couple of organised excursions out. That's the sensible default given the country's crime picture — GOV.UK flags motorcycle bag-snatchers and daytime muggings, so independent wandering and self-driving carry more risk here than on a typical European beach holiday. When you do travel, a pre-booked private transfer from Punta Cana airport to the Bávaro strip is about US$30–45 (~£24–36) each way and takes 20–40 minutes; Uvero Alto adds 15–20 minutes. Within the strip, resort shuttles, cheap shared 'Sichermay' open-air buses and the local guagua minibuses run along the main road, and short taxi hops between resorts and El Cortecito are easy but should be price-agreed before you set off. The big-ticket day trips — Saona from Bayahibe (~1h15–1h30 each way) and Santo Domingo (~2h+ on tolled Highway 3) — are best done as packaged tours with a driver rather than self-driving. Book excursions through your rep or a reputable operator, not a beach tout, agree the price and currency up front, and carry only what you need on excursion days.
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