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Apple Vacations: From Family Business to Hyatt-Owned Giant

A Philadelphia-area startup became a $2.7B acquisition. Doylestown Travel was there in 1985, and we’re still here now.

What Butch Harmon Built at Sandals Emerald Bay

Tiger Woods’s coach brought tour-level instruction to a championship course on a Bahamian peninsula. The Atlantic is on three sides. The school is still running.

What Happens When a Resort Decides the Island Matters

$20M invested. 50,000 students. 250,000 coral fragments planted. This is what your stay supports.

The Infinity Pool Has a More Interesting History Than You Think

From Roman baths to the cantilevered pool above St. Lucia’s volcanic coast. A digressive history.

Butch Stewart Built an Empire Asking One Question

Why did Caribbean tourism only work for visitors? What happened next changed the islands permanently.
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A La Mode Vacations

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A La Mode Vacations · In business since 1985 · Before the internet · Before TripAdvisor · After all of that, still here · © 2026

Location · A La Mode Vacations

Why Where You Stay Changes Everything

By A La Mode Vacations · Caribbean Specialists Since 1985

Here is a thing that happens every day somewhere in the travel industry: a couple books a Sandals resort because it has the best swim-up suite photos on the website, arrives to find the property is on a rocky shoreline rather than a sandy beach, and spends the first day quietly recalibrating their expectations. The resort is excellent. The beach is not what they imagined. These are two separate facts, and the travel booking sites that sold them the trip presented only the first one.

The Caribbean has extraordinary variation compressed into a surprisingly small geographic area. Saint Lucia has dramatic volcanic terrain, black-sand coves, and the Pitons — two UNESCO-listed peaks that turn extraordinary colors at dusk. It does not have the long, flat, white-powder beaches that appear in most Caribbean photography. The Bahamas has those beaches. Jamaica has both, depending on which parish you’re in. Barbados’s west coast is calm and clear; its east coast faces the Atlantic and is beautiful in an entirely different, more turbulent way.

“The resort is not the destination. The destination is the destination. The resort is where you sleep, eat, and decompress from the destination.”

This matters practically. If you want to wake up and walk directly into warm, calm, shallow water, you want the west coast of Barbados or the protected lagoons of the Bahamas. If you want to hike a volcano in the morning and have a butler-delivered cocktail by the infinity pool in the afternoon, Saint Lucia is doing something the others are not. If you want five-star food in a setting where the Caribbean is genuinely visible from every restaurant table, Grenada’s LaSource has done the architectural work to make that possible.

The reason to use a specialist rather than a search engine is simple: a search engine sorts by price and reviews. A specialist sorts by what you actually want from a week. They are different algorithms, and only one of them involves a conversation.

Ready to find the right island for your trip?

Our specialists have visited every Sandals property in person. Tell us what matters most — and we’ll match you to exactly the right resort.

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Food & Table · A La Mode Vacations

The Quiet Revolution of the All-Inclusive Restaurant

By A La Mode Vacations · Caribbean Specialists Since 1985

There was a time, not long ago, when “all-inclusive dining” was a phrase that landed with a particular thud in the ears of anyone who cared about food. The buffet was a permanent fixture. The cocktails were sweet and premixed. The steak, when it appeared, arrived at a temperature that suggested it had been prepared at some point in the afternoon and kept warm since. This was not a secret that the resorts were hiding. It was simply the deal: unlimited quantity in exchange for a certain flexibility about quality.

That deal has been renegotiated. Sandals now operates more than 240 dining experiences across its Caribbean properties, a number that includes multiple celebrity-chef partnerships, dedicated Japanese omakase counters, farm-to-table concepts sourcing from local Caribbean producers, and a wine program that a serious sommelier would find worth discussing. The Soy restaurant at Sandals Royal Barbados — the flagship opened in 2017 — seats guests for a choreographed omakase progression that has no business existing inside an all-inclusive resort and yet does, without apology.

“The buffet is still there. It’s simply no longer the main character. It has been demoted to a supporting role and seems, on balance, to be handling the transition well.”

The practical consequence for travelers is that the question “what will I eat?” — once a reasonable source of concern before a Caribbean all-inclusive booking — has been replaced by a more interesting problem: which of the twelve restaurants do you want for Tuesday. This is a better problem to have. Our agents know which restaurants at which properties require advance reservations, which ones are genuinely worth the effort of securing a table, and which ones sound better in the brochure than they perform in practice. The distinction is worth asking about before you arrive.

Want to know which resort has the best food?

Honest opinion from agents who have actually eaten there. No brochure language. Just a real answer.

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History · A La Mode Vacations

Before the Resort, There Was Something Else Entirely

By A La Mode Vacations · Caribbean Specialists Since 1985

The address of the Sandals Royal Barbados sits on what was, for most of the 18th and 19th centuries, an active sugarcane plantation. The same is true for much of the luxury resort corridor that runs along Barbados’s Platinum Coast. Saint Lucia’s most celebrated resort properties are built on land that was variously French and British territory, occasionally simultaneously, over a fifty-year period in the 1700s that involved the island changing hands fourteen times. Jamaica’s Montego Bay — now home to five Sandals properties — was called “Lard Bay” by early British settlers, a name derived from the lard they rendered from the wild boar they found there, which is a considerably less glamorous origin story than the beaches currently suggest.

This is not ancient history that exists only in archives. It is, in many cases, visible. The great houses that administered plantation operations still stand on several Caribbean islands, some of them converted into restaurants or hotel public spaces. The stone fortifications the British and French built to defend their respective sugar investments still crown the hills above the bays where cruise ships now anchor. Walking Grenada’s capital, St. George’s, involves moving through a harbor town whose architecture dates to the 1700s and whose pastel buildings were painted, originally, to match the colors that French colonial administrators considered appropriate.

“Every Caribbean resort sits on a story. Most of them don’t put it in the brochure. The islands themselves, however, are not shy about it.”

The reason this matters for travelers is straightforward: the Caribbean is more interesting than its marketing department suggests. The resorts are good. The islands are extraordinary. They are not the same thing, and the best trips involve engaging with both. A good travel agent will help you plan the beach days. An exceptional one will point out that the drive from Sandals Saint Lucia to the Soufrière volcano is forty-five minutes and that it is an unreasonable thing to be that close to an active volcano and not go.

Want a trip that goes beyond the beach?

Our agents can build an itinerary that gets you into the islands, not just onto them. History, culture, and a very good villa to come back to.

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Brand Ambassador · A La Mode Vacations

Butch Stewart Built an Empire Asking One Question

By A La Mode Vacations · Caribbean Specialists Since 1985

Gordon “Butch” Stewart was an air-conditioning salesman when he opened his first hotel in Montego Bay, Jamaica in 1981. He had no formal training in hospitality. What he had was a single observation that most of the resort industry had missed: Caribbean tourism, as it existed at the time, was structured entirely around the visitor. The locals who built, cleaned, cooked, and served in the resorts went home at the end of the shift to communities that saw essentially none of the money. The beaches were for tourists. The nice restaurants were for tourists. The island, it often seemed, was a stage set rather than a place where people actually lived.

Stewart’s question was simple: what if the resort industry actually invested in the islands it depended on? The Sandals Foundation, which he established in 2009, has put $20 million into Caribbean education, health, and environmental programs. Fifty thousand students have received educational support. Two hundred and fifty thousand coral fragments have been planted through the foundation’s reef restoration programs — a number significant enough that marine biologists cite it in academic papers about Caribbean reef recovery.

“He asked why Caribbean tourism only worked for visitors. The answer he built has funded schools, hospitals, and coral reefs across eight islands.”

Stewart died in 2021. His family continues to operate Sandals and Beaches Resorts. The company remains privately held, which means the long-term thinking that characterized Stewart’s approach to the Caribbean — the investments that don’t pay off in a single quarter but that build something over decades — is structurally possible in a way it wouldn’t be for a publicly traded company. When you book a Sandals resort, you are booking into a business that has decided, as a matter of company policy, that the islands it operates on matter beyond their utility as a backdrop for vacation photography. This is not the most common position in the resort industry.

Book a resort that gives back to the Caribbean.

Your stay directly supports education, reef restoration, and community development across eight Caribbean islands. Our agents will help you find the right property.

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Did You Know · A La Mode Vacations

The Infinity Pool Has a More Interesting History Than You Think

By A La Mode Vacations · Caribbean Specialists Since 1985

The infinity pool is, technically speaking, a hydraulic trick. The water is not actually falling into the sky or the ocean or whatever horizon it appears to be merging with. There is a catch basin below the overflow edge, the water circulates back, and the whole arrangement is engineered specifically to produce the illusion of a pool without edges — an effect that was first achieved, at architectural scale, in French formal garden design of the 17th century, where reflecting pools were deliberately positioned to produce the same visual elision of water and sky. The Romans had overflow pools. The medieval Islamic world built them into garden architecture. The concept is ancient. The branding is recent.

The modern resort infinity pool in its current form — dramatically cantilevered over a hillside or beachfront, positioned for a specific view, photographed from a specific angle in the late afternoon light — can be traced reasonably confidently to a 1992 project by landscape architect John Lautner in Palm Springs. It was adopted by the luxury resort industry slowly through the 1990s and then, once the internet made resort photography a primary driver of booking decisions, very quickly indeed. The visual grammar is now universal: vanishing edge, view, late afternoon sun, possibly a cocktail in frame.

“The pool above the Pitons at Jade Mountain was not designed to be photographed. It was designed to be in. The photography was an afterthought. The view was the point.”

What varies, significantly, is the quality of the view the pool is positioned to frame. The infinity pool at Jade Mountain in Saint Lucia looks directly at the Pitons — two volcanic spires rising from the Caribbean that are, by general agreement, among the most dramatic geological formations in the Western Hemisphere. The pool at Sandals Royal Barbados has the Platinum Coast. The pool at Iberostar’s Joia Maya in Mexico has the Riviera Maya jungle canopy and a glimpse of the Caribbean beyond it. The hydraulics are identical. The experience of sitting in them is completely different, which is why the choice of pool matters as much as the fact of having one.

Which infinity pool is worth the trip?

Our agents have sat in the best ones in the Caribbean and Mexico. Ask us which view is worth what you’re spending.

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The Sandals Foundation · A La Mode Vacations

What Happens When a Resort Decides the Island MattersWhat Happens When a Resort Decides the Island Matters

By A La Mode Vacations · Caribbean Specialists Since 1985

There is a reef off the coast of Grenada that is recovering. Coral fragments — 250,000 of them — have been planted along sections of the reef that suffered bleaching events during particularly warm Atlantic seasons in the early 2000s. The program responsible for this is run by the Sandals Foundation and staffed, in part, by marine biology students from Caribbean universities who receive scholarship support from the same foundation. The scholarships exist because the foundation also funds education. The students study at universities where the Sandals Foundation has built science laboratories. The laboratories are in schools that the foundation renovated. The circle closes, as the better philanthropic programs tend to do, with the money going into systems rather than gestures.

Twenty million dollars. That is the figure the Sandals Foundation cites for total community investment since its founding in 2009. It covers education, environment, and community development across eight Caribbean islands. Fifty thousand students have received some form of educational support. The reef program is the most visible externally but may not be the most significant locally — that distinction likely belongs to the school feeding programs, which operate in areas where a reliable hot meal at school is not something every family can guarantee.

“$20 million. Eight islands. The accounting is straightforward. What it adds up to is harder to quantify: a set of islands that are genuinely better because a resort decided it was their problem too.”

For travelers choosing between resort brands at similar price points, the Sandals Foundation is one differentiating factor that the websites don’t tend to put in the headline. It probably should be. A vacation at a Sandals property in Saint Lucia or Jamaica is, in a small but real way, a contribution to the educational and environmental infrastructure of the island you are visiting. This does not make it charity. It makes it a choice with slightly better consequences than the alternatives, which seems worth knowing about.

Book a stay that supports the islands.

Our agents will match you to the right Sandals property. You pay the same price as booking direct. The reef benefits either way.

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Sandals · Golf · Legacy Partnership

Butch Harmon at Sandals. What the World’s Best Golf Coach Built in the Caribbean.

By A La Mode Vacations · Sandals Elite Specialist

Butch Harmon is, by most accounts, the most decorated golf instructor in the history of the sport. He coached Tiger Woods through the most dominant run in professional golf — the late 1990s and early 2000s — and subsequently worked with Phil Mickelson, Greg Norman, Adam Scott, and a list of tour professionals that reads like a Hall of Fame ballot. He is the son of Claude Harmon, who won the 1948 Masters. Golf instruction, in the Harmon family, is not a career so much as a vocation that spans generations.

His connection to Sandals Resorts grew from exactly the kind of relationship that the resort industry is built on: a genuine enthusiasm for a product that he then chose to represent publicly. Harmon developed a partnership with Sandals that established the Butch Harmon School of Golf at Sandals Emerald Bay in the Bahamas — a championship course set on one of the most dramatic pieces of golf real estate in the Caribbean, designed by Greg Norman on a peninsula with the Atlantic on three sides. The school brought Harmon’s instructional methodology — the same framework that rebuilt Tiger Woods’s swing — to guests who had never had access to tour-level instruction and who were, as it happened, already at an all-inclusive resort with nothing scheduled for Tuesday morning.

“Harmon brought the same swing methodology that produced Tiger Woods’s best golf to a beach resort in the Bahamas. The students are less experienced than Tiger. The Atlantic backdrop is considerably better.”

The practical result for Sandals guests is a golf program that takes the instruction seriously in a way that most resort golf schools do not. The Harmon methodology emphasizes fundamentals over fixes: grip, stance, and the mechanics of a repeatable swing rather than the spot adjustments that most resort lessons offer. Guests who have gone through the program at Emerald Bay consistently report that they arrived as recreational golfers and left with something to actually work on — which is a different outcome from most vacation golf experiences, where the lesson is pleasant and the improvement is negligible.

The Emerald Bay course itself is worth noting separately from the school. Eighteen holes on a peninsula in the southern Bahamas, Greg Norman design, no development visible from most of the fairways — just the Atlantic, the island’s interior, and the particular blue of the Bahamian sky at seven in the morning when the course opens. For couples where one person golfs seriously and one does not, the proximity to a full-service Sandals property means the non-golfer is not simply waiting. They are, in all likelihood, in a swim-up suite. This is a workable arrangement.

Book Sandals Emerald Bay — with golf or without.

Our Sandals Elite Specialist certification means we can book the Butch Harmon school sessions alongside your room. Same price as direct. We handle the details.

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Agency Story · A La Mode Vacations · Since 1985

Apple Vacations: From Family Business to Hyatt-Owned Giant. We Were There Every Step.

By A La Mode Vacations · Apple Vacations Elite Partner Since 1985

Apple Vacations was founded in 1969 by John Mullen, a Philadelphia-area entrepreneur who had a straightforward idea: package the flights, the hotel, and the transfers into a single price, and sell them to working families who wanted a real vacation but didn’t have the time or the expertise to arrange all three pieces separately. The company operated out of suburban Philadelphia, served a largely Northeastern customer base, and was, by the standards of the travel industry, a modest regional operation. It was also, in retrospect, precisely the right business model at precisely the right moment in American consumer history.

The all-inclusive resort concept was still developing in the Caribbean through the 1970s and early 1980s. As it crystallized — as properties in Jamaica, Mexico, and the Dominican Republic figured out that the unlimited-everything model generated both guest satisfaction and advance payment certainty — Apple Vacations found itself positioned to distribute these resorts to exactly the market that wanted them. The Philadelphia suburbs. The mid-Atlantic corridor. Families who had never heard of the Riviera Maya but who, once they understood what “all-inclusive” meant in practical terms, immediately wanted to go. Doylestown Travel — A La Mode Vacations — was among the agencies that helped translate this new category to clients who trusted us rather than a brochure.

“Apple started as a regional Philadelphia operation serving families who wanted the Caribbean but didn’t know where to start. Doylestown Travel was one of the agencies that showed them the door.”

The company grew steadily through the 1980s and 1990s, becoming one of the largest sellers of all-inclusive vacations in the United States. It merged with Funjet Vacations in the early 2000s under the umbrella of Apple Leisure Group, which expanded the portfolio to include hotel brands — first through partnerships, then through ownership. The AMR Collection, which includes Secrets, Dreams, Breathless, and Zoëtry, was acquired and developed under Apple Leisure Group. By 2021, the portfolio had grown to the point where it attracted Hyatt Hotels Corporation, which acquired Apple Leisure Group in a transaction valued at approximately $2.7 billion. The family vacation company from suburban Philadelphia had become a corporate giant with a Fortune 500 acquirer.

For A La Mode Vacations, the forty-year relationship with Apple and its successor companies is not primarily a business history. It is a client history. The couples we booked on their first Cancún trip in 1989 came back in 1994 with children. The children came back in 2010 as couples. The couples are now coming back with their own children to resorts that didn’t exist when their parents first went. Apple Vacations grew because the product worked. We grew alongside it because the clients kept coming back. The Hyatt acquisition changes the corporate structure but not the fundamental transaction: a family that trusts us to send them somewhere good, and forty years of evidence that we will.

Book Apple Vacations through the agency that was there at the beginning.

Same price as booking direct. Elite Partner access. Forty years of knowing which resorts actually deliver on what the brochure promises.

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Iberostar Joia Collection · Riviera Maya, Mexico

The Resort You Won’t Find on Expedia. Or Anywhere Else.

Mature jungle canopy. A saltwater lagoon pool. Food that sources from Mexican farms by name. This is what a family-owned resort looks like when no one is watching the quarterly numbers.

By A La Mode Vacations · Apple Leisure Group Elite Partner · On Property

Most resort properties in the Riviera Maya were built on cleared land — the jungle pushed back, the footprint leveled, the infrastructure installed. Joia Maya was built differently. The property sits within mature coastal jungle that Iberostar specifically chose not to clear. The result is something you genuinely cannot appreciate from a photograph: the main pool, which is fed by a natural saltwater lagoon system rather than treated freshwater, is flanked by decades-old trees whose canopy provides organic shade at midday, filters the afternoon light into something the photographers spend hours trying to replicate artificially, and creates a sound environment — birds, wind through actual old growth — that you don’t find at resorts built on previously developed land. You feel the age of the place. This is intentional.

The saltwater pool deserves its own sentence. At most resorts, the pool is chemically treated freshwater, chlorinated to a standard that keeps it clear and keeps the liability lawyers satisfied. At Joia Maya, the main lagoon pool uses filtered natural saltwater from the adjacent lagoon system. It is gentler on the skin, it does not have the chemical smell that most resort pools carry, and it creates the particular sensation of swimming in water that feels alive rather than processed. Guests who have stayed at multiple Riviera Maya properties consistently identify this as one of the details that makes Joia Maya feel categorically different from its neighbors.

“The pool is saltwater from the lagoon. The jungle is original growth. The fish on your plate was caught within fifty kilometers. Expedia’s star rating does not have a field for any of this.”

The food program is the third thing that distinguishes Joia Maya from the all-inclusive category in general. Iberostar made a company-wide commitment to responsible sourcing — part of the Wave of Change initiative — that at Joia Maya translates into kitchen relationships with named local producers. The fish served in the restaurant’s seafood program is sourced from Mexican fishing cooperatives operating under sustainable certification, and the kitchen team knows which boat caught what. The produce — the tomatoes, the chiles, the herbs that appear in the salsas and the ceviches — comes from farms in the Yucatán state that supply the property directly. This is not farm-to-table as a marketing slogan. It is the actual supply chain, documented and verifiable, and it shows up on the plate in a way that guests who have eaten at Joia Maya and then returned to other all-inclusive properties notice immediately. The food at the other place seems, suddenly, to come from somewhere else. It does. That’s the point.

The overwater bungalows were built over the natural lagoon because the lagoon was there and the engineering was sound. This matters: the glass-floor panels look directly into the mangrove lagoon system, not into a constructed water feature. At certain times of day, fish are visible below the glass. The mangroves are part of the Wave of Change restoration program. The bungalow decks extend over water that is, by design, getting healthier every year the program runs. You are staying in an amenity that is also a conservation project. Whether this influences your choice of resort is a personal matter. It is, in any case, not something Expedia’s search algorithm surfaces.

Book Joia Maya through an Elite Partner.

Same price as direct — with overwater bungalow category advice (not all lagoon views are equal), Wave of Change excursion booking, and the saltwater pool rooms that sell out first. Our agents have been on property. Choose how to connect:

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Just Opened · Joia Collection

Joia Aruba — Eagle Beach. The World’s #1 Beach. Finally.

Zero hurricanes. Constant trade winds. The most reliably blue water in the Caribbean. Iberostar has arrived exactly where it should have been all along.

By A La Mode Vacations · Apple Leisure Group Elite Partner

There is a reason travel writers who cover the Caribbean return to Aruba with a frequency that seems, at first, disproportionate. It is not simply that Eagle Beach is consistently ranked among the finest beaches on the planet — though it is, and has been, for most of the years that travel publications have been conducting such rankings. It is that Aruba is genuinely, structurally different from every other Caribbean island in the tourist ecosystem, and the difference is meteorological before it is anything else. Aruba sits outside the hurricane belt. This is not a slogan. It is a geographical fact derived from the island’s position twelve degrees north of the equator, well below the latitude at which Atlantic hurricane systems organize. In forty years of modern resort development on Aruba, no hurricane has made landfall. The hotels that opened in 1985 look essentially as they did in 1990. The beach has not changed. The weather, for approximately 340 days per year, is 82 degrees, sunny, and moderated by trade winds blowing consistently from the northeast off the Atlantic. You can book Aruba in September — the height of Caribbean hurricane season — with the same meteorological confidence as March.

“Zero hurricanes in forty years of modern resort development. The trade winds keep Eagle Beach at 82 degrees and clear skies for roughly 340 days a year. Aruba is not the most dramatic Caribbean island. It is the most reliably perfect one.”

Eagle Beach itself is what the travel industry calls a powder beach: fine-grained white coral sand, shallow for a long distance from shore, water that moves through turquoise into a deep cobalt where the reef begins. The beach is wide enough that even at capacity it does not feel crowded. The trade winds that guarantee the weather also mean the water has gentle, consistent movement — not waves, exactly, but the kind of mild chop that keeps the surface interesting without making it difficult to simply float. The snorkeling off Eagle Beach requires no boat. The reef is reachable from the shoreline and contains the kind of coral and fish diversity that reef systems in busier tourist corridors have lost over the past twenty years. Aruba’s reef system, protected by the island’s government and relatively undisturbed by the storm systems that damage Caribbean reefs elsewhere, is in better condition than almost anywhere in the region.

The Joia Aruba property brings Iberostar’s flagship collection to this setting for the first time. The Joia standard — the food sourcing from local producers and fishermen, the Wave of Change marine conservation program visible to guests in snorkeling and dive itineraries with the resort’s own marine biologist, the adults-only environment with the particular quiet that produces — transfers to Aruba with one significant addition: the beach. At Joia Maya, you must walk to the beach or take the resort shuttle. At Joia Aruba, Eagle Beach is the front yard. The relationship between guest and water is immediate and uncomplicated in a way that the Riviera Maya’s geography, with its lagoons and reef barriers, cannot quite replicate. The food, by the same principle, now incorporates Aruban ingredients: the local catch from the island’s fishing industry, produce from the small but serious community of farms operating in the island’s interior, and the Dutch-Caribbean culinary tradition that gives Aruba’s food culture its particular character — lighter than the rest of the Caribbean, influenced by the Netherlands, and genuinely its own thing in a way most island cuisine is not.

The detail that Expedia will not tell you about Joia Aruba: the trade winds, which make the weather perfect, also make the outdoor dining experience at the property genuinely exceptional. Eating on an open terrace in Aruba at sunset, with the consistent northeast breeze and the Eagle Beach view, is not a thing you can photograph adequately. It requires being present. Our agents can make sure you’re booked into the room categories that make this as straightforward as possible.

Be among the first to stay at Joia Aruba.

Just opened. Limited room inventory. Our Elite Partner status means we hear about availability before it hits the public booking sites. Choose how to connect — we’ll confirm availability and walk you through what’s worth the upgrade:

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Iberostar Hotels & Resorts · Est. 1956

Iberostar: A Family Business That Became a Global Standard

From a single shoe factory in Mallorca in 1930 to one of the world’s most awarded hotel collections. The story of Iberostar is the story of what happens when a family decides, quietly and without announcement, to be excellent at everything they do.

By A La Mode Vacations · Apple Leisure Group Elite Partner

The Fluxa family of Mallorca started in shoes. The year was 1930; the business was a small factory producing footwear for the Spanish market, operating out of the island whose name — for most of the 20th century — was more associated with almonds and olives than with international tourism. The hotel business came later, in 1956, when the family opened their first property and discovered something that has shaped the company’s direction for the seven decades since: the hospitality business, done correctly, rewards exactly the qualities that the Fluxa family already possessed. Attention to materials. Patience with long-term investments. A refusal to cut corners that is both a family value and, it turns out, a competitive advantage in an industry that cuts corners constantly.

What distinguishes Iberostar from every other major resort brand is an ownership structure that the industry considers unusual and that guests experience as consistency. Iberostar owns its hotels. The Fluxa family has never sold equity, never franchised the name, never entered a management-contract arrangement where they operated a property someone else owned. This matters for a reason that most resort guests never think about but immediately feel: when the owners are also the operators, and when the operators intend to still be operating the same properties in twenty years, the decisions that get made about maintenance, renovation, staffing, and food quality are different from the decisions made by a brand that manages properties on behalf of third-party investors. The investors want yield. The Fluxa family wants the resort to still be exceptional in 2045. These are different objectives, and they produce different hotels.

“From a shoe factory in 1930 to the Joia Collection in 2024. Nearly a century. One family. Zero equity sold. The quality you feel at a Joia property is the direct result of decisions made on a century-long time horizon.”

The food program across all Joia Collection properties is the most direct expression of this philosophy in a form that guests interact with three times a day. Iberostar made a company-wide commitment under the Wave of Change initiative to source all seafood sustainably and to build direct relationships with local agricultural producers at every property. At Joia Maya, this means the kitchen team knows the names of the farms supplying their chiles, tomatoes, and herbs. The fish on the ceviche menu was caught within fifty kilometers. The mezcal list was assembled by someone with genuine opinions about Oaxacan production. At Joia Aruba, the local catch from the island’s fishing community and produce from Aruban farms feed a Dutch-Caribbean culinary program that is unlike anything else in the all-inclusive category. This is not a marketing statement. It is a supply chain, and it shows up in the food in a way that guests who have eaten at Joia properties and then returned to standard all-inclusive resorts notice within approximately one meal.

The Wave of Change program — plastic-free operations across all properties, sustainable sourcing across all restaurants, active reef and marine restoration at all coastal resorts — is the most visible external expression of the same internal logic. A company that intends to operate the same beach resorts for another century has a self-interested reason to ensure the beaches and reefs are in good condition in fifty years. The coral fragments being planted by the marine biology teams at Joia properties are not a charitable exercise. They are an investment in the asset base. The fact that they also happen to be the correct thing to do for the Caribbean ecosystem is, from the Fluxa family’s perspective, an alignment of interests rather than a sacrifice.

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