Six Senses is opening a 3-island resort in South Carolina — and the journey starts on Hilton Head

Lovers of luxury and wellness, get ready: Six Senses is headed to the Lowcountry.

Set to open in 2026, the Six Senses South Carolina Islands will consist of a sprawling 460-acre property spanning Hilton Head Island, Daufuskie Island and Bay Point Island and will include a resort, one of the brand’s celebrated spas and even residential offerings.

Once open, guests will start their Six Senses journey on Hilton Head Island at a “welcome hub” with a restaurant and a shopping outlet, according to a statement from IHG, before being whisked off to the resort or residences on a hybrid yacht or electric water boat.

On Daufuskie Island, visitors will find guest rooms, suites and cottages along the beach, plus an all-day restaurant, a “specialty eatery and bar,” a beach club, a pool grill and various programming available throughout a visit.

For folks wanting more space to spread out, a few two- to five-bedroom guest residences will be available to book.

Daufuskie Island will also be home to a Six Senses Spa and the brand’s integrative wellness program, which includes activities like yoga and meditation, as well as visiting wellness practitioners with various specialties. Much of Six Senses focuses on personalization and, as IHG shared, an “approach that fuses scientific advances with ancient wisdom worth remembering.”

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But it won’t all be mindfulness. Guests can also enjoy some adventure on Daufuskie Island with water sports, sailing and fishing, as well as some local culture with studios highlighting local artists.

Outside the resort itself, guests can take advantage of a round of golf or even equine therapy at an integrated farm and golf course located on the island, which happens to be the southernmost inhabited sea island in South Carolina.

On Bay Point Island, branded residential villas will be available. These villas will be hurricane-resilient and modular and will feature eco-friendly designs and systems, including renewable energy, reverse-osmosis water supplies and helical piling that limits soil disruption. According to IHG, a limited number of these villas will be available for sale in 2024.

The residential units highlight the entire resort’s focus on sustainability, which is designed to help protect the area and reduce its overall environmental footprint.

There’s still much to learn about the upcoming resort, which is planned in partnership between IHG, Whitestone and Redrock Portfolio, Inc. What remains to be seen is whether it will open as the first Six Senses in the U.S., as properties in Hudson Valley, New York, and Napa Valley, California, are also in the pipeline.

The property also solidifies what Jolyon Bulley, IHG’s CEO of the Americas, told TPG earlier this year about IHG’s plans to launch Six Senses in the U.S. in “leisure resort” areas before potentially moving into “selected urban areas.”

You might remember that an urban Six Senses was originally planned for New York City, but that project was scrapped in 2022.

Either way, the upcoming push of Six Senses from sea to shining sea is a big win for IHG loyalists, though only time will tell what kind of price tag comes with the resort experience.

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