Cupecoy for Retirees: A Local's Neighborhood Guide (2026)

Cupecoy is the closest thing Sint Maarten has to a planned, luxury, walkable retirement neighborhood. Even though that’s not what it was designed to be. It’s a cluster of upscale condo towers, a marina, a college campus, restaurants, and quiet residential pockets, all on the western tip of the Dutch side just before the French border.

Cupecoy is one of the four or five neighborhoods I show almost every North American retiree, and it’s the right answer for a specific kind of buyer. Here’s who.

Key Takeaways

Where Cupecoy is

The far west of the Dutch side, on the cliffs above Plum Bay and Cupecoy Beach. Drive 5 minutes east and you’re in Maho. Drive 5 minutes west and you cross into French-side Terres Basses (technically the wealthiest residential area on the island). Drive 25 minutes east and you’re at the airport. Drive 35 minutes east and you’re at SMMC at Cay Hill.

 

The neighborhood sits 100–250 feet above sea level on the cliffs, which means dramatic views, strong wind, and lower flood risk than coastal-level neighborhoods.

What Cupecoy actually feels like

Mornings are quiet. The college campus (American University of the Caribbean School of Medicine) brings a small student population, but they’re in class or studying through the day. Most residents in the towers are couples 50+ or families with one or two visits a year.

 

The neighborhood has a small grocery (Mendies, Maho Market just over the line), several mid-to-upscale restaurants (Karakter Beach Bar, La Patrona, El Zafiro, Skipjack’s nearby), the Mullet Bay golf course (with restaurant), and the marina-adjacent Porto Cupecoy plaza with a few dining options.

 

Evenings: people walk to dinner. Sunsets at Cupecoy Beach are one of the genuinely best on the island. By 10pm the area is quiet.

Who Cupecoy is right for

Who Cupecoy is wrong for

The major buildings (the names you'll see in listings)

Each has its own personality, HOA structure, and renter/owner ratio. Renter-heavy buildings have more turnover and noise; owner-heavy buildings feel residential.

 

Property prices in Cupecoy (2026 ranges)

Property type Range (USD)
1BR condo, mid-tier $300,000–$500,000
1BR oceanfront, premium $500,000–$800,000
2BR mid-tier $500,000–$800,000
2BR oceanfront premium $900,000–$1.5M
3BR / penthouse $1.2M–$3M+
Premium penthouse / villa $2.5M+

Pricing is more uniform than in some neighborhoods because the inventory is concentrated in a few comparable buildings. Comp analysis is straightforward.

Cost of ownership in Cupecoy

Beyond the purchase price:

Total monthly carry on a $600K 2BR: roughly $1,400–$1,900/month in fixed costs.

Walkability and daily life

By SXM standards, Cupecoy is genuinely walkable. From the major towers you can walk to:

You still need a car. But many Cupecoy residents drive 2-3 times per week instead of every day.

Healthcare access from Cupecoy

For a retiree with chronic conditions requiring frequent specialist visits, Cupecoy’s drive-time to SMMC is acceptable. It’s not faster than living in Cay Hill or Cole Bay, but it’s not significantly slower.

Hurricane and elevation considerations

Cupecoy sits at 100–250 feet above sea level, which:

Lower-floor units in towers fared well in Irma (2017); ground-floor and beachfront units had more variable outcomes. Insurance underwriters generally rate Cupecoy mid-tier. Better than ocean-level neighborhoods, similar to Pelican Key.

 

When evaluating a specific Cupecoy property, ask: structural age, post-Irma upgrades, hurricane shutter system, building HOA reserve fund for repairs.

The Cupecoy social scene

The Cupecoy social scene

It’s social if you want it. It’s quiet if you don’t.

Common questions

Is Cupecoy safe?

 Yes. Most towers have 24/7 security and gated parking. Outside the towers the area is well-traveled and feels safe. Standard Caribbean precautions apply (don’t leave valuables in cars).

 

What’s the noise level? 

Daytime is quiet. Some buildings hear airplane traffic from Princess Juliana (the Maho-airport-spectacle is 5 minutes away. But Cupecoy is over a small ridge from the noisiest part). Evening is quiet. Weekends, some Karakter Beach Bar music carries.

 

Can I rent before buying?

 Yes. Rental inventory is good, especially November-April. Expect $2,500-$5,500/month for 2BR depending on building and view.

Is Cupecoy good for snowbirds? 

Yes. It’s specifically designed for lock-and-leave. Many buildings have rental programs that produce income while you’re away.

 

What about the AUC medical school students?

 They’re present but not disruptive. Most live in dedicated student housing. The campus brings a small population of young adults to the neighborhood, which keeps the area lively without changing its character.

 

Is there public transport? 

Limited. Most retirees drive. Taxis and Uber-equivalent services are available.

 

What’s the worst thing about Cupecoy? For some buyers: it doesn’t feel “Caribbean enough.” It feels more cosmopolitan/Mediterranean than tropical. If you came for thatched-roof rustic, look elsewhere.

 

What’s the best thing about Cupecoy? 

The combination of premium amenities, walkability, sunset views, and security in one neighborhood. There isn’t another SXM neighborhood with this exact stack.

What to do next

01

Spend at least 2 weeks renting in Cupecoy before deciding.

02

Tour at least 3 buildings. The differences matter.

03

Review HOA financials and minutes for any building you’re seriously considering.

04

Read the Maho retire guide for the natural sister-comparison neighborhood.

05

Compare with Pelican Key. The closest budget alternative to Cupecoy.

06

Book a Day With Wei to walk Cupecoy candidates with me.

All 8 neighborhoods

Cupecoy

Polished. Walkable. Cliff-top.

Simpson Bay

Marina life. Restaurants. Boats.

Pelican Key

Quiet. Mid-priced. Canadian.

Maho

Beach. Planes. Dining.

Cole Bay

Central. Authentic. Local.

Oyster Pond

Calm. Marina. French border.

Guana Bay

Surf. Wind. Space.

Point Blanche

Hilltop. View. Value.Polished. Walkable. Cliff-top.
Past curiosity, into planning? Spend a day on the island with me. Four neighborhoods, eight hours, no fluff.

Continue reading

No. 01

The retirement guide hub

No. 03

Pelican Key for Retirees: The Local's Neighborhood Guide

No. 04

Maho for Retirees: The Local's Neighborhood Guide

No. 05

Cole Bay for Retirees: A Local's Honest Neighborhood Guide

No. 06

Oyster Pond for Retirees: The Local's Neighborhood Guide

No. 07

Guana Bay for Retirees: The Local's Neighborhood Guide

No. 08

Point Blanche for Retirees: The Hidden Hilltop Value

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