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- By Wei Landgraf
Simpson Bay for Retirees: The Local's Neighborhood Guide (2026)
Simpson Bay is the most active, most marine-oriented, most-restaurant-dense neighborhood on Sint Maarten. It’s where boats live and where dinner reservations happen. For retirees who came here because the water and the social scene are what they were chasing, Simpson Bay is hard to beat.
Simpson Bay isn’t right for everyone. It’s busier than other retiree-friendly neighborhoods. Here’s the unvarnished read.
Key Takeaways
- Best for: active retirees, boat owners, snowbirds, social/restaurant-oriented buyers.
- Property prices (2026): 1BR condos $200K–$400K; 2BR $400K–$800K; villas/townhomes $700K–$2M+; lagoon-front premium $1M+.
- HOA fees: $300–$900/month depending on building.
- Walkability: strong. Many restaurants, two gyms, multiple grocery options, marina amenities all within reach.
- Healthcare: 10-15 minutes to SMMC; multiple GP and specialist clinics in the neighborhood.
- Major caveat: noise. The neighborhood is alive. That's its appeal and its cost.
Where Simpson Bay is
Central-west Dutch side, wrapped around the south end of Simpson Bay Lagoon and along the south coast facing the Caribbean. The airport (Princess Juliana International) sits right on Simpson Bay’s south edge. Meaning you’re 2-5 minutes from departures and arrivals. SMMC is 10-15 minutes east. Cole Bay is 5 minutes north. Maho is 5 minutes west.
It’s the central nervous system of the Dutch side.
What Simpson Bay actually feels like
Wake-up: the lagoon is mirror-flat at sunrise. By 8am there’s marine activity. Boats moving in and out, charter operators prepping, fishing trips heading offshore. Mornings are buzzy but pleasant.
Midday: lagoon-front restaurants fill for lunch. The neighborhood has a real rhythm. Boat people, restaurant people, tourists from Maho/Cupecoy coming over for the marina dining, and residents.
Evenings: dinner reservations at Lal’s, Pineapple Pete’s, Top Carrot, Lee’s, Karakter, Chesterfield’s, Skipjack’s, multiple sushi spots. Music carries from a few of the more energetic places.
Late: portions of Simpson Bay (especially around Old Street) get loud Friday-Saturday with bar/club traffic. Choose your specific street carefully.
Who Simpson Bay is right for
- Retirees who own or want to own a boat (slip access matters)
- Couples who eat out 4-7 times per week and value walking distance
- Snowbirds who want resort-style amenities and rental income potential
- Active retirees (yoga, gym, beach walks, paddle, kayak)
- Buyers willing to trade quiet for vibrancy
Who Simpson Bay is wrong for
- Retirees seeking quiet residential calm
- Anyone sensitive to airplane noise (the airport is right there)
- Buyers who want privacy and seclusion
- Those uncomfortable with bar/restaurant noise within earshot
- People who want a 'village' feel. Simpson Bay is mixed-use commercial-residential
The sub-areas of Simpson Bay
Simpson Bay isn’t one place. It’s a few:
Simpson Bay Lagoon-front (north side)
Lagoon views, slip access, restaurant-row. Buildings: Simpson Bay Yacht Club residences, Atlantis II, Aqua Marina, Caymanas. Premium property; premium HOAs.
South Simpson Bay (Caribbean-facing)
Old Street area
Restaurants, bars, nightlife. Lively. Some loft apartments above commercial; not for the noise-averse.
Pelican Key (technically separate but contiguous)
The quieter, residential-leaning area to the east. Many retirees end up choosing Pelican Key for the calm + Simpson Bay proximity. See Pelican Key guide.
The Yacht Club neighborhoods
Sint Maarten Yacht Club (SBYC) and Princess Yacht Club anchor the boating community. SBYC membership is highly social and a real feature for some buyers.
Property prices in Simpson Bay (2026 ranges)
| Property Type | Range (USD) |
|---|---|
| 1BR Condo (Off-Water) | $200,000–$350,000 |
| 1BR Lagoon-View | $300,000–$500,000 |
| 2BR Mid-Tier | $400,000–$700,000 |
| 2BR Lagoon-Front Premium | $700,000–$1.2M |
| Townhome / Small Villa | $700,000–$1.5M |
| Premium Villa with Slip | $1.5M–$3M+ |
Slip-access units carry significant premiums. If you don’t need a slip, save real money.
Cost of ownership
| Line | Range |
|---|---|
| HOA | $300–$900/month |
| Power | $300–$600/month |
| Property Insurance | 1.5–2.5% of value/year |
| Slip Fees (if applicable) | $300–$1,500/month |
A $500K 2BR without a slip carries roughly $1,200–$1,700/month in fixed costs. Add $300-$1,500 for slip if you have one.
Walkability and daily life
Simpson Bay has the best walkability for daily life of any SXM neighborhood:
- Multiple groceries within walking distance (Le Grand Marché Cole Bay is a 5-minute drive; smaller markets in Simpson Bay itself).
- Restaurants: 30+ within 10-minute walk depending on starting point.
- Marina services: chandlery, fuel dock, repair, charter desk.
- Two gyms.
- Banks, pharmacies, hair/nail.
- Beach access: Simpson Bay Beach itself, Kim Sha Beach, easy drive to Mullet Bay or Maho.
Many Simpson Bay retirees drive only 2-4 times per week.
Healthcare access
- GPs and clinics: multiple in Simpson Bay; 5-10 minutes drive.
- Pharmacies: several within walking distance.
- SMMC: 10-15 minutes east.
- CHLCF (French side): 15-20 minutes.
This is among the best healthcare-access locations on the island.
Noise. The honest variable
Simpson Bay’s defining trade-off. By section:
- Old Street area: loud Friday/Saturday nights until 2am. Avoid if you sleep early.
- Lagoon-front, mid-residential: moderate. Boat sounds, occasional restaurant music carrying across water.
- South Simpson Bay (beach side): quieter, mostly wind and waves.
- Yacht Club residential pockets: quiet during the day, mild boat traffic.
Airplane noise: the runway flight path crosses the lagoon. The famous Maho beach plane-spotting view is real but localized. From most Simpson Bay residential properties, planes are an occasional rumble, not a constant. Worst is around takeoffs (visible from many lagoon-front balconies).
If you’re sensitive to noise, prioritize Pelican Key, Cupecoy upper-floor, or Cole Bay over Simpson Bay.
Hurricane considerations
Simpson Bay was hit hard by Irma (2017) due to:
- Sea-level coastal exposure
- Lagoon storm surge potential
- Boat-debris hazards in the marina
Modern construction post-Irma is built or retrofitted to category-5 standards. Some older waterfront properties still carry residual risk. When evaluating, ask:
- Has the building been inspected and certified post-Irma?
- What's the HOA reserve fund?
- Insurance underwriter rating for the specific building.
Lower-elevation lagoon-front carries higher hurricane risk than upper-floor units in towers.
If you’re social, Simpson Bay is rich:
- SBYC (Sint Maarten Yacht Club). Central social hub for boaters and many retirees who don't even own boats. Friday racing nights, regattas, weekly events.
- Multiple restaurants run informal Friday-night gatherings.
- Yoga and fitness classes with active expat groups.
- Charity events, lecture series, art shows rotate through.
It’s harder to be lonely in Simpson Bay than in any other SXM neighborhood.
Common questions
Is Simpson Bay safe?
Generally yes. Well-traveled, well-lit, residentially mixed with restaurants and businesses. Standard precautions apply.
Is the airplane noise a deal-breaker?
Depends on your specific property and tolerance. Most residential Simpson Bay isn’t bothered. Lagoon-front lower-floor and direct flight-path properties hear more. Visit at multiple times of day before deciding.
Can I keep a boat here?
Yes. That’s a major feature. Slip availability ranges from $200/month (small slips) to $2,000+/month (premium superyacht slips at Yacht Club Port de Plaisance just over in Cole Bay).
What about the lagoon water quality?
Simpson Bay Lagoon is generally clean enough for swimming and watersports. Post-rain runoff can affect quality briefly. Most residents prefer Caribbean-side beaches for swimming.
Is the noise just on weekends?
Mostly, yes. Tuesday at 9pm in most of Simpson Bay is quiet. Friday-Saturday is when Old Street area gets loud.
Are there parks or green space?
Limited. Simpson Bay is dense and built out. The ‘green’ is the lagoon and the beaches.
Best buildings for retirees?
Highly building-specific. Many retirees gravitate toward residential-heavy buildings rather than rental-heavy ones. The Yacht Club residential cluster, Atlantis II quieter floors, Aqua Marina, Atrium Beach. Avoid buildings with heavy short-term-rental percentages if you want quiet.
What to do next
01
Rent in Simpson Bay for at least 2 weeks during a busy season (Dec-Apr) to test the noise level.
02
Compare with Pelican Key. Quieter sister-neighborhood often a better fit.
03
If boating matters, visit SBYC and observe community.
04
Tour at least 3 buildings; reject any with HOA reserves below 6 months of operating expenses.
05
Book a Day With Wei.
All 8 neighborhoods
Cupecoy
Simpson Bay
Pelican Key
Quiet. Mid-priced. Canadian.


The social scene