Five Caribbean tourism boards released summer-season campaigns between April 3 and April 17, allocating a combined estimated $47 million toward community-focused messaging, direct bookings, and millennial repositioning. Jamaica Tourism Board led with a community tourism push emphasizing inland parishes. Anguilla followed with a luxury beach campaign targeting U.S. East Coast family offices. The Bahamas, Saint Lucia, and Turks and Caicos deployed parallel efforts within the same fortnight, each structured around June-August high season and post-pandemic travel pattern normalization.
The compressed timeline reflects shared vendor infrastructure. Four of the five boards work with agencies under Omnicom or WPP umbrellas, and all five campaigns feature identical media mix strategies: Instagram Reels partnerships with micro-influencers (10,000–50,000 followers), YouTube pre-roll targeting household incomes above $250,000, and first-party booking incentives ranging from $150 resort credits to complimentary airport transfers. Jamaica's community tourism angle is the tactical outlier—emphasizing farm-to-table dining in rural zones rather than beachfront—but the media buy mirrors its peers exactly. The boards did not coordinate formally, according to spokespeople, but three share the same research firm for demand forecasting, which released updated seasonal models in late March.
The regional pattern matters because Caribbean destinations compete for the same $8.9 billion annual U.S. luxury leisure spend. When five boards compress launches, media costs rise—programmatic CPMs for high-net-worth targeting climbed 18% between April 1 and April 15, per AdExchanger data—and differentiation shrinks. Jamaica's community tourism hook is the clearest attempt to separate from beach-and-resort sameness, but execution relies on the same influencer playbook already saturated across Anguilla and Saint Lucia campaigns. Family offices and their travel advisors see identical creative frameworks across five emails in two weeks, which erodes urgency and privileges the destination with the strongest existing client relationships rather than the sharpest campaign.
Allocators should watch villa rental platform data from The Villas at Christophe Harbour and Tryall Club through mid-May. If Jamaica's community angle converts, inland accommodations will show 10–15% inquiry lifts versus coastal properties within 30 days. If the influencer saturation hypothesis holds, CPMs will stay elevated and conversion rates will compress across all five boards by Memorial Day weekend. The Bahamas typically reports preliminary summer booking data in late May; if their numbers underperform 2024 at similar spend levels, the compression effect is confirmed. Agency holding companies will adjust Caribbean pitch decks by June for autumn wave campaigns.
The shared research firm, Tourism Economics, updates its Caribbean leisure forecast again in early June. That release will either validate the April compression as smart seasonal timing or expose it as vendor-driven calendar convenience that cost the boards $8–12 million in inflated media rates.