Quick Facts: Port β Harbour Island, North Eleuthera | Country β The Bahamas | Terminal β North Eleuthera Ferry Dock / Harbour Island Government Dock | Tender/Ferry: most cruise ships anchor off Nassau or Nassau-area ports; Harbour Island is reached independently via ferry from North Eleuthera | Distance to Dunmore Town center: ~5-minute walk from the Government Dock | Time zone: EST (UTCβ5)
Harbour Island is one of the most beautiful small islands in the entire Caribbean β 3 miles long, unhurried, and anchored by Dunmore Town, a pastel-painted colonial village that predates the American Revolution. The single most important thing to know: most cruise passengers visit on an independent day trip from Nassau, so build in travel time and never cut your return too close to all-aboard.
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Port & Terminal Information
Harbour Island doesn’t have a dedicated cruise ship berth. If you’re sailing into Nassau’s Prince George Wharf (the main Nassau cruise terminal, located here on Google Maps), Harbour Island is a 45β60 minute taxi ride north plus a short ferry crossing away. If your ship calls at North Eleuthera directly, you’re already at the jumping-off point β the North Eleuthera Ferry Terminal sits right across the water from Harbour Island’s Government Dock in Dunmore Town.
The North Eleuthera terminal is basic: no ATMs, no luggage storage, minimal shade. Nassau’s Prince George Wharf has ATMs, Wi-Fi, tourist information desks, and a shopping area. Pack Bahamian dollars or USD cash before leaving Nassau if you’re heading to Harbour Island β card acceptance is thin on the island itself.
The ferry crossing from North Eleuthera to Harbour Island’s Government Dock takes 3β5 minutes and drops you directly in Dunmore Town.
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Getting to the City

- On Foot β Once you reach the Government Dock in Dunmore Town, the village is entirely walkable. Bay Street’s restaurants, shops, and the hilltop churches are all within a 10-minute stroll. Pink Sand Beach is about a 10-minute walk east across the island.
- Water Taxi/Ferry β From North Eleuthera dock, ferries run continuously, roughly every 20β30 minutes, 6amβ6pm. Cost: ~$5 USD each way per person (cash only). If your ship is in Nassau, first take a taxi north (~$80β100 USD one-way for a shared van, ~45β60 min) to the Eleuthera ferry dock.
- Golf Cart Rental β The practical way to explore. Rent at the dock the moment you step off the ferry. Expect to pay $50β70 USD for a half-day. Multiple operators sit right on the waterfront β no reservation needed, though busy days in peak season can sell out by 10am. This is the island’s version of a rental car.
- Taxi (on island) β Small electric carts double as taxis for the few hills. Short hops cost $5β10 USD. Negotiate before you ride.
- Hop-On Hop-Off β None exists on Harbour Island. Golf cart is your HOHO equivalent.
- Ship Shore Excursion β Worth it only if your ship offers direct Harbour Island ferry packages; otherwise the logistics are the same as going independently and you’ll pay a significant premium. Check Viator’s Harbour Island options for independent day-trip tours that include transport.
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Top Things to Do in Harbour Island, Dunmore Town
Harbour Island punches far above its size β you have a Georgian colonial village, world-famous pink sand, excellent snorkeling reefs, and some of the best boutique dining in the Bahamas all within 3 square miles.
Must-See
1. Dunmore Town Historic District (free) β Wander Bay Street and its side lanes past 18th-century colonial cottages in coral pink, buttercup yellow, and seafoam green. The village was the first capital of The Bahamas. Don’t miss the 1768 St. John’s Anglican Church on Church Street. Allow 45 minutes.
2. The Loyalist Cottages (free) β Several original 1700s Loyalist homes survive along King Street, some still inhabited. This is living history with no velvet ropes. 20 minutes.
3. Harbour Island Government Dock & Waterfront (free) β The dock itself is a social hub. Fishing boats unload, kids jump into the water, and the view back to Eleuthera is gorgeous at golden hour. 15 minutes.
Beaches & Nature
4. Pink Sands Beach (free) β 3 miles of pale rose-pink sand caused by crushed coral and foraminifera. It genuinely looks like that in real life, not just in photos. The water is calm, shallow, and turquoise. This is the single non-negotiable stop on the island. Arrive before 11am for the best light and fewest crowds. Full beach access is free; sun loungers at beach clubs run $20β30 USD. Allow 2β3 hours minimum. Browse guided Harbour Island tours on GetYourGuide if you want snorkel equipment included.
5. Devil’s Backbone Reef (snorkel/dive tour ~$60β100 USD) β One of the most treacherous ship graveyards in the Bahamas, now a spectacular shallow snorkel site with wrecks, elkhorn coral, and sea turtles. You need a local guide β don’t try to navigate the reef independently. Check available guided snorkel tours on Viator. Allow 2β3 hours.
6. Current Cut (guided tour) β A dramatic tidal channel between Eleuthera islands where strong currents attract sharks, rays, and game fish. Best experienced as a guided drift snorkel or dive. 2 hours.
Day Trips
7. Nassau + Atlantis Day Combo (from $55 USD) β If you’re already transiting Nassau, the Discover Nassau Sightseeing Tour plus Atlantis Resort Visit on Viator makes good use of your Nassau layover before or after the Harbour Island ferry. 2.5 hours.
8. Eleuthera Glass Window Bridge (free, self-drive) β Just 30 minutes from the North Eleuthera ferry dock, this narrow rock bridge is where the dark Atlantic crashes against the pale Caribbean β literally two different-coloured oceans side by side. Rent a golf cart on Eleuthera’s side, not the island. Allow 1 hour including driving time.
Family Picks
9. Pig Beach Day Trip from Nassau (from $249 USD) β If you have younger kids and flexibility, the Ultimate SeaXscape Pigs, Turtles, Snorkel, Lunch & Drinks trip on Viator is a full sensory hit β swimming pigs, sea turtles, reef snorkel, and a beach lunch in one 3.5-hour package. Departs Nassau; combine with a morning on Harbour Island if your schedule allows.
10. Pink Sands Beach Tide Pools (free) β The northern end of Pink Sands has shallow tide pools perfect for small children. Starfish, crabs, and tiny fish in knee-deep, calm water. No equipment needed. 1 hour.
Off the Beaten Track
11. The Surfer’s Beach (Eleuthera side) (free) β A short golf cart ride from the North Eleuthera dock on the Atlantic side, this wild beach has consistent swells and almost no tourists. Bring snacks β there are no facilities. 1 hour.
12. Gusty’s Bar (free to enter, drinks $5β10 USD) β A ramshackle local’s bar on the beach down a dirt track off Coconut Grove Avenue. Cold Kaliks, sun-bleached walls, and Bahamians who will tell you exactly what they think of tourists who don’t tip. Arrive afternoon. 1 hour.
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What to Eat & Drink

Harbour Island’s food scene is tiny but quietly excellent β this is where Bahamian conch fritters meet white tablecloths. Prices are higher than Nassau; expect to pay resort-level on the beach club end and honest local prices at the village spots.
- Sip Sip Restaurant β beloved brunch spot on milk-white porches; lobster bisque and coconut-shrimp salads; Dunmore Town center; $20β35 per dish
- Gusty’s β cash-only beach bar; cracked conch and cold Kalik beer; off Coconut Grove Ave; $8β15 per plate
- Conch Fritters (street vendors, dock area) β freshest thing you’ll eat all week; Government Dock; $5β8
- The Landing β historic colonial inn restaurant; best lunch on the island; Bay Street; $25β45 mains
- Angela’s Starfish Restaurant β unpretentious, generous portions of Bahamian fish and grits; Gospel Hill neighbourhood; $12β20
- Bahamian Rock Lobster β in season (AugβMarch), order it anywhere; simply grilled is best; $35β55 at sit-down restaurants
- Sky Juice β local drink of gin, coconut water, and sweet milk; get it from any beach bar; $5β8
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Shopping
Bay Street and the lanes off it have a cluster of small boutiques selling quality Bahamian-made goods β far less touristy than Nassau’s Straw Market. Look for hand-painted coconut wood carvings, locally-made straw work, Androsia batik fabric (made on Andros Island, sold widely here), and Bahamian hot sauces. The boutique **Pink S
ποΈ Things to Book in Advance
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π Getting to Harbour Island Bahamas, Dunmore Town
Use the interactive map below to explore the port area and plan your route from the terminal.

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