North Island Seychelles Leaves Marriott: This Never Made Sense

North Island Seychelles Leaves Marriott: This Never Made Sense

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North Island, Seychelles, is one of the world’s most exclusive private island resorts. Historically the property was fully independent, until 2019, when it (mysteriously?) joined Marriott, as part of Luxury Collection. I could never really make sense of the logic of that, so there’s now an interesting update — starting in several months, the hotel will no longer be affiliated with Marriott.

Let’s cover the basics, starting with some background.

What is North Island, Seychelles?

North Island is a resort on a private island in the Seychelles, and it has just 11 rooms spread across the island’s nearly 500 acres. It’s just 30 kilometers from Mahe (the main island in the Seychelles), and this island is home to all kinds of endangered species.

This is by far the most luxurious private island resort in Africa, and arguably one of the most luxurious private island resorts in the world. It’s priced accordingly, and then some — it’s easily one of the most expensive hotels in the world, with rates typically starting at around $9,000 per night, give or take.

North Island aerial view
North Island beach
North Island villa
North Island villa pool

North Island’s Marriott participation comes to an end

In 2019, we saw North Island join Marriott Bonvoy, as a Luxury Collection property. I’ve gotta say, I found this to be a very strange collaboration. At the time, the property’s managing director described this as follows:

“We are delighted to join the exclusive collection of properties under The Luxury Collection. North Island is the perfect fit for a brand that stands for such exclusive luxury, while recognising the importance of sustainable development, and we look forward to building on the position of the island as one of the world’s most aspirational private-island destinations.”

While there can of course be value in luxury properties joining a major hotel group to increase exposure, I found this to be an unusual collaboration:

  • Generally speaking, when I think of a Luxury Collection property, I think of a historic hotel in a city (maybe even a bit past its prime), and not a $10K per night private island resort, with fewer than a dozen accommodations
  • There are a lot of hotels where a loyalty program can impact whether or not a guest chooses to stay there; but does that really apply to a hotel that’s this expensive, which counts royalty and endless A-listers among its guests?

There was another interesting thing that happened at the time. The hotel joining Marriott coincided with ASMALLWORLD taking over management of the hotel. For those of you who have no clue what that is, I think Wikipedia describes it pretty well:

ASMALLWORLD is an exclusive, paid-subscription social network, which relaunched in spring 2013 as a private international travel and social club, with a peer-recommended and verified user base capped membership at 250,000 people. Described as “Myspace for millionaires” and “The secret social network for the elite”, the site was founded in 2004 by Erik Wachtmeister and was one of the first social networks at that time.

This organization is rather controversial, and at one point, Harvey Weinstein was the majority shareholder. To me this made the branding even more confusing. An organization that’s all about exclusivity and membership and excluding others wanted the hotel to become more mainstream? At the time, ASMALLWORLD’s CEO stated the following about the company’s involvement with the island:

“We are very excited to launch the ASmallWorld Hotel Collection with such a world-renowned hotel as North Island. This first step towards building our very own luxury hotel collection will allow us to offer our travel-savvy members a unique destination, while at the same time increasing the occupancy rate and the profitability of the property.”

North Island beach

That brings me to the latest update. As of July 1, 2025, North Island will no longer be affiliated with Marriott or the Luxury Collection, and will go back to being fully independent. So if do want to stay here while it’s still a Marriott, now is your last chance to do so. You can redeem Marriott Bonvoy points at the low rate of just *checks notes* 605K points per night.

Redeem Bonvoy points at North Island Seychelles

Bottom line

In 2019, we saw one of the world’s most exclusive private island resorts join Marriott’s Luxury Collection. While the thought of earning and redeeming points here was in theory nice, as you’d expect, this property is out of reach for a vast majority of us.

A little over five years after the partnership was launched, there’s now an update. As of July 1, 2025, North Island will no longer be affiliated with Marriott. I can’t say this is a huge loss for most of us, and if anything, I’m surprised it lasted as long as it did.

What do you make of North Island leaving Marriott?

Conversations (11)
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  1. Susan Guest

    I searched for many, many months for any award availability and never found any, so not really a loss.

    1. Pete Guest

      It's booked-out with paying customers many months in advance, year-round, so I'm not surprised there's no award availability.

  2. Jakob Guest

    The split coincides with the end of the management agreement between ASW and the property's owner, which was extended for a second 3 year term from 2022 to 2025, but now appears to not have been terminated.
    Separately, ASW is a very different organization today compared to 10 years ago, and most of the historical points indicated here are no longer applicable or outdated.
    FYI, and on a side note, ASW is a...

    The split coincides with the end of the management agreement between ASW and the property's owner, which was extended for a second 3 year term from 2022 to 2025, but now appears to not have been terminated.
    Separately, ASW is a very different organization today compared to 10 years ago, and most of the historical points indicated here are no longer applicable or outdated.
    FYI, and on a side note, ASW is a Hyatt Privé agent that is freely accessible with a simple sign-up to the free membership.

  3. Jerry Diamond

    I'd be curious to know the Marriott engagement statistics for this place. Did most people accrue points? Are there many elite members that stayed? How many people redeemed points? Was someone able to swing a 5th night free?

  4. Jones Guest

    The screenshot shows "605,000 points/stay". How long's a "stay"? One night? Two weeks? A month? ...

    1. Ben Schlappig OMAAT

      @ Jones -- That was for a one-night stay.

    2. ML Guest

      I'm surprised you haven't stayed there yet Ben. Any plans to do so before it leaves MT? Even for just one night?

  5. AG Guest

    I'd say the most expensive and luxurious private island resort in Africa is Miavana in Madagascar

    1. Nic123 Guest

      What about Kisawa Sanctuary in Mozambique? It looks incredible....

    2. pstm91 Diamond

      Kisawa is absolutely incredible, but it's not a private island resort. Miavana is beautiful but definitely not the most luxurious. Also really far to get to.

  6. FNT Delta Diamond Guest

    I was unaware of the Weinstein connection. Wasn't he arrested around that time? Maybe business took a hit and they thought affiliating with Marriott would deliver more guests. Who knows. I imagine the costs of affiliating with Marriott far outweighed the benefits, especially for such a small property. I imagine the hotel is 100% sold-out months in advance, at least during peak season. And it's not like many Marriott customers have enough points for a...

    I was unaware of the Weinstein connection. Wasn't he arrested around that time? Maybe business took a hit and they thought affiliating with Marriott would deliver more guests. Who knows. I imagine the costs of affiliating with Marriott far outweighed the benefits, especially for such a small property. I imagine the hotel is 100% sold-out months in advance, at least during peak season. And it's not like many Marriott customers have enough points for a reservation at 600,000+ points per night.

Featured Comments Most helpful comments ( as chosen by the OMAAT community ).

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Jerry Diamond

I'd be curious to know the Marriott engagement statistics for this place. Did most people accrue points? Are there many elite members that stayed? How many people redeemed points? Was someone able to swing a 5th night free?

1
pstm91 Diamond

Kisawa is absolutely incredible, but it's not a private island resort. Miavana is beautiful but definitely not the most luxurious. Also really far to get to.

0
Pete Guest

It's booked-out with paying customers many months in advance, year-round, so I'm not surprised there's no award availability.

0
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