
The Overwater Honeymoon
Private overwater villas above a turquoise lagoon, a dinner set on an uninhabited motu, and the kind of silence that belongs only to the two of you.

The world arranged for two — private terraces, reserved tables, and the luxury of being left alone together.
A honeymoon, or simply a journey for two, asks for a particular kind of design: fewer logistics, more intimacy. Every one of these begins with privacy and ends with the feeling of having the world to yourselves.
Each of these is a starting point — not a package, not a fixed schedule. Your advisor reshapes it entirely around you.

Private overwater villas above a turquoise lagoon, a dinner set on an uninhabited motu, and the kind of silence that belongs only to the two of you.

Caldera sunsets from a private terrace and a crewed gulet drifting to coves the ferries never reach — Greece at its most intimate.

A villa above Positano, a yacht along the Côte d'Azur, and long Mediterranean lunches that have no reason to end.
Five points of departure — each one opened privately, then reshaped entirely around the two of you.
Flights and hotels are the easy part. What turns a trip into the one you talk about for years is access — the villa held back, the table that does not exist, the hour kept private — opened through forty years of relationships, never searched or reserved.
None of these were on any itinerary. Yours won't be either.
No quotes. No obligation. A conversation.
Tell a private advisor how you like to travel and they'll point you to the right starting point — or design something entirely new.