Gee Jam

Top choice in Ocho Rios, Port Antonio & the North Coast


The hotel home of Gee Jam recording studios sets the standard for ultra-modern design, cuisine and exclusivity. Fabulous cottages are connected by jungle walkways with views of the coast. The owner is a hip-hop and reggae industry veteran – guests who've stayed here form their own Grammy Award nominees list. With luck, you'll run into Rihanna or Drake at the bar.

An extension of a dozen rooms called the Marumba Studios was slated to open in early 2020.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Ocho Rios, Port Antonio & the North Coast attractions

1. Frenchman’s Cove

0.51 MILES

This beautiful little cove just east of Drapers boasts a small but perfect white-sand beach, where the water is fed by a freshwater river that spits…

2. San San Beach

0.73 MILES

San San is a pretty beach used by residents of the villas on Alligator Head, and guests of the Goblin Hill, Fern Hill and Jamaica Palace hotels. The bay…

3. Trident Castle

0.92 MILES

A strange slice of Ruritania in the Caribbean, this folly on a headland 3km from Port Antonio was built in the 1970s by the (in)famously eccentric…

4. Blue Lagoon

1.36 MILES

The waters that launched Brooke Shields’ movie career are by any measure one of the most beautiful spots in Jamaica. The 180ft-deep (55m) “Blue Hole” (as…

5. Winnifred Beach

2.1 MILES

Perched on a cliff 13km east of Port Antonio is the little hamlet of Fairy Hill. Follow the road steeply downhill and you’ll reach Winnifred Beach, yet…

6. Folly

2.36 MILES

This rather appropriately named two-story, 60-room mansion on the peninsula east of East Harbour was built entirely of concrete in pseudo-Grecian style in…

7. Folly Point Lighthouse

2.58 MILES

Near the Folly mansion stands the orange candy-striped Folly Point Lighthouse, built in 1888, which overlooks Monkey Island. Said island adds even more…

8. Christ Church

2.88 MILES

A redbrick Anglican building constructed in neo-Romanesque style around 1840 (much of the structure dates from 1903). Look for the brass lectern donated…