St Peter (Platinum Coast)
Mullins Beach
The Platinum Coast beach most UK visitors pick: calm, clear Caribbean water with a beach bar, sunbeds and decent snorkelling just south of Speightstown โ walkable from the waterfront or one stop on the ZR.
Where
Speightstown, Barbados
Opening hours
Open access (always open). Like all Barbados beaches, Mullins is public and free at any hour; the beach bar, sunbed hire and watersports operators run daytime hours, busiest from late morning through the afternoon.
Tickets
Free โ no ticket needed; all Barbadian beaches are public. You only pay for a sunbed and parasol (a minimum spend or hire from a few BDS$ via the beach bar) and for food and drinks.
Time needed
A half-day to swim, snorkel and have lunch at the bar, or longer if you settle in for a full beach day.
In short
Visiting Mullins Beach
Mullins is the Platinum Coast beach most UK visitors single out: a sheltered stretch of calm, clear Caribbean water just south of Speightstown, with a beach bar, sunbeds for hire and decent snorkelling over nearby reef. The sand is free public access; you only pay for loungers and food and drink. It is walkable from the Speightstown waterfront or a single stop on the ZR minibus.
The water and the sand
Mullins is the stretch of the Platinum Coast that most UK visitors end up picking, and the reason is simple: calm, clear, gentle Caribbean water over pale sand, just south of Speightstown. The west coast is the sheltered side of Barbados, so there is no Atlantic surf here โ it is flat, warm and easy, which makes it good for unconfident swimmers and children as well as for floating about all afternoon. Like every beach on the island it is public and free to use; the catch is that the beach bar runs the rows of sunbeds and parasols, so you either hire a set or meet a small minimum spend (from a few BDS$) to claim one. The sand itself never costs a thing.
Bring a mask. There is reef and seagrass not far offshore where you can see fish and, with luck, turtles. It is a sociable, easy snorkel rather than a serious dive site, but it adds plenty to a beach day.
Making a day of it
The beach bar is the hub โ it serves rum punch, cold beers and lunch through the day, and it gets lively into the afternoon, so come for the late morning to afternoon stretch when it is at its best. Watersports operators work the beach too, so you can usually arrange a short boat trip out to the better turtle and shipwreck snorkelling if the on-beach reef leaves you wanting more.
Getting here is part of the appeal. From the Speightstown waterfront it is a fifteen-minute walk, or a single hop on the cheerful, music-blaring ZR minibus that runs the coast road โ carry small Barbadian dollars for the fare. Is it worth it? For a relaxed, low-cost, properly Caribbean beach day with a bar at hand, comfortably yes; just donโt expect a quiet, deserted cove, because Mullins is popular for good reason.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Speightstown city guide.