Shopping for an all-inclusive with six people is an exercise in frustration. Standard max occupancy is four adults, kids-free policies cap at two children, and the "family suite" on the website turns out to be two connecting rooms billed separately. We researched room inventory and occupancy rules across 60+ resorts to find those that genuinely work for a family of six.
What to Check Before You Book
Always verify three numbers: maximum room occupancy (must be 6+), kids-free age cutoff (ideally 12, sometimes only to 2), and per-child supplement for kids above the free limit. A resort advertising "kids stay free" may only mean one child. Call reservations directly and get the occupancy confirmation in writing before paying a deposit.
Pricing Reality for 6 People
Expect to pay a 20–35% premium over the per-room rate shown for four guests. True family suites at places like Beaches Turks & Caicos or Club Med Cancun Yucatan run $400–$750/night all-in for six during shoulder season (May, late October). Peak weeks in February or July can hit $950–$1,300/night for the same room. That math still beats two separate rooms, which typically come to $600–$1,100/night at comparable properties.
Off-Season Strategies
The resorts below consistently hold 6-person suite inventory in May, early June, and October — months school-age families often avoid. If your kids are under 5, those windows cut rates by 30–40% without sacrificing weather. Mexico's Caribbean coast (Riviera Maya) has its dry season run November through April; Turks & Caicos is comfortable year-round with October being the quietest month.



