Caesars Palace Bluewaters: Where Roman Grandeur Meets the Arabian Gulf
Perched on Dubai’s newest man-made island with Ain Dubai spinning overhead and the Jumeirah skyline stretched across the water, Caesars Palace Bluewaters is less a hotel and more an event — one that begins the moment you cross the bridge from JBR.
Illustrated elevation of Caesars Palace Bluewaters — the neoclassical façade, Ain Dubai in the background, and the Arabian Gulf at its feet · Dubai Daily Press
There is a particular kind of arrival that Dubai specialises in — the approach that tells you, before you have even entered a building, that what is about to happen will be deliberate, choreographed, and more than a little theatrical. Crossing the bridge from JBR onto Bluewaters Island with the white colonnaded façade of Caesars Palace stretching ahead of you, Ain Dubai revolving slowly to your right, and the Gulf glittering beyond — that arrival is among the city’s best.
Caesars Palace Bluewaters Dubai opened in 2018, making it the first Caesars property in the Middle East. It occupies a significant portion of Bluewaters Island — the artificial island developed off the JBR coast that is home to Ain Dubai, the world’s largest observation wheel. The hotel’s neoclassical architecture, all white marble columns, Roman statuary, and gold-accented cornices, would look outlandish anywhere else. On Bluewaters Island, amid the Dubai skyline, it makes complete sense.
“Caesars doesn’t apologise for its excess. It leans into it — and in doing so, it finds a kind of sincerity that more restrained luxury can sometimes miss.”
Dubai Daily Press · June 2026The Property at a Glance
The hotel occupies 525 rooms and suites spread across a building that manages to feel both enormous and coherent. The interiors draw heavily from Roman imperial design — mosaic floors, marble staircases, columns topped with gold capitals — while keeping the rooms themselves contemporary and functional. The result is a hotel that feels like staying inside an idea rather than simply a building.
The prime rooms face the Gulf, offering views across the water toward the Palm Jumeirah, the Marina towers, and, on a clear night, the hazy outline of the Abu Dhabi highway. Corner suites look directly up at Ain Dubai, which is lit in changing colours after dark and provides a surprisingly meditative backdrop to an evening on the balcony. Beach access is private, reserved for hotel guests, and the stretch of sand at the island’s edge remains one of the least crowded in this part of the city.
- Location Bluewaters Island, Dubai — off JBR, accessible via bridge or water taxi
- Rooms 525 rooms and suites — sea-view, Ain Dubai-view, and garden categories
- Transport Bluewaters Tram from Dubai Marina · taxi or rideshare via JBR bridge
- Best for Couples, special occasions, beach access without the Palm premium
- Pools Two outdoor pools plus adults-only pool deck at Palace Tower
- Dining Hell’s Kitchen, Nobu, Gordon Ramsay Fish & Chips, Cleo Medbar, Byblos sur Mer
- Check-in From 3 pm · Check-out at noon
Dining: The Strongest Argument for Staying Here
If Caesars Palace Bluewaters has a single, unambiguous selling point that lifts it above its competitors, it is the concentration of restaurant quality under one roof. The hotel’s dining lineup reads like a curated festival programme rather than a hotel F&B list.
Gordon Ramsay’s Hell’s Kitchen occupies the most prominent dining position in the hotel and delivers on the brief: dramatic interior design modelled on the TV set, a menu of precise, well-executed dishes, and service that is brisk without being cold. The beef Wellington — Ramsay’s signature, exported faithfully to this outpost — is as carefully made here as reports suggest it is at the original London location. Prices are significant but not egregious for what is delivered.
Nobu, the Japanese-Peruvian fusion concept that has become a permanent fixture of Dubai’s luxury hotel circuit, operates from the beachfront here with particular confidence. The black cod miso and yellowtail jalapeño are the obvious orders, and they remain reliable — but the Bluewaters location distinguishes itself with an outdoor terrace that gives the meal a context the indoor Nobu branches lack.
Hell’s Kitchen and Nobu both require reservations, especially Thursday through Saturday. Book at least a week ahead for weekend dinners. Gordon Ramsay Fish & Chips on the island promenade operates without reservations and offers an excellent, affordable alternative for a casual meal — the portions are generous and the batter is right.
Caesars Palace Bluewaters pool deck at dusk — Ain Dubai illuminated in the background, the Venus Pool Bar open until late · Dubai Daily Press
The Pools and Beach
Caesars Palace Bluewaters operates three distinct pool areas. The main pool is the social one — large, animated, and home to the Venus Pool Bar, which serves cocktails and light bites throughout the day and evening. The adults-only pool deck at the Palace Tower offers a quieter experience with a view that takes in both the Gulf and the wheel. The beach is the hotel’s quietest amenity: a stretch of calm-water shoreline, sheltered from the open sea, where loungers are well-spaced and the service is unhurried.
What distinguishes the beach here from comparable options at the Atlantis or the Palm strip hotels is simple: it does not feel oversubscribed. On a weekday morning, it is possible to find a lounger with no competition. The water on the Bluewaters side faces back toward the mainland, making for a skyline view across the water toward JBR and the Marina towers — one of the better perspectives on that stretch of city.
Non-hotel guests can access some of the pool and beach areas via a day pass — rates vary by season and include a credit toward food and drink. This makes Caesars one of the more accessible luxury beach options in Dubai without the full room cost. Check the hotel website for current availability, as pass numbers are limited.
The tram from Dubai Marina Metro to Bluewaters Island runs regularly and costs a few dirhams — far easier than driving if you are coming from the metro.
The Spa and Wellness
The Qua Spa at Caesars Palace Bluewaters is a serious operation. Spread across multiple floors of the Palace Tower, it offers a full menu of treatments drawing from Roman bathing traditions — the concept leans into the brand identity with genuine commitment rather than surface decoration. There is a Roman bath circuit featuring cold plunge pools, a caldarium, and a tepidarium; it can be used independently of treatments and is one of the better spa facilities in a city well-stocked with them.
The gym is large, well-equipped, and open 24 hours — an amenity that matters more than it might seem in a city where the useful hours for outdoor exercise are limited to a narrow window around sunrise. The fitness facilities face the sea, which gives the treadmills a view that makes the exercise feel slightly less like exercise.
Getting There and Around
Bluewaters Island sits off the JBR coast, connected to the mainland by a single road bridge and a pedestrian bridge from the JBR Walk. By road, the approach from the Marina takes about 10 minutes without traffic. The Bluewaters Tram connects the island to the Dubai Marina Metro station on the Red Line, running frequently enough to make car-free arrival entirely practical. Water taxis from Dubai Marina Wharf offer a slower but more scenic alternative, and the journey across the Marina to the island takes around 20 minutes.
Parking on the island itself is available but fills quickly on weekend evenings, when the island’s promenade restaurants and Ain Dubai draw visitors from across the city. If you are arriving for dinner only, the tram is almost always the better option.
“On an island that exists entirely as an act of imagination, a hotel modelled on ancient Rome feels not just plausible but necessary.”
Dubai Daily Press · Travel DeskWho It’s For — and When to Go
Caesars Palace Bluewaters suits a particular kind of Dubai visitor: one who wants genuine luxury, strong food, beach access, and a sense of occasion without committing to the full isolation of a Palm hotel. The Bluewaters location keeps you within easy reach of the Marina, JBR, and the rest of the city, which the deeper Palm properties cannot offer.
The cooler months — October through April — are the natural peak, when the beach and pool are comfortable throughout the day. The summer rates drop significantly, and the pools are tolerable in the early morning and evening. Ramadan brings a different atmosphere entirely: the hotel operates its own suhoor and iftar experiences, and the island at night during Ramadan has a particular quietness that regular visitors value highly.
For a special occasion in Dubai — an anniversary, a milestone birthday, a honeymoon stop — Caesars Palace Bluewaters remains one of the more considered choices in a city where considered choices take effort to find. It does not pretend to be subtle. But it delivers what it promises, which in Dubai is, itself, a kind of luxury.