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Casa de Campo® · Lifestyle · February 23, 2026

Family Life at Casa de Campo: A Guide to Multi-Generational Living

A villa that holds three generations, a gated resort kids can roam, and enough to do that no one is bored — what family life at Casa de Campo actually looks like.

Ask owners at Casa de Campo® what surprised them most, and a striking number say the same thing: it became the place the whole family gathers. A villa here has a way of turning into the house where three generations spend the holidays, where grandchildren learn to swim and grandparents finally relax. For a certain kind of buyer, that is the real purchase — not a property, but a place for the family to come together.

This guide looks at what family life at Casa de Campo actually involves: the multi-generational villa, what each generation does with its days, the safety of the gated environment, and the practicalities for families who spend serious time here. We represent buyers, and we have watched a lot of families settle into this resort over the years.

Why families gravitate here

The pull is a combination of things that are hard to find together: a fully gated, secure environment where children have room to roam, villas large enough to hold an extended family comfortably, and enough to do that no one — from a restless eight-year-old to a golf-obsessed grandfather — is ever bored. Add staff who make hosting effortless, and the resort becomes less a holiday and more a gathering place the family returns to.

The multi-generational villa

Many Casa de Campo villas are built, almost by instinct, for multiple generations. Separate bedroom wings or detached casitas give grandparents their privacy and parents theirs, while shared living space and a big pool pull everyone back together. With household staff handling cooking and cleaning, the adults are guests in their own home, and the logistics that usually exhaust a family holiday simply dissolve. It is the rare house where everyone can be together without being on top of one another.

What the children do

For kids, the resort is a giant, safe playground. There is the calm beach at Minitas, pools to live in, tennis, water sports, and miles of gated roads to explore by bicycle or golf cart with a freedom that is hard to give children anywhere else. Cousins reunite here summer after summer, and the resort becomes part of their childhood — the place the family photos come from for twenty years running.

What the parents and grandparents do

The grown-ups are well served too. There is world-class golf for the players, the marina and the beach for slower days, the spa, and a dining scene that ranges from casual to memorable. The pace is the point: with the children happy and safe and the house running itself, parents and grandparents get something a normal holiday rarely delivers — actual rest, in good company, without a to-do list.

Safety and the gated environment

Much of the family appeal comes down to peace of mind. Casa de Campo is a private, gated community with round-the-clock security and controlled access, which is precisely why parents relax here. Children can have a long leash inside the gates, the kind of unsupervised freedom many families no longer feel they can offer at home, and the adults can stop watching the clock. That security is not a detail; for families, it is often the whole reason.

For families who stay longer

Families who spend extended time here, or relocate, look beyond the resort gates for the practicalities — international schooling and healthcare are available in the wider La Romana area and in Santo Domingo, about 75 minutes away. For most owning families the villa is a vacation and gathering home rather than a full-time base, but the surrounding infrastructure makes longer stays workable when life calls for them.

Holidays and traditions

The resort comes into its own around the holidays. Christmas, Easter, and the long summer weeks are when families converge, and the social calendar — from beach days to evenings at Altos de Chavón — gives everyone something to share. Traditions take root quickly here; within a couple of years, the family has its own rituals, its own table at its own restaurant, its own way of marking the season.

A home that grows with the family

Bought for the family, a villa here tends to become a legacy. It is where the next generation grows up coming, where milestones are celebrated, and eventually where the grandchildren bring their own children. Homes in established, family-friendly neighborhoods like Punta Minitas are bought for decades, not seasons — which is exactly how the families who own them think about them.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Casa de Campo good for families?

Very. It is a gated, secure resort with space for multiple generations, a calm beach, pools, tennis, water sports, and safe roads for children to explore. With household staff easing the logistics, it suits family gatherings particularly well.

Are the villas suitable for multiple generations?

Many are built for it, with separate wings or detached casitas for privacy, shared living space and a pool to bring everyone together, and staff to handle cooking and cleaning — so an extended family can be together comfortably.

Is it safe for children?

Yes. Casa de Campo is a private, gated community with 24-hour security and controlled access, which is why families let children roam more freely here by bicycle or golf cart than they might at home.

Are there schools and healthcare for families who stay longer?

International schooling and healthcare are available in the wider La Romana area and in Santo Domingo, about 75 minutes away. Most owning families use the villa as a vacation and gathering home, but the surrounding infrastructure supports longer stays.

What do children do at the resort?

Beach time at Minitas, pools, tennis, water sports, and exploring the gated resort by bike or golf cart. For many families it becomes a place cousins reunite at year after year.


Caribbean Paradise Homes is a real estate agency based in Casa de Campo, La Romana. We exclusively represent buyers. For a consultation, contact us at info@caribbeanparadisehomes.com.

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