VILLA MANAGEMENT · SAINT-BARTHÉLEMY
Hurricane Season in St. Barth: A Villa Owner's Preparation Checklist
If you own a villa in St. Barth, hurricane season is the six months of the year that will determine whether your property comes out of the off-season intact or with a six-figure repair bill. Most owners are off-island during this period. Your villa manager is the one standing between your property and whatever the Atlantic sends this way.
I have been through every hurricane season in St. Barth since I started managing villas here over five years ago. This article is the preparation checklist I use with my own clients, written so any villa owner can understand exactly what should be happening to their property between June and November.
When Is Hurricane Season in St. Barth?
The Atlantic hurricane season officially runs from June 1 through November 30. The peak window is August through October, when sea surface temperatures are highest and tropical systems are most likely to form and intensify.
Saint-Barthélemy sits at 17.9°N in the Leeward Islands, directly in the path of Caribbean hurricane tracks. The island is small (25 square kilometers) with limited natural windbreaks, which means even a near-miss storm can cause significant damage through wind, surge, and flooding.
The reference event for every villa owner here is Hurricane Irma in September 2017. Irma crossed the northern Caribbean as a Category 5 storm with sustained winds over 185 mph. The damage to Saint-Barthélemy was extensive. Roofs stripped. Power grid destroyed. Water infrastructure offline for weeks. The Collectivité de Saint-Barthélemy coordinated recovery efforts, but individual property owners were responsible for their own repairs.
The island rebuilt. But the lesson was clear: preparation is not optional, and having someone on the ground to execute that preparation is the difference between a manageable repair and a catastrophe.
Why Most Managers Leave (And Why That's a Problem)
Here is the uncomfortable truth about villa management in St. Barth. A significant number of seasonal managers and staff leave the island between June and November. The rental calendar is quiet. The restaurants close. The social scene disappears. Many people who work in hospitality during high season head back to metropolitan France, the US, or elsewhere for the summer.
This creates an obvious problem. The months when your villa is most at risk are the months when many managers are simply not here.
Low season is not downtime for a villa. It is when the real work happens:
- Renovation and construction projects are scheduled during low season because contractors are available and guest bookings are minimal. Someone needs to supervise that work in person, daily.
- Storm preparation requires physical presence. You cannot close hurricane shutters by phone.
- Post-storm inspection and emergency repairs need to happen within hours, not days. A manager who is off-island when a storm hits cannot assess damage until flights resume, which can take a week or more.
- Insurance documentation (pre-storm and post-storm photos) has to be done locally, with timestamps, before and after the event.
When I tell prospective clients that I stay on the island year-round, including through hurricane season, the reaction is often surprise. It should not be. This is the baseline. A villa manager who leaves for half the year is not a manager. They are a seasonal contractor.
Pre-Hurricane Villa Preparation Checklist
This checklist should be completed at the start of hurricane season (late May or early June) and updated before any specific storm threat. Your villa manager should handle every item on this list, with photo documentation sent to you.
Structural and exterior
- Test and close all hurricane shutters. Lubricate tracks and hinges. Replace any corroded hardware.
- Inspect the roof for loose tiles, flashing gaps, or degraded sealant. Repair before storm season starts.
- Clear all gutters and downspouts. Tropical vegetation clogs them fast.
- Trim trees and remove dead branches within fall distance of the villa, the pool deck, or the driveway.
- Secure or store all outdoor furniture, cushions, umbrellas, and decorative items. Anything that can become a projectile in high wind must come inside or go into storage.
- Check perimeter walls and retaining structures for cracks or erosion.
Mechanical systems
- Run the backup generator under load. Check oil, coolant, fuel level, and battery. A generator that has not been tested will not start when the power goes out.
- Confirm the automatic transfer switch works (if equipped). When grid power drops, the generator should kick in within seconds.
- Test the water pump and verify the cistern is full. Municipal water can be disrupted for days after a major storm.
- Service all air conditioning units. Clean filters, check refrigerant levels, confirm drainage lines are clear.
- Verify the electrical panel has proper surge protection.
Pool and water features
- Remove pool equipment that can be damaged by storm surge or debris (robotic cleaners, floating dispensers, skimmer baskets).
- Lower the pool water level by about one foot to allow for heavy rainfall without overflow.
- Super-chlorinate and balance chemistry. Post-storm debris cleanup is easier in properly treated water.
- Turn off the pool pump and cover the motor if it is exposed. Power surges during a storm can destroy pump motors.
Interior preparation
- Move valuable artwork, electronics, and upholstered furniture away from windows.
- Close and lock all interior doors to compartmentalize potential water intrusion.
- Place towels or absorbent barriers at the base of doors and windows that face the prevailing wind direction.
- Unplug all non-essential electronics.
- Confirm that the villa's safe or lockbox contains the insurance policy, property deed copies, and emergency contact list.
Documentation
- Take a complete set of timestamped photos of the entire property: every room, every exterior angle, all mechanical equipment, the pool, the garden. This is your "before" record for insurance purposes.
- Update the villa inventory list. Note serial numbers for major appliances and electronics.
- Confirm the insurance policy is current and covers hurricane damage. Check the deductible and any named-storm exclusions.
What Happens During the Storm
Once a hurricane warning is issued for Saint-Barthélemy (tracked via Météo France Antilles-Guyane and the Préfecture alerts), the focus shifts from preparation to safety and monitoring.
Your villa manager should:
- Complete all shuttering and securing at least 24 hours before projected impact. Once sustained winds exceed 40 mph, it is too dangerous to be outside.
- Send you a final status update confirming the villa is locked down, the generator is fueled, and the cistern is full.
- Shelter safely. During the event itself, no one should be at the villa. Your manager should be in their own secure location, monitoring conditions.
- Stay reachable. Power and cell service may go down, but satellite messaging (if available) or periodic check-ins via WhatsApp when signal returns are the standard.
- Coordinate with the Collectivité's emergency services if the villa suffers critical damage (structural collapse, fire, flooding) during the event.
There is nothing glamorous about this part. It is sitting in a concrete structure, listening to wind, and waiting until conditions are safe to move.
Post-Hurricane Inspection and Recovery
The first 48 hours after a storm passes are critical. Damage that goes unaddressed compounds fast in a tropical climate. Water that enters through a compromised roof will grow mold within 72 hours.
Immediate inspection (day one)
- Walk the full exterior of the property. Document every visible damage point with photos and notes.
- Check the roof from ground level and (if safely accessible) from above. Look for missing tiles, displaced flashing, punctures from debris.
- Inspect all windows and shutters. Note any breaches.
- Check for downed trees, displaced outdoor structures, or damage to perimeter walls.
- Verify the generator is running and powering essential systems.
- Check the cistern level and water quality.
Interior assessment (day one to two)
- Open shutters carefully and inspect each room for water intrusion.
- Check ceilings for staining, bubbling, or sagging (signs of water trapped above).
- Test all electrical circuits. Do not re-energize any circuit that has been exposed to water.
- Check for mold or musty odors, especially in closets, under sinks, and behind furniture.
- Document everything with timestamped photos. This is your "after" record for insurance.
Emergency repairs (first week)
The goal of emergency repairs is not full restoration. It is preventing further damage while the insurance process plays out.
- Temporary roof patching. Tarps secured over breaches to stop ongoing water entry.
- Water extraction. Pumping out any standing water, running dehumidifiers, removing soaked materials.
- Tree and debris clearing. Particularly anything blocking access, damaging structures, or creating safety hazards.
- Board-up of broken windows or compromised openings.
- Generator refueling and maintenance. Grid power may be out for days or weeks.
This is where your manager's contractor network matters most. After a major storm, every property on the island needs repairs. Contractors prioritize the clients they know. A manager with established relationships gets their villas fixed first.
Insurance and Documentation
Insurance claims after a hurricane are not simple. They involve adjusters, documentation requirements, and timelines. Having the right records makes the difference between a smooth claim and a disputed one.
What your villa manager should maintain year-round
- Pre-season photo inventory. Complete documentation of the property in good condition, updated every year before June 1.
- Maintenance logs. Dated records of all work done on the property. This proves the property was well maintained, which matters when an insurer is deciding whether damage was storm-caused or due to neglect.
- Contractor invoices. Every repair, every service call, filed and accessible.
What to document after a storm
- Post-storm photo set. Every room, every angle, every damaged element. Timestamp metadata in the photos is essential.
- Written damage assessment. A structured report listing each damaged area, the probable cause (wind, water, debris impact), and the estimated scope of repair.
- Emergency repair receipts. Costs incurred to prevent further damage are typically covered by insurance. Keep every receipt.
- Communication log. When you reported the claim, who you spoke with, what was agreed. Your manager should help you track this.
A good villa manager does not start documenting when a storm is announced. The photo reports, the maintenance logs, the contractor records. All of it exists because it is part of regular operations year-round. When a storm does hit, the "before" documentation is already done.
That is one of the reasons I emphasize routine villa visits with photo reports to every owner I work with. The same habit that keeps you informed about your property in March is the habit that saves your insurance claim in September.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is hurricane season in St. Barth really that dangerous?
The risk is real. St. Barth is a small, low-lying island in the direct path of Atlantic hurricane tracks. Category 5 Hurricane Irma in 2017 caused severe damage across the island. Not every year brings a major storm, but the preparation has to happen every year regardless. The cost of preparing is a fraction of the cost of repairing unprepared damage.
What should I do if my villa manager leaves the island during hurricane season?
Find a new one. A manager who is not on the island from June through November cannot close your shutters, inspect your property after a storm, or coordinate emergency repairs. At minimum, ask who will be responsible for your villa in their absence. If the answer is vague, you have a gap in coverage during the highest-risk months.
Does villa insurance in St. Barth cover hurricane damage?
Most comprehensive property insurance policies in the French Antilles include hurricane coverage, but the terms vary significantly. Check for named-storm deductibles (on a high-value villa, these can be substantial). Also verify that the policy covers loss of rental income during the repair period. Your villa manager should know where your policy documents are stored and have a copy of the key terms accessible on the island.
How quickly can a villa reopen after a hurricane?
It depends entirely on the severity of damage and contractor availability. After a minor tropical storm with no structural damage, a villa can be cleaned and reopened within a few days. After a major hurricane like Irma, some properties took months to rebuild. The villas that reopened fastest were the ones with managers who had strong contractor relationships and began emergency repairs within 24 hours of the storm passing.
Need a villa manager in St. Barth?
Shêraze Mathlouthi has been on the island for five years. One WhatsApp message is all it takes.
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