The bill at checkout for a Coral Hotel stay at Atlantis Bahamas came to $64.90 in resort fees plus a $14 nightly gratuity – $78.90 total per night – against a rack rate that can hit $500 or more on peak dates. The room itself: $0, booked on a Caesars Rewards Diamond comp. One catch sitting in the fine print: Atlantis requires four hours of rated casino play during the stay, tracked through a players card at the table.
Here’s a full breakdown of what that comp unlocks – the Coral Hotel’s room and amenities, the Aquaventure Water Park access bundled into every guest stay, and exactly how the Caesars tier ladder works from Platinum up through Diamond Plus.
Aquaventure Water Park Access: What Day Visitors Pay $190+ Per Adult to Enter
Every Coral Hotel guest gets automatic access to Atlantis’s 141-acre Aquaventure Water Park. Day visitors currently pay around $190 per adult – sometimes more than $200 – for the same access. For a family of four staying three nights, that’s 4 guests × $190 × 3 nights = $2,280 in water park admission alone that simply disappears as a line item on the hotel bill.
The park runs across more than 20 water slides, anchored by the Leap of Faith – a 60-foot near-vertical drop through a transparent shark tank. A mile-long rapids river threads through tropical foliage. Fourteen resort pools range from quiet grottos to adults-only cabana areas. Five miles of white sand beach stretch along the property. Over 20 in-water spots hold live sharks, rays, and tropical fish, including Predator Lagoon – accessible via a rope bridge overhead and an underwater tunnel for close-up viewing directly beneath the surface.
A kids splash zone and family cabanas sit adjacent to the main water complex. Standard cabanas and Barbie-themed cabanas are available to rent separately. A swim-up bar operates poolside for guests who want a drink without leaving the water.
The Coral Hotel King Terrace Room: Compact Bathroom, Oversized Balcony
The Coral Hotel sits above Marina Village, within steps of late-night pizza and ice cream at Sun and Ice, just off the lobby. The arrival experience runs through an open-air portico into a lobby anchored by dolphin fountains. A guest lounge across from check-in rotates through activities including karaoke and trivia – a practical option for a break from the sun.
The king terrace room itself is straightforward. A large entry closet with ample hangers and an in-room safe sits at the entrance. The bathroom is compact – tub-shower combo, and a toilet positioned close to the door – functional without being spacious. A small coffee and ice counter near the bathroom handles morning coffee or afternoon drinks.
The main room has a king bed flanked by bedside tables, a flat-screen TV above the dresser, a small work table in the corner, and an oversized chair with a built-in drink holder. Lighting and décor stay in Caribbean territory – low-key, unhurried.
The balcony is the standout: a full sliding door opens to a space noticeably larger than the room’s footprint would suggest. The view overlooks the Coral Pool and the lagoon below, with the Royal Towers framed in the background. From that same balcony, guests can sometimes watch the stingray feeding encounter happening down in the lagoon.
Why the Caesars Diamond Coral Comp Stacks Differently Than Paying the $500 Nightly Rate
The Caesars Rewards tier structure produces meaningfully different outcomes at the Coral depending on where a member sits. Platinum status – reachable through normal casino play or automatically granted upon approval of the Caesars Rewards Visa card – unlocks up to four complimentary Coral nights during select months, a solid position for members who don’t gamble heavily. Diamond status, the next tier up, typically delivers a three- or four-night Coral comp annually. Members can accelerate the climb using five-times or ten-times tier credit promotions, or by matching an existing top-tier status from another program – Wyndham Diamond being one named example.
Diamond Plus changes the property entirely: five complimentary nights at the Royal Hotel, sometimes with no resort fee at all, only a small nightly gratuity. That comparison matters because the Royal’s rack rate sits well above the Coral’s. The four-hour rated casino play requirement applies at the Coral level – guests need to log that time with a players card to satisfy the booking terms.
For context, three nights at Coral at rack rate – $500 per night before taxes – runs $1,500 to $2,000 fully loaded. The Diamond comp path brings that to under $237 in combined fees for the same three-night stay ($78.90 × 3 nights). The $2,280 in water park access that would otherwise go to day-visitor pricing doesn’t appear on the bill at all.
The actual folio confirmed here: $64.90 resort fee plus $14 gratuity, nightly, with the base room rate at zero. Fees shift by date and booking period, so confirming exact amounts at the time of reservation is the practical step – not the number from someone else’s stay.
For travelers already inside the Caesars ecosystem – or within matching distance of Diamond through another loyalty program – the Coral comp represents one of the more concrete uses of casino loyalty status outside of a domestic property. The Bahamas trip becomes structurally affordable not because of a promotional rate, but because the room cost is eliminated entirely, leaving only the fixed daily fees as the actual out-of-pocket number.



