Pippa Middleton Is Honeymooning On Barack Obama's Island Of Choice

These bungalows are fit for the famous.

Newlyweds Pippa Middleton and James Matthews are reportedly heading to an island in the South Pacific for an uber luxurious honeymoon ― and their destination couldn’t be hotter these days. 

A day after their wedding in Englefield, England, E! reports the couple braved security lines at Los Angeles International Airport Sunday evening on their way to Tetiaroa, French Polynesia. It’s the same private island where Barack Obama recently spent a month working on a book before yachting around with the likes of Oprah, Tom Hanks and Bruce Springsteen, so it’s safe to say Tetiaroa is having a moment right now. 

Tetiaroa is technically a small atoll. Just north of Tahiti in the Society Islands, it once belonged to Marlon Brando. In 2014, a decade after his death, the place was transformed with a dreamy ecologically friendly resort called The Brando

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Douglas Peebles via Getty Images
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The Brando
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The Brando
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The Brando

The Brando features 35 private villas, which run from $2,800 to $13,300 per night. Activities include swimming, kayaking and paddleboarding, which the Obamas did during their visit to the area. 

Middleton has shown a preference for islands before, such as when she and her brother visited St. Barts for New Year’s or when the entire family went to Mustique. Her bachelorette party, however, took place in the French Alps last month.

And now, it’s time for some South Pacific sun. Take us with you?!

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Before You Go

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Score: 86.897History aficionados have long-loved this Mediterranean nation, evidence that you don’t need palm trees or daiquiris to be one of the world’s most tantalizing islands. Malta has been overrun by every major empire in the region, from the Phoenicians to the Byzantines, the British to the 1.5 million tourists who flock to the island’s colorful shores. Limestone cliffs are dotted with baroque churches, crumbling castle walls, and fortresses. The capital, Valletta, squeezes half a millennium of history into half a square mile, with forts and stairways that crest in unparalleled harbor views. With the debut of a new Renzo Piano-designed open-air theater, visitors can now marvel at the contrast of 21st and 16th-century architecture. Head to the Gozo for a reprieve from Valletta’s frenetic energy—it’s here that Odysseus is rumored to have spent seven years after the Trojan War. Take one look at this handsome Bronze Age island, set between Sicily and the North African coast, and you won’t blame him.

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Kauai, Hawaii(02 of06)
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Score: 87.882Kauai, the oldest Hawaiian Island, formed when lava bubbled up from the ocean floor 5 million years. To this day, it maintains a certain sense of dignity that is not uncommon amongst the community’s elders. For example, it's defiantly more low-key than its glamorous sibling to the east, though no less dramatic. Can't-miss sights include Pali Ke Kua, or Hideaways beach, kept secret by towering black lava walls, as well as the Waimea Canyon and Na Pali Coast, both banded by scenic hiking trails and switchbacks. Development isn't unheard of here; Kauai has its famed golf courses and high-profile resorts. But nature still asserts itself in the form of the spiked Anahola Mountains and the bluffs above Hanelai Bay. From here, you get what may arguably the most impressive vista in the state: clouds evaporating over a perfect crescent moon of beach.

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Score: 87.904This heart-shaped island levitating on the South Seas has convinced even the most selective travelers that there is such a thing as paradise on Earth, thanks to impossibly blue lagoons and rugged, rainforest-blanketed mountains. The less-trafficked sister island of Bora Bora offers coconut-strewn beaches and an intoxicating aroma of vanilla, grapefruit, and Tahitian gardenia, as well as thatched bungalows at luxe properties such as the InterContinental and views of Tahiti, only 11 miles away, at The Sofitel Moorea la Ora Beach Resort. Friendly Tahitians are full of local lore. It’s believed that the beaches along Cook and Opunohu Bays was formed by the tail of a giant yellow lizard, and that—perhaps more believably—James Michener’s novel, Tales of the south Pacific, was inspired by this otherworldly land.

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Score: 87.93Everything is brighter on Santorini, where blanched-white houses and blue-domed churches erupt down the sides of an ancient caldera. Highlights include the black sands of Perissa Beach, the richly preserved, prehistoric Akrotíri settlement, best known as the “Minoan Pompeii,” and the postcard-worthy sunsets over Oia, the cliff-top village that is one of the most photographed spots in the world. Book a room at Perivolas, an adults-only resort housed in 300-year-old cave-carved dwellings that feel anything but primeval with a selection of honey and herb-scented Apivita toiletries, and an infinity pool that seems to pour into the Aegean Sea.

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