It's called Pom Pom. You don’t come to Grand Cayman expecting a rooftop like this. Most nights on Seven Mile Beach stay close to the sand — beachfront dinners, low-lit bars, the sound of the water just beyond the tables. Then you take the elevator up at Pom Pom Rooftop, and the perspective changes.
The island opens up in front of you. The shoreline runs in one direction, the rest of Grand Cayman stretches in the other, and the light starts to shift as the sun drops. It’s a different way to see a place that’s usually experienced at ground level.
Pom Pom is set above Seven Mile Beach at the Hotel Indigo, and it’s the island’s premier rooftop lounge and restaurant. That alone makes it distinct, but the experience goes beyond the elevation. You’re not tucked into a corner or partially above a building — you’re fully above it, with wide, uninterrupted views across the island.
It’s the kind of vantage point that changes how you spend the evening. You’re watching the horizon, tracking the last light over the water, then staying as the sky turns and the room fills in.
The layout leans into open air and lounge-style seating — low couches, bar seating, and pockets of space that shift as the night goes on. Music carries across the rooftop, often with live DJs, and the tone moves from early evening to late-night without a reset.
The crowd builds gradually. Early tables lean toward dinner and drinks. Later, it becomes more about the bar — cocktails, music, and people staying longer than planned.
The menu focuses on Latin-inspired small plates and cocktails, built for sharing and pacing the night rather than anchoring it to a single course. You’ll see dishes like seafood preparations, grilled items, and lighter plates designed to move across the table.
Cocktails carry the same direction — citrus, spice, and layered flavors, often presented with a bit of detail but without overcomplication. It’s the kind of menu that keeps things moving, matching the energy of the room.
Timing changes the experience. Earlier in the evening, you’re here for the view — the light, the horizon, the quieter stretch before the crowd builds. After dark, the rooftop shifts into something more social, with music taking over and the bar becoming the center of attention.
Both work. It just depends on what kind of night you’re looking for.
Grand Cayman has no shortage of strong restaurants, particularly along Seven Mile Beach. What’s been missing is this kind of perspective — a place where you see the island from above while still staying in the middle of it.
Pom Pom fills that gap. It adds a new layer to the island’s dining scene, one that feels current, social, and built around the full arc of an evening rather than a single meal.
Pom Pom Rooftop changes how you experience Grand Cayman at night. You’re not at the beach, and you’re not removed from it either — you’re above it, looking out across the island with a drink in hand and the night building around you. That combination is what makes it one of the most compelling places to go right now.
