It looks like John Travolta is hiding in the Bahamas to avoid the sex scandal that he’s involved in. Click below to find out more.

Melissa Nash

The feverish search for John Travolta is now centered on a private hideaway in the Bahamas.

As recently as this week, the “Saturday Night Fever” star was riding out his groping scandal with wife Kelly Preston and their two kids at a vacation home on a remote Bahamian island, E! News reported.

The residence is not the same location where Travolta’s 16-year-old son Jett suffered a fatal seizure in 2009, E! said.

Before the Bahamas, the embattled “Pulp Fiction” actor reportedly was holed up at his home in the gated Jumbolair aviation community near Ocala, Fla., as his lawyer battled groping allegations from two masseurs seeking millions in federal court.

“He was at Jumbolair, the whole family, acting like everything was normal,” an anonymous neighbor told E! News.

He also spent time at the Scientology center in nearby Clearwater, E! reported.

Rumors have swirled about the recent state of Travolta’s marriage, but Preston has not commented publicly beyond praising her husband of two decades for the Mother’s Day video he made her — a 4-minute montage of dozens of private family snapshots.

“My husband, Johnny, made his directorial debut creating a special Mother’s Day video for me. I was so moved and love it so much that I wanted to share it with all of you,” Preston, 49, wrote on her website after the first accusers filed their lawsuit.

Travolta, 58, has denied allegations from a growing cast of men claiming the actor surprised them with horny horseplay during massages or other travel-related encounters.

Both masseurs behind the original federal lawsuit have withdrawn their John Doe claims and now are working with famed civil rights lawyer Gloria Allred.

John Doe No. 2 — identified as beefy black belt John Casey Truesdale in a Daily News exclusive — met face to face with Allred in the Atlanta area on Wednesday, Allred confirmed.

“I am back in L.A. and have no comment today,” Allred said Thursday.

A source previously told The News that Travolta’s camp offered Truesdale $125,000 in a verbal settlement offer, but the former U.S. Army medic thought it was too low and fired his original lawyer Okorie Okorocha to jump ship to Allred.

Travolta’s lawyer called the settlement claim “completely false.”