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Day-by-day plans for every length

Maldives Tour Itinerary 2026: real day-by-day plans

A Maldives itinerary works best when you let the islands set the pace — early-morning snorkels when the water is calm, lazy midday on the beach, late-afternoon excursions when the light goes gold, and dinners that stretch into the stars. Below are the actual day plans we use when arranging trips, with specific timings, atoll picks, and the real logistics most blogs leave out.

Sweet spot length 5 to 7 nights
Practical minimum 3 to 4 nights
Best long format Split-stay trips
Day 1 mistake Doing too much

“The best Maldives itinerary has fewer items, not more. Two genuine excursions plus four mornings of unstructured snorkelling beats six structured activities every time.”

01 Trip length at a glance

How many days do you actually need?

Not how many you wish you had — how many you actually do. Here’s what fits in each length.

Length Best for What you can fit in
3 nights / 4 daysShort escapes from short-haul originsOne island, one excursion, beach time
4 nights / 5 daysLong-weekend extrasOne island, two excursions, spa day
5 nights / 6 daysFirst-time mid-range visitorsSingle island, three excursions, real rest
7 nights / 8 daysHoneymoons, divers, long-haul travellersSplit stay possible, 4–5 excursions, full unwind
10 nights / 11 daysTwo-atoll explorers, serious diversResort + local island combo, regional variety
14 nights / 15 daysMulti-centre and slow travellersSri Lanka or Dubai add-on, two distinct atolls
In short

For most travellers, 5 to 7 nights is the sweet spot — long enough to settle into the island rhythm and tackle two or three signature excursions, short enough to stay focused. Anything under 4 nights is hard to make worthwhile if you’re flying long-haul. Anything over 10 nights usually wants a split-stay or multi-centre format to stay interesting.

Match your length to a real budget on our Maldives tour cost page, or browse current Maldives tour packages bundled at each length.

02 The natural rhythm

The rhythm of a Maldives day

Before the day-by-day plans, here’s the natural shape every good Maldives itinerary follows. The Maldives runs on the sun, the tides, and the wind — not on your home schedule. Working with that rhythm makes every day better.

6:30 – 9:00 AM

Calmest water, best snorkelling

The lagoon is glass-flat at dawn. Visibility peaks. Reef fish are most active. If you do one snorkel a day, do it now.

9:00 – 11:00 AM

Breakfast and a slow pool morning

Resort buffets run until 10:30 or 11. Local island cafés serve mas huni and roshi. After breakfast, drift to pool or beach.

11:00 AM – 2:00 PM

Excursion window or shade time

Sun is brutal between 11 and 2. Long excursions fill this slot well — boat shade, hat, reef-safe sunscreen. Or just find a daybed and read.

2:00 – 4:00 PM

Half-day excursions, water sports

Wind picks up. Good window for kayaks, paddleboards, jet skis, and half-day fishing. Manta activity peaks late afternoon at Hanifaru and South Ari.

4:00 – 6:30 PM

Sunset hours

Light goes gold around 5:30. Sunset cruises, fishing trips, beach walks. Photographers — this is your window. Sunset bars open around 5.

6:30 – 10:00 PM

Dinner, stars, slow evenings

Dinner runs late. Book speciality restaurants a day in advance. Walk the beach after. Bioluminescent plankton sometimes appears in lagoons June–October.

Maldives overwater villa in the early morning with calm lagoon
Morning
Glass-flat water, 6:30 AM The lagoon is calmest at dawn. The best snorkel of every Maldives day happens before breakfast.
Maldives sandbank excursion with white sand, turquoise water and a small boat
Midday excursion
One signature trip per stay The sandbank picnic, the whale shark expedition, the manta snorkel. Pick one. It anchors the trip.
Private beach dinner setup at a Maldives resort with candles and lanterns at sunset
Slow evenings
Dinner, stars, no rush The Maldives rewards stillness. Slow dinners and starry walks matter more than checking off another activity.
03 The classic week

7-night Maldives itinerary — the canonical plan

This is the canonical Maldives itinerary. We arrange more 7-night trips than any other length. The plan below works for couples, families, and solo travellers; pacing is relaxed but not dull.

Day
01

Arrival, transfer, settle in

Most international flights land between 9 AM and 4 PM at Velana International Airport (MLE). Visa-on-arrival takes 10–15 minutes. Your transfer rep meets you in the arrivals hall holding a name board.

  • Speedboat30–90 minutes to your island, runs all day. Best for late-afternoon arrivals.
  • Seaplane20–45 minutes scenic flight, daylight only (last flights ~16:00). Inbound after 16:30 = overnight in Malé.
  • EveningWelcome drink, orientation walk, find your villa. Don’t try to do anything ambitious — unpack, swim, eat, sleep early.
Day
02

House reef and slow settling

This day looks lazy on paper. It’s deliberate. You’re recalibrating after long-haul travel, building trust with your villa, learning the layout. Don’t skip it.

  • 6:45 AMCoffee on the deck, then 7:15 AM in the water. House reef peaks 7–9 AM — parrotfish, butterflyfish, turtles, reef sharks.
  • 9:30 AMLong breakfast. Pool morning. Lunch at 12:30 at the beach café.
  • AfternoonKayak the lagoon or sleep on a daybed. 5 PM cocktails. Dinner around 7:30.
Day
03

Signature excursion — the reason you came

Pick the one excursion that’s the reason you came to the Maldives. Book it through your resort excursion desk on Day 1 — popular ones sell out, especially whale shark trips in peak season.

  • South AriWhale shark snorkelling expedition, 4–5 hours, $80–$180 per person, year-round.
  • Baa AtollManta ray snorkel at Hanifaru Bay, $80–$150, May–November only.
  • AnywhereSandbank picnic, dolphin cruise, turtle reef snorkel, half-day fishing trip.
  • Late PMSpa or beach time. Dinner at a speciality restaurant if your resort has one.
Day
04

The “lost day” — and that’s the point

This is the day where you don’t plan anything, and that’s the point. Sleep in. Long breakfast. Pool. Long lunch. Beach nap. Snorkel the house reef again — you’ll see things you missed on Day 2.

  • If neededCouple’s spa session ($150–$400 per treatment) or sunset cruise ($60–$120). Otherwise, this is the day Maldives works for you.
Day
05

Second excursion or local island day trip

Pick a second excursion you’d regret missing — different from Day 3.

  • CulturalHalf-day local island visit — Maafushi, Dhiffushi, or Thulusdhoo. Real Maldivian life: harbours, hotaa cafés ($5 fish curry vs $80 resort lunch), souvenirs cheaper than gift shops.
  • ActiveFull-day boat trip combining sandbank, snorkelling, and dolphin watching ($150–$250 per person, lunch included).
  • EveningBack at the resort by 4 PM. Sunset, dinner, sleep.
Day
06

Active morning, slow afternoon

This is also the night to book a private candlelit beach dinner or a floating breakfast for the next morning. Honeymooners always do this on Night 6 because Night 7 is checkout-pack-stress night.

  • MorningSingle scuba dive ($80–$160), parasailing, jet ski tour, kite surfing lesson, or guided snorkel to the resort’s best reef.
  • AfternoonDeliberate slow afternoon. Spa, daybed, sunset.
  • EveningReserve floating breakfast ($80–$200) or beach dinner ($200–$700 per couple) for Day 7.
Day
07

Last full day, slow goodbye

Stay up late tonight — you’ll sleep on the plane.

  • MorningFloating breakfast on the deck. One last morning snorkel — your favourite spot from earlier in the week.
  • AfternoonLunch on the beach. Pack mid-afternoon (less rushed than tomorrow).
  • EveningSunset on your favourite beach. Final dinner under the stars.
Day
08

Departure

Most resorts allow late checkout until 12:00 free; later costs $100–$300 unless you have status or are honeymooning.

  • Speedboat30 minutes before your check-in time at MLE.
  • Seaplane2.5–3 hours before your flight. TMA and Manta Air run on their schedule, not yours.
04 Most-booked length

5-night Maldives itinerary

For 4 nights / 5 days, this works equally well — just compress Day 4 (the “lost day”) and skip Day 6’s morning activity. The most popular short-trip length we book.

01
Arrive and settle

Land. Transfer. Welcome drink. Don’t try to fit anything ambitious. Unpack, swim, eat, sleep.

02
House reef & pool day

Sunrise snorkel. Long breakfast. Slow pool morning. Afternoon kayaking. Sunset cruise booking ($60–$120) if active.

03
Big excursion day

Whale shark, manta ray, sandbank, or full-day fishing — whichever fits the atoll. Morning departure, back by 3 PM, spa or beach for the rest.

04
Second excursion or local island

Half-day local island visit, second snorkel, or scuba dive. Sunset on the beach. Private beach dinner if you’re celebrating.

05
Slow goodbye

Last morning swim. Pack. Transfer to airport. Goodbye.

05 The quick escape

3-night Maldives itinerary

Tight, but workable for travellers from India, Sri Lanka, the Middle East, or Singapore where flights are short. Don’t pick a seaplane resort — you’ll lose 6+ hours to flying. Stick with speedboat-access resorts within 60 minutes of MLE.

Three nights doesn’t give you a “lost day” of pure rest, which means it works better as a romantic recharge than as a holiday. Manage expectations.

Day-1 reality: Land before 3 PM if possible. After 16:00 inbound effectively kills your first day.

01
Arrive & settle

Speedboat to resort. Sunset on the beach. Dinner.

02
Hit the highlights

Sunrise snorkel. Half-day excursion. Pool afternoon. Sunset cruise. Dinner.

03
Active morning, slow PM

Scuba dive or jet ski. Long beach lunch. Spa. Last sunset.

04
Departure

Last swim, pack, speedboat back, fly home.

06 Long-trip formats

10 to 14-night Maldives itinerary

Long trips need variety. Single-island stays past 7 nights start to feel slow for most travellers. The two formats that genuinely work for 10+ nights:

Format 1: Two-atoll split stay

Stay at one resort for 5 nights (e.g. North Malé Atoll for easy access and signature excursions), then transfer to a second resort in a different atoll for 5+ nights (e.g. Baa Atoll for manta season, or South Ari for whale sharks). Each atoll has different reefs, different marine life, different vibes. Internal transfer cost: $200–$700 per person depending on whether it’s speedboat-to-speedboat or seaplane connection. We coordinate this directly.

Format 2: Resort + local island combo

5 nights at a resort island, then 5 nights at a local island like Maafushi, Dhigurah, or Fulidhoo. You get the polished resort experience plus the cultural depth of staying somewhere with actual Maldivian life. Often 30–40 percent cheaper overall than two resort stays. This is the format we recommend most for longer trips. It’s also the one no booking aggregator can put together cleanly because it requires local logistics.

★ Signature itinerary

A 10-night split-stay that works well when planned properly

This format combines the best of both worlds — the polished resort week plus the cultural depth of a local island, coordinated end-to-end so the transition day works seamlessly. Done right, it gives you two distinct sides of the Maldives in one trip.

Days 1–5

Resort base — Velassaru, North Malé

  • Day 1: Arrive, settle in
  • Day 2: House reef, pool day, sunset cruise
  • Day 3: Big excursion (sandbank or whale shark)
  • Day 4: Lost day — pure rest
  • Day 5: Spa morning, water sports afternoon
Days 6–10

Local island base — Maafushi

  • Day 6: Resort checkout, speedboat to Maafushi ($75 pp), guesthouse check-in
  • Day 7: Long full-day whale shark excursion, usually operated toward South Ari depending on sea conditions and operator schedule
  • Day 8: Day-trip ferry to Gulhi or Guraidhoo
  • Day 9: Manta excursion (seasonal) or local cruise
  • Day 10: Slow last day, souvenir shopping, departure Day 11

Total cost: $2,800–$4,500 per person all-in (excluding flights). Compare with $4,500–$7,500 for 10 nights at the same resort. Better trip, lower price, two completely different sides of the Maldives.

07 Themed plans

Themed itineraries by traveller type

Same core trip rhythm, different priorities. These are the trip shapes we book most often.

5-night honeymoon itinerary

Single luxury resort, water villa for the second half, all-inclusive plan

  • Day 1Beach villa check-in, welcome champagne (most resorts comp this for honeymooners), early dinner
  • Day 2House reef snorkel, pool morning, couple’s spa ($300–$800 for two), sunset cruise
  • Day 3Move to water villa. Floating breakfast on the deck. Half-day private boat: snorkel + sandbank picnic
  • Day 4Sleep in. Whale shark or manta excursion. Private candlelit beach dinner ($200–$700)
  • Day 5Last morning swim, pack, sunset toast, dinner, depart Day 6

Resorts we book often: Hurawalhi (adults-only), Conrad Maldives Rangali, Joali, Anantara Kihavah, Soneva Jani. Full details on our Maldives honeymoon guide.

5-night family itinerary

Two adults plus two kids, kids’ clubs, easy speedboat transfers, family villas

  • Day 1Arrive — pick a resort within 60 min of MLE (kids and seaplanes don’t always mix). Pool, dinner, sleep
  • Day 2Kids’ club AM while parents snorkel. Family lunch. Beach pool. Mini-disco at sunset
  • Day 3Family excursion — dolphin cruise, shallow lagoon snorkel for ages 6+, or sandbank picnic with shaded gazebo
  • Day 4Resort fun day — water sports, banana boat, paddleboards, kids’ cooking class
  • Day 5Slow morning, last swim, pack, depart

Resorts we book often: Kandima Maldives, Atmosphere Kanifushi, Hard Rock Hotel Maldives, Niyama Private Islands.

7-night diver’s itinerary

Built around dive sites — best atolls: South Ari, Vaavu, Lhaviyani, Addu

  • Day 1Arrive, check in, dive briefing with on-island PADI centre
  • Day 2Two-tank house reef dive (orientation + drift). Optional third dive PM
  • Day 3Channel dive — Maaya Thila, Kuda Giri, Banana Reef, or Fish Head. Strong currents, big fish
  • Day 4Day off from diving (mandatory if flying within 24 hrs). Snorkel-only, beach, spa
  • Day 5Whale shark or manta excursion (snorkel-only)
  • Day 6Wreck dive — Maldive Victory or other local wreck
  • Day 7Final dive AM if flight is 24+ hrs out, otherwise cruise/beach. Depart Day 8

Liveaboard alternative: 12-cabin dive boat, 3–4 dives per day, often cheaper. See our Maldives diving guide.

7-night budget local-island itinerary

Real Maldives trip on a real budget — same lagoons, simpler accommodation

  • Day 1Speedboat to Maafushi ($25), guesthouse check-in. Bikini beach swim, café dinner ($10)
  • Day 2Snorkel from bikini beach (free). Walk the island. Local cooking class ($25)
  • Day 3Whale shark expedition from Maafushi (full day, $80–$120 — way cheaper than from a resort)
  • Day 4Day pass to a nearby resort ($75–$150) — pool, beach, lunch buffet, sometimes cocktails
  • Day 5Speedboat to Fulidhoo or Dhigurah ($30, 1 hr). Reef shark feeding at the harbour at dusk
  • Day 6Manta ray excursion (seasonal) or local island day
  • Day 7Slow last day, final swim, depart Day 8

Total: $700–$1,100 per person excluding flights. See Maldives island tour packages.

08 Choosing your plan

How to choose your Maldives itinerary

Three questions answer most of the choice.

01

How many nights do you have?

Not how many you wish you had — how many you actually do. Three is short but workable from short-haul origins. Five to seven is the sweet spot. Ten+ benefits from a split format.

02

What would ruin the trip if it didn’t happen?

A water villa? Diving with manta rays? A floating breakfast for the photo? An actual rest after a tough year? Your answer dictates resort, atoll, and pacing. If marine life is the priority, atoll matters more than the resort.

03

Are you OK with seaplanes?

Seaplanes are scenic but only run in daylight, only carry small bags, and add $400–$700 per person. If your arrival flight lands past 16:00, you have kids under 5, mobility issues, or fear of small aircraft — pick a speedboat-access resort.

Use our Maldives Trip Planner Wizard → — walks you through these questions and suggests itineraries that match.

09 Practical logistics

The logistics that shape every itinerary

A few practical decisions affect every day of the trip. Get these right and the itinerary works.

Maldives seaplane transfer route over atolls and turquoise lagoons

Getting from Malé Airport to your island

Speedboat: 15–90 minutes, $150–$450 round-trip per person, all day. Seaplane: 20–60 minutes, $400–$700 round-trip, daylight only (last flights ~16:00). Domestic flight + speedboat: remote atolls, 2–4 hours total, $300–$600 round-trip.

Visa for the Maldives

Maldives tourist visa is granted on arrival, subject to meeting entry requirements. Travellers need a passport or travel document with a Machine Readable Zone and at least 1 month validity, confirmed return or onward tickets, confirmed accommodation or proof of funds, and the IMUGA Traveller Declaration submitted within 96 hours before arrival.

What to pack

Light cottons, multiple swimsuits, reef-safe sunscreen (essential), wide-brim hat, sunglasses, sandals, one smart-casual outfit for resort dinners, a light cover-up. On local islands: shoulders and knees covered when out — local law and culture, not optional.

Alcohol on local islands vs resorts

Local inhabited islands are dry — no alcohol on the island itself. Many guesthouses arrange “floating bars” (boats anchored offshore in international waters). Resort islands and liveaboards: alcohol freely available, included in most AI plans.

Best time of year

Dec–April: dry season, peak prices, calmest seas. May–Nov: green season, 30–60% cheaper, brief afternoon showers, plankton-rich water (better for whale sharks and mantas). Sweet spot: late April–early May, late September, first 3 weeks of November.

See our Maldives weather and season checker → for month-by-month detail by atoll.

10 What goes wrong

Itinerary mistakes most first-timers make

After arranging hundreds of trips, here’s what we see go wrong on Day 1, fixable in advance.

!

Booking a seaplane resort with a late inbound flight

Land at 17:00, no seaplane until next morning, $200 overnight in Malé, half a day lost. Always check seaplane operating hours against your flight time.

!

Cramming Day 1

Long-haul travellers try to do a sunset cruise + dinner + welcome drinks within 4 hours of landing. They’re exhausted by Day 2. Day 1 is for arriving. That’s it.

!

Choosing the wrong atoll

Booking South Ari for a romantic week when they wanted quiet — or booking Lhaviyani for whale sharks (wrong atoll). Atoll choice should match what matters most.

!

Pre-booking too many excursions

People over-book before arriving and then can’t change anything. Book Day 3 and maybe Day 5 in advance; leave the rest flexible.

!

Skipping the local island day

Travellers stay 7 nights at a private resort and never see actual Maldivian life. Half a day on Maafushi or Dhiffushi changes the trip.

!

Underestimating the sun

Maldives sun is brutal between 11 and 2. SPF 50 reef-safe sunscreen, hat, rash guard for snorkelling. First-degree sunburn on Day 3 of a 7-night trip is a major buzzkill.

What most travellers miss: the best Maldives itinerary has fewer items, not more. Two genuine excursions plus four mornings of unstructured snorkelling beats six structured activities every time. The Maldives rewards stillness.

11 Why book through us

Why plan your Maldives itinerary with HolidayVibe

We’re a Maldives Ministry of Tourism-licensed travel agency based in the Maldives. The itinerary advice on this page comes from our team’s actual stays, our regular relationships with resort general managers, and our coordination of split-stay logistics that aggregator sites can’t handle.

Local-time WhatsApp support

When your seaplane runs late, you message us directly, not a 1-800 number 12 time zones away. We’ve fixed missed transfers at 11pm and rebooked emergency room moves on Sundays.

Coordinated split-stay transfers

The resort + local island combo or the two-atoll split — we handle the connecting logistics, luggage, timing, and cancellation backups. The format aggregators can’t put together.

Honest pacing advice

We’ll tell you when 5 nights is enough, when 10 nights wants a split, and when your flight time means changing the resort shortlist before you book the wrong combination.

Honeymoon perk advocacy

We confirm the honeymoon perks before you fly. Free welcome drinks, candlelit dinners, late checkouts, and upgrades — sometimes promised, sometimes forgotten. We chase them.

Real on-the-ground knowledge

We’ve stayed at most resorts. When we recommend an atoll for a specific trip type, it’s because someone on our team has slept there, eaten there, snorkelled there.

Maldives-licensed

Registered with the Maldives Ministry of Tourism. Answerable to local regulators. Anything goes wrong with a HolidayVibe booking and you can complain directly.

Plan with a local team

Get your Maldives itinerary built

Send us your dates, length, traveller mix, and the one thing that would ruin the trip if it didn’t happen. We come back within 24 hours with a day-by-day itinerary at one or two price points. No booking fees. We compare the full package cost — including transfers, taxes, meal plan, and inclusions — so you can choose the option that makes the most sense.

Keep planning

Sister guides & tools

FAQs

Frequently asked questions about Maldives itineraries

How many days are enough for a Maldives trip?

Five to seven nights is the sweet spot for most travellers. Four nights is the practical minimum once you factor in flight times and transfers. Three nights only makes sense from short-haul origins like India, Sri Lanka, or the Middle East. Travellers from Europe, North America, or Australia should plan at least 7 nights to make the long-haul worthwhile.

How do I get from Malé Airport to my island?

Three options: speedboat (15–90 minutes, $150–$450 round-trip per person, runs all day), seaplane (20–60 minutes, $400–$700 round-trip per person, daylight only with last flights around 16:00), or domestic flight plus speedboat for remote atolls (2–4 hours total, $300–$600 round-trip per person). Your resort representative meets you in the arrivals hall holding a name board. Always check seaplane operating hours against your inbound flight time before booking.

Can I drink alcohol on local islands?

No. Local inhabited islands like Maafushi, Thulusdhoo, Dhigurah, and Fulidhoo are dry — no alcohol on the island itself, by Maldivian law. Many guesthouses arrange “floating bars” (boats anchored just offshore in international waters) where you can drink. You can also take a day pass to a nearby resort. Resort islands and liveaboards have alcohol freely available — included in most all-inclusive plans.

What should I pack for a Maldives trip?

Light cottons, multiple swimsuits, reef-safe sunscreen (essential — many resorts ban regular sunscreen near house reefs), wide-brim hat, sunglasses, sandals, one smart-casual outfit for resort dinners, a light cover-up, insect repellent, and a basic dry bag for excursions. If staying on a local island, pack modest clothing — shoulders and knees covered when walking around. Bikinis only at designated bikini beaches. This isn’t optional; it’s local law and culture.

Is it better to stay at a resort or a local island?

Depends on your priorities. Resort islands offer privacy, overwater villas, all-inclusive dining, alcohol, and minimal logistics — but cost $300–$5,000+ per night. Local islands like Maafushi cost $50–$150 per night, give you authentic Maldivian culture, are dry of alcohol, and require modest dress when out and about. Many travellers do best with a split-stay — 3–5 nights at a resort plus 3–5 nights at a local island, getting both experiences in one trip.

What are the best things to do in the Maldives?

Snorkelling on the house reef, sandbank picnics, sunset cruises, dolphin watching, scuba diving, whale shark excursions (South Ari Atoll, year-round), manta ray snorkels (Baa Atoll’s Hanifaru Bay, May–November), nurse shark snorkels (Lhaviyani Atoll), surfing (Central Atolls, March–October), local island cultural visits, sunset fishing, spa treatments, and floating breakfasts. The best Maldives itineraries balance two or three signature excursions with plenty of unstructured beach and reef time.

When is the best time to visit the Maldives?

December to April is the dry season — calm seas, postcard skies, best for first-time visitors and short trips. May to November is the green season — 30–60 percent cheaper, brief afternoon showers (not constant rain), and the best season for whale sharks and mantas because of plankton-rich water. The sweet spot is late April–early May, late September, or the first three weeks of November — best balance of weather and price.

What does a typical Maldives day look like?

Sunrise snorkel between 6:30 and 9 AM (calmest water, best visibility). Long breakfast 9–10:30. Pool or beach mid-morning. Lunch and shade 11–2 (sun is brutal). Half-day excursion or water sports 2–4. Sunset window 5–6:30. Dinner 7–9. Stars and slow walks until late. The Maldives runs on the sun, the tides, and the wind — working with that rhythm makes every day better.

Should I plan every day of my Maldives trip in advance?

No. Pre-book your big excursions (whale shark, manta, full-day cruises) before arrival because popular ones sell out. Leave half-day activities, spa, and meals flexible — the resort excursion desk handles same-day and next-day bookings well. The best Maldives itineraries have two or three structured activities and several unstructured days.

Can I combine a resort and a local island in one trip?

Yes, and it’s one of the smartest formats for trips of 7+ nights. Stay 3–5 nights at a resort island, then transfer to a local island like Maafushi, Dhigurah, or Fulidhoo for the rest. You get the polished resort experience plus the cultural depth of staying somewhere with actual Maldivian life. Often 30–40 percent cheaper than two resort stays. We coordinate the transfer logistics directly.

Is the Maldives good for families with kids?

Yes, with the right resort and itinerary. Family-friendly resorts (Kandima, Atmosphere Kanifushi, Hard Rock Hotel) offer kids’ clubs, family villas, and shallow lagoon swimming. Stick to speedboat-access resorts within 60 minutes of MLE — kids and seaplanes don’t always mix well. Build in pool mornings, half-day excursions only (full-day boats are too long for under-10s), and family-friendly dining options.

What’s the most romantic Maldives itinerary for a honeymoon?

Five to seven nights at a luxury water-villa resort, all-inclusive plan, three structured romantic moments: a sunset cruise on Day 2, a private candlelit beach dinner on Day 4, and a floating breakfast on Day 5 or 6. Most resorts comp honeymoon perks (sparkling wine, fruit platters, sometimes free upgrades) — confirm with your travel agent before flying. Best resorts for honeymoons we book often: Hurawalhi, Conrad Maldives Rangali, Joali, Anantara Kihavah, and Soneva Jani.

How much does a typical Maldives itinerary cost?

A 5-night mid-range itinerary costs $2,000–$3,800 per person excluding flights. A 7-night luxury itinerary runs $5,500–$11,000 per person. Local-island budget itineraries can come in under $1,500 per person for a full week. International flights add $130–$1,900 depending on origin city. See our Maldives tour cost guide for detailed breakdowns.

Should I take a liveaboard or stay at a resort?

Liveaboards make sense if diving is the main reason you’re coming. You sleep on a 12-cabin boat, wake up at a different reef every morning, and dive 3–4 times per day. 7-night liveaboards cost $1,800–$3,500 per person — often cheaper than equivalent resort dive packages. Resorts are better for non-divers, families, honeymoons, and travellers who want luxury accommodation.

Can I plan a Maldives itinerary on a budget?

Yes. Stay on local islands like Maafushi, Thulusdhoo, Dhigurah, or Fulidhoo at $50–$150 per night, take public ferries or scheduled speedboats ($25–$50 each way), eat at local cafés ($5–$15 per meal), and join group excursions ($30–$120 per person). A 5-night budget itinerary runs $700–$1,200 per person plus flights. You can access many of the same lagoons, sandbanks, reef areas, and marine-life excursions as higher-budget travellers, but with simpler accommodation and more local-island logistics.