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From a $90 short-transfer Bandos day to a $300 luxury escape at Kurumba — here's how Maldives resort day passes actually work, which resorts to pick from your base, and how to spot a poor-value transfer before you book.
A Maldives resort day pass is a paid one-day visit to a private resort island — you arrive by speedboat, use the beach, pool, and dining facilities, then return to your base in the evening. Most travellers buying day passes are staying on a local island like Maafushi, transiting through Malé or Hulhumalé, or spending a long airport layover.
Day passes typically cost $90–$160 per person at short-transfer resorts like Bandos and Kurumba, $140–$220 at mid-tier properties, and $220–$350+ at premium resorts. The biggest decision isn't the resort — it's the transfer. A 90-minute boat ride for a 5-hour day rarely beats a 25-minute hop with 8 hours on the island.
A day pass gives you temporary access to a private-island resort — the beach, the pool, dining outlets, sometimes a meal credit, and limited use of facilities like snorkelling gear or non-motorised water sports. You arrive by speedboat from Malé, Hulhumalé, or a nearby local island, spend most of the day on the island, and return in the late afternoon or early evening.
What it isn't: an overnight resort stay. You don't get a room, you don't see the resort in the evening, and you usually don't have access to spa, premium dining, or motorised water sports without paying extra. The product is one polished day on a private resort island, nothing more.
In short
A resort day pass is the cheapest way to spend a day on a private Maldives resort island without paying for the room. It works best when the transfer is short, the inclusions are clear, and you actually have time to enjoy the place.
Most pages talk about day passes as if every resort offers them. They don't. The resorts below run regular day-pass programmes, accept advance bookings, and have predictable transfer routes. Use this as your shortlist before checking specific dates.
| Resort | Atoll | Transfer | Day pass tier | Why it stands out |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bandos Maldives | North Malé | ~25 min speedboat from Malé | Mid ($110–$180) | The most popular day-pass resort in the country. Strong house reef, lunch buffet usually included, easy logistics. |
| Kurumba Maldives | North Malé | ~20 min speedboat from Malé | Premium ($180–$280) | Closest 5-star resort to the airport. Multiple dining outlets, manicured grounds, family-friendly setup. |
| Paradise Island Resort | North Malé | ~20 min speedboat from Malé | Mid ($120–$180) | Half-board day passes common. Long beach, several pools, good for families needing space. |
| Adaaran Club Rannalhi | South Malé | ~30 min from Maafushi | Mid ($110–$160) | The standard Maafushi day-pass target. All-inclusive day options, reef snorkelling included. |
| Olhuveli Beach & Spa | South Malé | ~45 min from Maafushi or Malé | Mid–Premium ($150–$250) | All-inclusive day-pass option, adults-only honeymoon section, strong house reef. |
| Fihalhohi Island Resort | South Malé | ~50 min from Malé | Value ($90–$140) | One of the cheapest day-pass options. Casual atmosphere, good for travellers prioritising value. |
| Embudu Village | South Malé | ~45 min from Malé | Value ($90–$130) | Budget-friendly day pass, traditional Maldivian setup, decent house reef for snorkelling. |
| Sun Island Resort | South Ari | ~25 min seaplane or 90 min speedboat | Mid–Premium ($180–$280) | One of the largest islands, all-inclusive day pass available. Long transfer makes it best for travellers already in South Ari. |
What most travellers miss
The best day-pass resort isn't the most luxurious one — it's the one with the shortest transfer from your base. A 25-minute hop to Bandos with 8 hours on the island almost always beats a 90-minute boat to a more famous resort with 5 hours on the island.
Your departure island decides which resorts are realistic. Most travellers picking day passes don't realise their options narrow significantly based on where they're starting from.
| Your base | Strong day-pass options | Transfer time each way | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Malé / Hulhumalé | Bandos, Kurumba, Paradise Island, Embudu, Fihalhohi | 20–50 min speedboat | Best variety. Same-day pickup/dropoff easy from any city hotel. |
| Maafushi | Adaaran Club Rannalhi, Olhuveli | 30–45 min speedboat | Same atoll resorts. Most operators run scheduled boats; book through guesthouse or harbourside operator. |
| Airport (long layover) | Bandos, Kurumba | 20–25 min | Closest 5-star resorts to MLE airport. Both accept layover guests, see layover section below. |
| South Ari local islands (Dhigurah, Mahibadhoo) | Sun Island, nearby resort options | 20–40 min speedboat | Practical only because you're already in the atoll. From other parts of the country it's not worth the seaplane cost. |
| Other local islands (Rasdhoo, Fulidhoo, Thulusdhoo) | Limited — depends on nearby resort partnerships | Varies | Day passes from these bases are less common. Check what your guesthouse can arrange before assuming it's available. |
Different travellers need different things from a day pass. These groupings should help you self-route to the right shortlist.
Shortest transfer
Both 20–25 minutes from Malé. If your priority is maximum island time and minimum motion sickness, these are the obvious picks. Kurumba is more polished, Bandos is more casual and has a stronger house reef.
Best value
Day passes around $90–$140 with meals included. Slightly longer transfers but materially cheaper than the premium options. Best for travellers who want a resort day without paying premium-resort rates.
Best for families
All three accept families on day passes, have pools and shallow lagoons, and offer kid-sized portions or buffet options. Kurumba has the best children's facilities; Paradise Island has the most beach space.
Best for couples
Olhuveli has an adults-only honeymoon section accessible on day passes. Kurumba has overwater dining and quieter beach areas. Both work well for an anniversary day or a romantic upgrade from a local-island holiday.
All-inclusive day
Day passes with food, drinks (including alcohol), and snorkelling included. Higher headline price but predictable total — you don't pay extra for a beer or a second sandwich.
From Maafushi
The default day-pass target if you're staying in Maafushi. About 30 minutes by speedboat, all-inclusive options, snorkelling included. Booked through Maafushi guesthouses or harbourside operators.
Long Maldives layovers are a real use case for day passes. If you have 8+ hours between flights at Velána International (MLE), spending the bulk of it on a private resort island is far better than sitting in the airport terminal — and only Bandos and Kurumba make it practical.
You need at least 8 hours between your arrival and departure flights for a layover day pass to be safe. 10+ hours is comfortable. Less than 6 hours, stay at the airport — the boat transfer math doesn't work.
Layover day pass cautions
Use these as planning ranges. Prices below assume the speedboat transfer is included. Tax and service charge are usually added on top of advertised resort prices — from 1 July 2025, Maldives Tourism Goods and Services Tax (TGST) is 17%, and most resorts also add a 10% service charge, so always compare the final payable total.
| Day pass tier | Typical resorts | Price range (incl. transfer) | What's typically included |
|---|---|---|---|
| Value | Fihalhohi, Embudu Village | $90–$140 pp | Speedboat, lunch buffet, pool/beach access, basic snorkel gear |
| Mid | Bandos, Paradise Island, Adaaran Club Rannalhi | $110–$180 pp | Speedboat, lunch (often with non-alcoholic drinks), pool/beach, snorkel gear |
| Mid–Premium | Olhuveli, Sun Island | $150–$250 pp | All-inclusive food and drinks, including alcohol; pool/beach; snorkel gear; some non-motorised activities |
| Premium | Kurumba | $180–$280 pp | Speedboat, multi-restaurant dining or generous credit, pool/beach, snorkel gear, refined service |
| Luxury one-day escape | Select 5-star resorts on request | $280–$450+ pp | Premium dining, spa credit options, private cabana, butler service in some cases |
Key takeaway on price
A $120 advertised day pass at a resort can become $154 on your final bill once 17% TGST and 10% service charge are applied. Always ask for the gross total before committing — for a fuller comparison across all excursion types see the Maldives excursion prices guide.
This is where most disappointed reviews come from. Two day passes can have similar headline prices and very different real value depending on what's actually covered.
Almost never included — budget for these separately
This is the standard arc for a day pass at a short-transfer resort like Bandos or Kurumba. Times shift slightly depending on resort and season, but the overall shape is consistent.
| Time | What happens |
|---|---|
| 9:00 a.m. | Speedboat departs Malé jetty (or Hulhumalé pickup) — check in at the resort speedboat counter 30 min before |
| 9:25 a.m. | Arrive at resort jetty — check in at reception, get day-pass wristband or card |
| 9:45 a.m. | Drop bags at the day-use lockers or beach lounger area; change if needed |
| 10:00 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. | Beach, pool, snorkel, water sports — the bulk of your day |
| 12:30 – 2:00 p.m. | Lunch — usually buffet, sometimes à la carte at premium resorts |
| 2:00 – 5:00 p.m. | Afternoon beach/pool time, optional spa or extra activities (paid separately) |
| 5:00 p.m. | Last call at reception — settle any extras (drinks, spa, paid activities) |
| 5:15 p.m. | Return speedboat to Malé or your local island |
| 5:45–6:00 p.m. | Back at base |
A 5-star resort 90 minutes away with 5 hours on the island is rarely better than a 4-star resort 25 minutes away with 8 hours on the island. Calculate your actual time-on-island before paying for prestige.
Speedboats run late. Weather can cancel afternoon transfers. Always leave a clear day between your day pass and your departure flight — or build a 4-hour buffer minimum if doing a layover day.
Some resorts advertise a "$60 dining credit" but the credit is only usable at one restaurant, doesn't cover drinks, and excludes 17% TGST and 10% service. Confirm exactly what the credit covers and whether it's gross or net.
Some Maldives resorts (parts of Anantara Veli, certain COMO properties) don't accept children even on day passes. Always confirm the resort accepts your group's age range before booking.
Most Maldives resorts require swimwear cover-ups in restaurants and main areas. Bring a light shirt or sarong even if you only plan to be in beachwear — you'll be turned away from lunch otherwise.
Day-pass guests can usually charge to their day-pass account, but some resorts only allow this for guests with credit cards on file. Bring $50–$100 USD in cash for tips, drinks, or paid extras as a backup.
Walk-up day passes get refused regularly when the resort is at capacity (high season, weekends, when overnight guests are arriving). Always book at least 24 hours ahead, 72 hours during peak weeks.
Unless you're at an explicit all-inclusive day pass (Olhuveli, Sun Island, Adaaran), expect to pay $8–$15 per beer and $12–$20 per cocktail before tax and service. A couple having three drinks each can add $80–$150 to the day.
Tell us where you're staying, your travel dates, and whether you want short-transfer convenience or all-inclusive value. We'll come back with options that match your base, budget, and group.
Open the excursion planner 💬 WhatsAppMost Maldives resort day passes cost $90–$280 per person depending on the resort tier. Value resorts like Fihalhohi and Embudu start around $90–$140. Mid-tier resorts like Bandos and Paradise Island typically run $110–$180. Premium resorts like Kurumba sit around $180–$280. Most resorts add 17% Tourism GST and 10% service charge on top of advertised prices, which can take a $120 day pass to $154 on the final bill.
Bandos Maldives is the most popular and best-balanced day pass for most travellers — 25 minutes from Malé, mid-tier pricing, strong house reef, family-friendly. Kurumba Maldives is the closest 5-star resort to the airport and the best premium pick. Adaaran Club Rannalhi is the standard choice from Maafushi. The "best" resort depends on your departure base and what you're prioritising — transfer time, food value, or luxury level.
Yes, if your layover is 8+ hours. Bandos Maldives and Kurumba Maldives both run airport-friendly day passes — 20–25 minute speedboat each way from MLE. Build a 90-minute buffer for the return transfer plus security. Layovers under 6 hours don't work because the boat transfer math leaves too little time on the island. Always book at least 24 hours ahead, and confirm your transit visa allows leaving the airport.
Usually yes, especially at short-transfer resorts. Bandos, Kurumba, Paradise Island, Adaaran Club Rannalhi and most popular day-pass resorts include the round-trip speedboat in their day-pass price. Resorts further away (Sun Island, Olhuveli) sometimes price transfers separately, especially for seaplane access. Always confirm whether the quote is "transfer included" or "transfer extra" before booking.
Lunch is included at most resorts — usually a buffet, sometimes a credit at a designated restaurant. Soft drinks with lunch are typically included. Alcohol is rarely included unless the resort is explicitly all-inclusive (Olhuveli, Sun Island, Adaaran Club Rannalhi all-inclusive option). Premium dining outlets, speciality restaurants and bar drinks at standard resorts are charged separately. Budget $30–$80 extra per person if you'll have multiple drinks or use premium outlets.
Yes. Adaaran Club Rannalhi is the most common Maafushi day pass — about 30 minutes by speedboat with all-inclusive options. Olhuveli Beach & Spa is also accessible in around 45 minutes. You book through your Maafushi guesthouse or directly with harbour operators. Day passes from Maafushi typically run $110–$200 including transfer, depending on the resort and whether the package is half-board or all-inclusive.
Standard day passes run 6–9 hours on the island. Typical timing is 9:00 a.m. arrival, 5:00–5:30 p.m. departure. Some resorts offer half-day passes (4–5 hours, usually mornings) at a reduced price — ask if you only need a short stay. Layover day passes are usually shorter because of the airport schedule, typically 5–6 hours on the island.
Most family resorts welcome children on day passes — Bandos, Kurumba, Paradise Island, Adaaran, Sun Island all accept families. Children 6–12 typically pay 50% of the adult day-pass rate; under 6 are usually free. Some adults-only resorts and adults-only sections of larger resorts (parts of Anantara Veli, certain COMO properties) don't accept children even on day passes. Always confirm before booking with kids.
For travellers staying on a local island like Maafushi, on a long airport layover, or wanting one polished resort day inside a budget Maldives trip — yes, a day pass is usually worth it. For travellers already staying at a resort, no — you have what a day pass offers and more. The day pass shines as a one-day luxury upgrade for budget travellers and a layover-rescue for transit travellers.
Yes — at least 24 hours ahead, 72 hours during peak season (December–February, July–August). Walk-up day passes are sometimes refused when the resort is full or when overnight guests are arriving. Layover day passes especially need to be booked in advance because the resort needs to confirm capacity before allocating speedboat seats.
A day pass gives you access to the resort itself — beach, pool, dining. A resort excursion is a guided activity run by the resort (snorkelling trip, sunset cruise, sandbank trip) regardless of whether you're staying there. Day-pass guests can usually book additional resort excursions on top of the day pass, but the excursions are charged separately. See our resort excursions guide for more.
You can usually book a spa treatment but it's almost never included in the day-pass price. Spa treatments cost $80–$300+ depending on the treatment. Some premium day passes include a small spa credit (e.g., $30 toward a treatment); these are usually advertised as "luxury one-day escape" packages and cost $280+ per person.
Day passes work best when compared against the alternatives. These guides help you decide whether a day pass, an excursion, or a different option suits your trip better.
The 8 main excursion types, where to book from, and how to plan your day-trip mix.
PricesCurrent 2026 rates for sandbank, snorkelling, dolphin, manta, whale shark and resort day passes.
Resort tripsBoat trips and activities run by resorts — how they differ from a day pass.
From MaafushiSandbank, snorkelling, and full-day trips bookable directly from Maafushi harbour.
ActivityIf you want a beach day without the resort price tag — sandbank trips are often the better choice.
ActivityReef trips and turtle snorkelling spots when reef quality matters more than resort facilities.
Use our excursion planner to tell us your base, dates, and what you're after. We'll send a clear quote with the right resort, transfer logic, and final payable price — no surprises at the end.
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