A Maldives island tour package is built around staying on inhabited local islands like Maafushi, Thulusdhoo, Dhigurah, or Fulidhoo — not on a private resort. You sleep at family-run guesthouses, eat at local cafés, hop between islands by ferry or speedboat, and snorkel the same reefs as travellers paying ten times more. Most packages run 3 to 7 nights and cost $350 to $2,800 per person plus flights.
“Same lagoons. Same whale sharks. Same manta rays. Different sleeping arrangement, different price tag, completely different feel.”
A proper local-island package covers the essentials and leaves a few things deliberately à la carte. Here’s the honest split — what’s bundled, what isn’t.
A 5-night island tour package on Maafushi, Thulusdhoo, or Dhigurah typically costs $700–$1,200 per person all-in plus flights — about a quarter of what a similar-length resort package costs, with access to the same lagoons, the same whale sharks, and the same manta rays.
For a full cost breakdown across all tour types, see our Maldives tour cost guide. For bundled options including resort packages, browse Maldives tour packages.
Real, current ranges per person — accommodation, transfers, half-board, and a couple of group excursions. International flights add $130 to $1,900 depending on origin.
| Trip length | Budget guesthouse | Mid-range guesthouse | Boutique 3-star |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 nights / 4 days | $350 – $600 | $500 – $850 | $750 – $1,200 |
| 5 nights / 6 days | $550 – $1,000 | $800 – $1,400 | $1,200 – $1,900 |
| 7 nights / 8 days | $750 – $1,400 | $1,100 – $1,900 | $1,700 – $2,800 |
| 10 nights / 11 days | $1,100 – $2,000 | $1,600 – $2,800 | $2,400 – $3,800 |
Accommodation tier (basic A/C double at $50/night vs beachfront boutique at $150/night), transfer choice (public ferry vs scheduled speedboat vs private charter), excursions included, and season — peak December–April adds 25–50% to guesthouse rates.
Travelling May–November (30–50% cheaper), choosing public ferry over private speedboat ($2 vs $300), staying at a small guesthouse instead of a 3-star boutique, and booking 4+ weeks ahead to lock in current rates before peak hits.
Not all local islands work the same. Picking the right one for your priorities matters more than picking the cheapest package.
The most popular local island for tourists. 1.5 km long, around 40 guesthouses, full tourist infrastructure including spas, restaurants, water sports, dive centres, and the Maldives’ only legal “floating bar”.
Surfer’s island. Home to Cokes and Chickens — two of the Maldives’ best surf breaks. 1 km long, smaller scene than Maafushi, more local feel. Some boutique floating bar options.
South Ari is the only place in the Maldives where whale shark sightings happen year-round, and Dhigurah is the easiest base. The island has a 2-mile beach — among the longest of any inhabited island.
Tiny, quiet, beautiful. 675m by 200m, walkable in 15 minutes. Famous for harbour reef shark and stingray feeding at sunset, plus exceptional snorkelling at Miyaru Kandu (channel diving with grey reef sharks, eagle rays, barracuda).
The “clean island” — Ukulhas runs one of the country’s best community waste-management programmes and feels noticeably tidier. Quieter than Maafushi but with decent guesthouse infrastructure.
Watermelon island. Larger than most local islands (1.8 km long) with strong agriculture — papaya, watermelon, banana farms grow across the interior. Manta ray excursions easy from here in season.
Smaller and quieter alternative to Maafushi, just 6 km south. Same atoll, similar reefs, fewer guesthouses, less commercial. Often combined with Maafushi for a 2-island trip.
Authentic local feel. Small village atmosphere, fewer than 10 guesthouses, working fishing harbour. The bikini beach is small but the surrounding reefs are excellent.
After arranging hundreds of these trips, here are the formats that consistently work best.
Stay at one local island the whole trip. Simplest logistics, deepest connection with one place. Best for first-time local-island travellers.
Stay 2–4 nights on a “busier” island like Maafushi, then 2–4 nights on a quieter island like Fulidhoo or Gulhi. Both energy and stillness, plus a built-in “trip within a trip” feel.
3–4 nights at a local island, then 3–4 nights at a private resort. Cultural depth plus the polished resort week without paying for 7 nights of resort. The format we book most often. Aggregators can’t put this together cleanly because it requires local logistics.
Sleep on a traditional dhoni boat for 3–7 nights, waking up at a different reef every morning. Less time on land, more time in the water. Good for divers and travellers who want movement.
Per-person ranges per package tier — what to expect at each price point.
After arranging hundreds of trips, these are the specific questions that consistently catch first-timers off guard. Ask them before you pay.
Local islands are small. A guesthouse next door doing renovations means hammers and cement mixers from 7 AM. We’ve had clients move guesthouses on Day 2 because of this. Always ask, and ask for a guesthouse on the opposite side of the island if construction is happening.
If your package includes a seaplane connection (rare for local islands but possible for split-stay trips), the limit is strict — typically 25kg checked + 5kg carry-on. Excess fees run $5–$10 per kg. We’ve seen travellers pay $80–$200 in seaplane excess on top of flight luggage they already paid for.
Many guesthouse “all-inclusive” packages exclude seafood mains and lobster (charged separately), bottled water ($2–$4 per 1L bottle), soft drinks at meals, excursions, and spa treatments. Always get the inclusion list in writing. Ask: “What’s the total cost for two people, including all taxes and the green tax?”
Some local islands have shore-accessible reefs you can swim straight to. Others have shallow lagoons where you need a boat ($30–$60 per trip) just to reach the drop-off. Maafushi’s bikini beach reef is ~50m offshore. Thulusdhoo has reef accessible by walk. Dhigurah’s is further out and usually requires a boat. Ask before you book if snorkelling is your main reason for coming.
Public ferries to Maafushi only run once daily, usually departing MTCC at 3 PM. Scheduled speedboats run more often but the last one is typically 5 PM. If your inbound flight lands at 16:30, you might miss the same-day ferry/speedboat and need an overnight in Hulhumalé or Malé ($80–$200 for a basic hotel). Always check transfer schedules against your flight time.
The reason “island tour” trips work as well as they do is that the experiences match what most travellers actually want from the Maldives — same lagoons, same marine life, much less expensive.
Free from designated bikini beaches. Group cluster trips $30–$70 per person, typically 2–3 reef points plus a sandbank. Best water 7–9 AM when the lagoon is glass-flat.
Year-round in South Ari Atoll. From Maafushi: full-day $90–$150, 7 AM departure. From Dhigurah: half-day $50–$90 because you’re already there. High success rate.
Seasonal — May to November in Baa Atoll’s Hanifaru Bay. From Maafushi: full-day $120–$180 (distance). From Thoddoo or Ukulhas: half-day $80–$130.
Boat to a temporary sandbank that disappears at high tide. Lunch on the sand with shaded umbrellas. The signature Maldives photograph happens here.
90-minute boat trip at sunset to spotter spots where spinner dolphins regularly surface. Combine with sandbank picnic for a full afternoon ($150–$200 combined).
Hand-line fishing with local guides on a traditional dhoni. Catch your dinner, the boat cooks it back at the harbour, eat it as BBQ at the guesthouse.
Half-day at a nearby resort. Pool access, lunch buffet, sometimes cocktails. Good way to sample resort life without booking it.
Most popular local islands have a dive centre. Single dive $80–$130 with own gear, $100–$160 with rental. Local-island dive prices typically run 20–30% below resort prices.
Full certification course over 3–4 days at a local-island dive centre. Significantly cheaper than equivalent resort certifications.
Browse our full Maldives experiences page → for activity-by-activity guides.
Local islands aren’t private resorts. They’re functioning Maldivian communities where people live, work, pray, and raise families. Following local custom isn’t optional — it’s the price of being welcomed.
Shoulders and knees covered, no swimwear off the beach. Bikinis only at the designated bikini beach.
Inhabited islands are dry by law. Exception: Maafushi’s offshore floating bar in international waters.
Hand-holding is fine; kissing in public is not. Keep that for your guesthouse.
Some shops close 11:30 AM to 1:30 PM for Friday prayers. Plan around it.
Local cafés and guesthouses don’t serve it. Some import-licensed resorts do; local islands don’t.
Especially women and children. Most Maldivians are warm and friendly but the request is respected.
These rules aren’t unfriendly. They’re how Maldivian local-island hospitality has worked for decades — and respecting them is exactly why guesthouse owners welcome travellers warmly in the first place.
The logistics decisions affect every day of the trip. Get these right and the package works.
Public ferry: $2–$5, 1.5–4 hours, set schedules (some islands only 3 days/week). Scheduled shared speedboat: $25–$80, 30 min–1.5 hr, multiple daily departures. Private speedboat charter: $150–$450 per boat, any time you want.
Free 30-day tourist visa on arrival for most nationalities. Need: valid passport (6+ months), confirmed return ticket, accommodation proof (we provide), IMUGA traveller declaration online within 96 hours of arrival.
Modest clothing for walking around (shoulders and knees covered). Multiple swimsuits for the bikini beach. Reef-safe sunscreen (essential — many islands now require it). USD small bills for tipping and shops. Basic dry bag for excursions.
Christmas/New Year: 4–6 months ahead. January–March: 2–3 months. April–November: 3–6 weeks. Last-minute deals appear regularly in green season (May–November).
Peak Dec–April: dry, sunny, +25–50% rates. Sweet spot: late April–May, late September, first 3 weeks of November — best price-to-weather ratio. Green season May–November: 30–50% cheaper, brief afternoon showers.
See our Maldives weather and season checker → for month-by-month detail by atoll.
Local-island packages are where local agencies genuinely earn their value. We’re a Maldives Ministry of Tourism-licensed agency based in Thinadhoo, Gaafu Dhaalu Atoll.
Local-island guesthouses open and close, change owners, change quality. Aggregator listings lag real conditions by months. We know the ground truth.
Multi-island packages need ferry/speedboat timing that aligns. We do this directly with operators we know — luggage, cancellation backups, transition days handled.
We negotiate rates and quiet promos that don’t appear on Booking.com or Agoda. Local guesthouses prefer agency bookings because we send repeat customers.
When we say “book the south side of Maafushi, not the north” or “Fulidhoo’s reef shark feeding happens 17:30 sharp,” it’s because we’ve watched it happen.
A guesthouse double-books your room; you message us; we get it sorted from a Maldives time zone, not a 1-800 number 12 hours away.
Registered with the Maldives Ministry of Tourism. Answerable to local regulators. Anything goes wrong and you can complain directly. Try that with an OTA.
Send us your dates, your length, your traveller mix, and which side of the country interests you most — South Malé for easy access, South Ari for whale sharks, Baa for mantas, Vaavu for solitude. We come back within 24 hours with two or three package options at different price points, every cost itemised.
A Maldives island tour package is a trip built around staying on inhabited local islands like Maafushi, Thulusdhoo, Dhigurah, or Fulidhoo — not on a private resort. You sleep at family-run guesthouses ($50–$150 per night), eat at local cafés ($5–$15 per meal), hop between islands by ferry or speedboat, and snorkel the same reefs as travellers paying ten times more for resort stays. Most packages run 3 to 7 nights and cost $350 to $2,800 per person plus flights.
A 3-night budget island tour package costs $350–$600 per person plus flights. A 5-night mid-range package runs $800–$1,400 per person. A 7-night premium package costs $1,700–$2,800 per person. International flights add $130 (from India) to $1,900 (from the USA) round-trip.
For first-time local-island travellers: Maafushi (best infrastructure, easy logistics from MLE, has Maldives’ only legal floating bar). For surfers: Thulusdhoo (March–October surf season). For whale shark obsessives: Dhigurah in South Ari Atoll (year-round sightings). For absolute peace: Fulidhoo in Vaavu Atoll. For sustainability-minded travellers: Ukulhas. Many travellers do best with a 2-island combo to sample contrasting vibes.
No pre-arrival visa is required for most travellers. A free 30-day tourist visa is issued upon arrival at Velana International Airport (MLE). Requirements: valid passport (6+ months remaining), confirmed return ticket, proof of accommodation (we provide this in your booking), and the IMUGA traveller declaration form completed online within 96 hours of arrival.
Easy between local islands; harder between local islands and private resorts. Public ferries between local islands cost $2–$7 per trip but run on set schedules (some islands only 3 days/week). Scheduled shared speedboats cost $25–$80 per trip and run more frequently. Private speedboat charters between any two islands cost $150–$450 per boat. Split stays between resorts and local islands typically require returning to MLE for the next transfer.
No, with one notable exception. Local inhabited islands are dry by Maldivian law — no alcohol on the island itself. The exception is Maafushi, which has a “floating bar” — a yacht moored just offshore in international waters where alcohol is legally served. Travellers on other local islands sometimes arrange a day pass to a nearby resort if drinking is important. Resort islands and liveaboards have no alcohol restrictions.
Modest clothing for walking around the island (shoulders and knees covered — local custom and law). Multiple swimsuits for the bikini beach. Reef-safe sunscreen (essential — many islands now require it). Wide-brim hat, sunglasses, sandals, light cotton clothing for evenings. Cash in USD small bills (1s, 5s, 10s) for tipping and small purchases — ATMs on local islands are limited and sometimes empty. Snorkel mask if you have a custom prescription one, and a basic dry bag for excursions.
A resort package puts you on a private island where you stay the entire trip — luxury accommodation, all-inclusive dining, alcohol freely available, but $300–$5,000+ per night and limited variety. An island tour package puts you on inhabited islands where local people live — simpler accommodation at $50–$150 per night, no alcohol on the island itself (with one exception), modest dress required when out, but vastly better value and a more authentic Maldivian experience.
The dry season runs December to April with calm seas and minimal rain — best for first-time visitors. The green season runs May to November with brief afternoon showers and 30–60% lower prices. The sweet spot for value plus weather is late April–early May, late September, or the first three weeks of November. Whale shark sightings stay strong year-round; manta ray season runs May–November in Baa Atoll.
Three options: public ferry ($2.50, 90 minutes to Maafushi, runs once daily at 3 PM weekdays except Friday), scheduled shared speedboat ($25–$30, 30 minutes, multiple daily departures usually 9 AM, 1 PM, 5 PM), or private speedboat charter ($150–$300 per boat, any time). Times vary by island — Dhigurah and Fulidhoo are further and take longer. Always check transfer schedules against your inbound flight time.
Yes. Beach walks, sunset photography, local cooking classes ($25–$40 per person), bicycle rentals (most islands rent bikes for $5–$10 per day), shopping in local markets, day-trips to neighbouring islands, sunset fishing trips (suitable for non-swimmers, $60–$120 per person), and dolphin cruises (boat-based, no swimming required, $40–$80). Some guesthouses offer cultural experiences like traditional Maldivian rope-making demonstrations.
Yes. The Maldives is one of the safer destinations in South Asia for solo travellers including women. Local islands have strong community oversight, low crime rates, and English is widely spoken in the tourism industry. Most guesthouses have other solo travellers — easy to join group excursions and meet people. Standard travel precautions apply: respect local customs, avoid swimming alone in unfamiliar areas, secure valuables.
Yes — this is one of the smartest formats for trips of 7+ nights. Stay 3–4 nights at a local island like Maafushi or Dhigurah, then transfer to a private resort for 3–4 more nights. You get the cultural depth plus the polished resort week, often 30–40% cheaper than 7 nights at the resort alone. We coordinate the transfer logistics between island and resort directly. See our full Maldives tour itinerary guide for split-stay day-by-day plans.
Most packages include 2–4 group excursions: sandbank picnic with snorkelling, dolphin cruise, whale shark expedition (where geographically possible), and sometimes a manta ray excursion (May–November). Use of basic snorkel gear, beach umbrellas, and bikini-beach sunbeds is usually free. Premium packages add private boat trips, sunset fishing with BBQ dinner, day passes to nearby resorts, and sometimes spa treatments.
They can be — many local islands have boutique 3-star guesthouses with beachfront balconies, rooftop dining, hot water showers, and decent A/C. Maafushi’s Triton Hotels and Kaani Village & Spa, Thulusdhoo’s Boutique Beach, and Dhigurah’s Yashfa Hotel are examples. They won’t have overwater villas or private pools — but a 3N local-island honeymoon followed by 4N at a luxury water-villa resort is a popular split-stay format we book often. Total cost typically 30–40% cheaper than 7 nights at the same resort.