A Maldives tour costs between $700 and $35,000+ per person for a week, depending on whether you stay on a local island or a private resort. The biggest variables are accommodation tier, transfer type, and meal plan — not the flight. Below is the real breakdown with current numbers, hidden fees most quotes hide, and where you can genuinely save without making your trip worse.
“There’s no single Maldives cost. There’s the cost of the trip you actually want, once you understand how the layers stack up.”
Per person, for a 7-night trip including accommodation, transfers, meals, taxes, and a few activities. International flights are extra — add roughly $400 to $1,800 depending on where you’re flying from.
Local island stay, ferry or scheduled speedboat, half-board.
4-star resort, beach villa, half-board, speedboat transfer.
5-star resort, water villa, all-inclusive, seaplane transfer.
Soneva, Cheval Blanc, One&Only, butler service.
A comfortable mid-range Maldives trip for two costs around $5,500 to $9,000 all-in for 7 nights including flights from most parts of the world. Local island stays cut that almost in half. Luxury overwater villa trips push past $15,000 per couple once seaplanes and AI dining are added.
Want to see real bundled offers in these ranges? Browse our Maldives tour packages for current package examples, or the Maldives Tours hub for the broader planning overview across all tour types.
Most online quotes lump everything into one number. Useful for booking, less useful for planning. Here’s what’s actually inside that number, in the order it usually adds up.
Flights swing 40 to 60 percent depending on dates. Book early or stay flexible.
The single biggest cost lever. A 30-percent room downgrade often saves more than skipping flights.
Charged per person, not per room. A couple at a seaplane resort can spend $1,400+ on transfers alone.
BB looks cheap on the quote and gets expensive when you’re trapped on a private island.
Free at most resorts: pool, kayaks, paddleboards, basic snorkel gear, kids’ club.
Always ask: “is TGST included in this quote?”. A “$5,000” package can become $5,850+ by checkout. Children under 2 are exempt from Green Tax.
Per-day costs stay relatively flat once you’re past 3 nights. The total scales pretty cleanly. Per person, excluding flights.
Tightest realistic length. Skip seaplane resorts.
Common short-trip length. Real beach time, two excursions.
Sweet spot for relaxed first-time trips. By night three you’ll exhale.
Best for divers, honeymoons, long-haul travellers.
Long enough for split atolls or multi-centre trips.
Where you fly from changes the all-in equation by $400 to $2,500 per person. All numbers below are for a 7-night mid-range trip per person, including flights.
| Origin | Round-trip flight | Mid-range package | All-in per person | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UK | $700 – $1,500 | $2,500 – $4,800 | $3,200 – $6,300 | Direct from London on BA / Virgin. Cheaper via Dubai or Doha. |
| USA | $1,000 – $1,900 | $2,500 – $5,000 | $3,500 – $6,900 | No nonstop flights. 22–28 hours via Doha, Dubai, Istanbul. |
| Western Europe | $750 – $1,400 | $2,500 – $4,800 | $3,250 – $6,200 | Direct from Paris, Zurich, Frankfurt, Milan seasonally. |
| Australia | $930 – $1,600 | $2,650 – $5,000 | $3,580 – $6,600 | Via Singapore or Colombo. 14–18 hours total. |
| Middle East | $250 – $550 | $2,200 – $4,500 | $2,450 – $5,050 | Cheapest gateway. 4-hour direct from Dubai, Doha, Abu Dhabi. |
| Asia | $130 – $1,100 | $2,200 – $4,500 | $2,330 – $5,600 | Direct from India, Sri Lanka, Singapore, China. |
Most package pricing assumes two sharing a room. Couple costs are the standard reference.
Same base as a couple’s trip, plus water villas, AI plans, and free perks (sparkling wine, candlelit dinners) at most resorts.
Most resorts charge 30–50 percent of the adult rate for kids in the same room. Some give kids under 12 free dining.
Single supplements at resorts (50–75% extra) destroy the value. Local islands and liveaboards are way cheaper for solo.
Groups of 6+ usually unlock 10 to 20 percent discounts at most mid-range resorts. We negotiate these directly.
Adults-only resorts (Hurawalhi, Cheval Blanc, Komandoo, Vakkaru) skew slightly pricier per night but include better dining.
Every quote we send lists these line by line. Most online quotes don’t.
From January 2025, most resorts and tourist vessels charge $12 per person per night. Small inhabited-island guesthouses (50 rooms or fewer) charge $6. Children under 2 are exempt. A couple on 5 nights at a resort pays $120 in green tax.
Often added at checkout, not in the headline price. From July 2025, TGST is 17% (up from 16% pre-July 2025). On a $5,000 trip, that’s an extra $850 if it was not already included. Always confirm “TGST included?”.
Standard at most resorts. Usually itemised separately. Adds another $500 to a $5,000 trip.
Some resorts have free filtered water in villas. Worth asking. Two bottles a day for 7 days adds $70–$170 per person.
Wine $14–$22 per glass. Beer $9–$15. Two drinks per person at dinner over 7 nights = $250–$400 per couple.
TMA and Manta Air only run in daylight. Last flight ~16:00. Late inbound = $150–$300 overnight in Malé.
Solo travellers at resorts pay nearly the full couple price for one room. Local islands don’t charge this.
Half or full-day rates if your departure flight is the next morning and you want the room past 12:00.
5-dive packages run $400–$550. Equipment rental adds $25–$40 per day on top.
Bank of Maldives ATMs limited on local islands and sometimes empty. Carry USD or USD forex cards.
What most travellers miss: the biggest cost surprise isn’t the green tax or the wine. It’s that “$X per night” rate you saw online is often the room only. Add 17% TGST, 10% service, $12/night green tax (resorts), half-board surcharge, and transfer cost — the actual nightly outlay can be 35 to 45 percent higher than the headline number.
A “cheap” $400/night water villa at a seaplane resort can cost more total than a “premium” $700/night villa at a speedboat resort. The math, both ways.
Same trip on 3 nights: $1,200 + $1,100 = $2,300. Transfer eats 1.5 hours of stay.
Same trip on 3 nights: $2,100 + $600 = $2,700. Gap shrinks to $400.
The shorter your trip, the more transfer costs matter. Always add room + transfer + meal plan together for the same dates before comparing two resorts. We do this automatically on every quote.
The all-inclusive question matters because it’s often the difference between $600 and $2,000 in your final bill. Mid-range resort, 5 nights, two people.
The Maldives has two seasons that swing prices significantly. May, June, July, August, September, and October are the cheapest — typically 30 to 60 percent below peak rates. This is the southwest monsoon, but “monsoon” here means short heavy showers followed by sunshine, not constant rain.
December 22nd to January 5th is the most expensive single window of the year. Most resorts charge a 60 to 100 percent peak surcharge.
Best price-to-weather ratio: May, June, September, and the first three weeks of November.
A January 8th departure costs about 40 percent less than a December 27th departure to the same resort.
After arranging hundreds of trips, here are the moves that genuinely save money without making the trip worse.
3-night Maafushi + 4-night resort costs ~30% less than 7 nights at the same resort. Two distinct experiences.
Beach villa nights 1–2, water villa nights 3–5. Saves 18–25 percent. Novelty hits harder when you’ve settled in.
Bundled flight packages rarely beat Emirates, Qatar, or Singapore Airlines direct. Send us the dates for a land-only quote and save 8–15 percent.
Same beach. Much cheaper villa. Same reefs and lagoons.
BB looks cheap on the quote, gets expensive when you’re trapped on a private island paying $80 for a sandwich.
Six or more travellers usually unlock 10–20 percent group rates at most mid-range resorts.
3–4 night trips work better at speedboat resorts. Save $400–$700 per person and don’t lose half a day.
Direct resort contracts mean 5–15 percent below Booking.com or Expedia for the same room. Plus quiet promos that don’t show up on aggregators.
Saves $11–$25 per day in rental fees. A decent mask costs $30 — pays for itself in 2 days of snorkelling.
The single most expensive window of the year. A January 8th departure can cost 40% less than December 27th.
The kind of trips we book most often. Real 2026 prices, no marketing fluff.
First Maldives trip, want to see what the islands are about without spending big.
First major couple’s holiday. Real Maldives moment without ultra-luxury pricing. Sun Siyam Olhuveli, 2N beach + 5N water villa, AI.
Two adults, two kids aged 9 and 12. Kandima Maldives, family beach villa, full-board.
We’re a registered Maldives Ministry of Tourism travel agency based in Thinadhoo. That’s not marketing copy — it’s a regulatory difference that matters.
In many cases, resort-direct agency rates and partner offers can beat the public OTA rate, especially when transfers, meal plans, taxes, and inclusions are compared properly. We check the full package cost — not just the headline room price.
We’ve stayed at most resorts. When we say “the lagoon at Resort X is too shallow at low tide,” we know because someone on our team got out and had to walk back.
Every line itemised. Green tax, TGST, service charge, transfer, meal supplement — all visible upfront, not buried in checkout.
We’re in GMT+5. We’ve fixed missed seaplane transfers at 11pm, rebooked emergency room moves on Sundays, recovered lost luggage in Malé. Aggregators don’t.
We get the resort to confirm perks before you fly. Free upgrades, sparkling wine, candlelit dinners, late checkouts — sometimes promised, sometimes forgotten. We chase them.
Registered with the Maldives Ministry of Tourism. Answerable to local regulators. Anything goes wrong with a HolidayVibe booking and you can complain directly. Try that with an OTA.
Send us your dates, your trip length, your traveller mix, and a per-person daily budget. We come back within 24 hours with two or three options at different price points, every cost itemised — no “from $XXX” marketing hooks, no add-ons that surface at checkout.
A Maldives trip costs $700 to $1,500 per person for a budget local-island week, $2,200 to $4,500 per person for a mid-range resort week, and $5,500 to $11,000 per person for a luxury resort week. Ultra-luxury trips at Soneva Jani or Cheval Blanc easily exceed $20,000 per person. International flights add $130 to $1,900 depending on origin city.
The cheapest months are May, June, July, August, September, and October — the southwest monsoon season. Resort prices drop 30 to 60 percent compared to the peak December-March window. Weather during these months includes brief afternoon showers rather than constant rain. May, June, and September give the best price-to-weather ratio.
Yes. By staying on local islands like Maafushi, Thulusdhoo, Dhigurah, or Fulidhoo instead of private resort islands, a Maldives trip becomes genuinely affordable. Local island guesthouses cost $50 to $150 per night, public ferries are under $7 each way, and meals at local cafés cost $5 to $15. A 7-night budget trip works out to roughly $700 to $1,500 per person plus flights.
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.
A 7-day Maldives trip for two costs roughly $1,700 to $3,000 for a budget local-island stay, $4,500 to $9,000 for a mid-range resort holiday, and $11,000 to $22,000 for a luxury resort experience. Ultra-luxury trips at Soneva Jani, Cheval Blanc, or One&Only easily exceed $40,000. These figures include accommodation, transfers, meals, taxes, and a few activities — but not international flights.
Round-trip flights to Velana International Airport (MLE) cost $700–$1,500 from the UK, $1,000–$1,900 from the USA, $250–$550 from the Middle East, $400–$700 from Singapore, $1,100–$1,800 from Australia, and $130–$300 from India. Direct flights work out cheapest from the Middle East and India. Most other origins fly via Dubai, Doha, or Colombo.
Seaplanes are scenic and iconic — many travellers consider the aerial view of the atolls a trip highlight. They cost $400 to $700 per person round-trip. They make sense for trips of 5+ nights at remote luxury resorts. They don’t make sense on short 3-night trips because you’ll burn 6+ hours in transfers. Speedboat-access resorts are usually better value for short stays.
The Maldives is expensive because most resorts occupy entire private islands with limited capacity, all supplies and labour have to be flown or shipped in, transfers (especially seaplanes) carry high fuel costs, and the country imposes a 17% TGST plus a 10% service charge on tourism. Luxury demand also keeps prices high. However, the Maldives isn’t only expensive — local island guesthouses make it genuinely affordable.
Hidden costs include: green tax of $12 per person per night at most resorts and tourist vessels (or $6 at small inhabited-island guesthouses with 50 rooms or fewer), 17% TGST on rooms and services, 10% service charge, bottled water at resorts ($5–$12 per bottle), drinks at half-board resorts ($9–$22 per drink), seaplane operating hours (no flights after 16:00), single supplements at resorts (50–75% extra), late checkout fees, and dive package add-ons ($80–$160 per dive). These extras can add 25 to 35 percent to your headline package price.
Packages booked through a Maldives-based agency are usually cheaper than booking accommodation, transfers, and excursions separately on aggregator sites. Direct resort rates through licensed agencies typically beat OTA prices by 5 to 15 percent because aggregators carry 18 to 25 percent commissions. However, booking your international flight separately direct with the airline often beats package flight pricing — so a “land-only package” plus separate flight booking is usually the cheapest combo.
Travel insurance is strongly recommended for any Maldives trip, especially because seaplane delays, medical evacuation, diving, lost luggage, and cancellation costs can be expensive. It is not currently listed as a standard tourist visa entry requirement by Maldives Immigration, but the Maldives Foreign Ministry advises travellers to purchase comprehensive travel insurance with medical evacuation cover. Budget $30 to $90 per person for a week of decent coverage. Divers should pick a policy with specific dive coverage — most generic policies exclude depths past 18 metres.
Yes. At resorts, free activities usually include: pool and beach access, kayaks, paddleboards, snorkelling gear, gym, kids’ club, basic yoga sessions, and house-reef snorkelling. On local islands, you can swim at “bikini beaches” for free, walk around the island, watch stingray feedings at sunset on islands like Huraa or Dhiffushi, and snorkel right off the beach. Many resorts run free guided house-reef snorkels and sunset kids’ activities.
For a mid-range resort trip with HB included, budget about $50 to $100 per person per day for extras (drinks, lunches, tips, occasional excursion). For a budget local-island trip, $30 to $60 per day covers cafés, snacks, and local activities. AI resort trips need very little extra cash — $15 to $30 per day for tips and incidentals. Carry small USD bills (1s, 5s, 10s) for tipping resort staff.
Resorts: no, prices are fixed. But low-season deals, free-night offers, and honeymoon perks are negotiable through a travel agent. Local islands: prices for excursions and souvenirs at small shops can sometimes be gently negotiated, but most pricing is fixed. We negotiate room rates and inclusions on your behalf at most resorts when we book.
A 5-night stay at a local island guesthouse on Maafushi or Thulusdhoo with half-board, public speedboat transfers, and 2 to 3 group excursions. Total cost: $900 to $1,400 per person plus flights. You’ll snorkel the same reefs, see the same whale sharks, and enjoy the same beaches as people paying ten times more — minus the overwater villa.