Komodo Dive Sites
World-class diving with dragons and manta rays nearby
Look, most divers dream about swimming with manta rays. At Komodo, you'll do it while massive dragons roam the islands above you. This remote corner of Indonesia serves up some of the planet's most electric diving — from the manta cleaning stations at Manta Point to the vertical walls of Batu Bolong where reef sharks cruise past like they own the place. And they do. The currents here are fierce, the visibility can hit 40 meters on good days, and you'll share dive boats with serious underwater photographers chasing shots they can't get anywhere else. But here's what makes Komodo special: after a morning watching mantas barrel-roll through cleaning stations, you can walk on Rinca Island and watch 3-meter-long dragons hunt deer. It's diving plus Jurassic Park, minus the Hollywood budget.
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Money-Saving Tips
- 1.Book liveaboards directly with operators to skip agency markups — save 15-20% on multi-day trips
- 2.Bring your own mask and fins to avoid daily rental fees of $5-8 per item
- 3.April and October offer identical diving conditions to peak season but with 30% lower accommodation rates
- 4.Split day boat costs with other divers — private charters for 6 people cost only $50 more than individual bookings
- 5.Pack reef-safe sunscreen from home — local shops charge $15 for brands that cost $8 elsewhere
- 6.Eat at local warungs instead of dive resort restaurants — save $10-15 per meal without sacrificing quality
- 7.Book Komodo Airport flights instead of connecting through Bali — direct routes save both time and money
Travel Tips
- •Bring seasickness medication — crossings to northern dive sites get rough even in calm season
- •Pack a 3mm wetsuit minimum — water temps stay around 26-28°C but currents make it feel colder
- •Download offline maps before arriving — cell coverage disappears between islands
- •Bring reef-safe sunscreen — the park bans chemical sunscreens that damage coral
- •Pack a red filter for underwater photography — it transforms blue-green shots into vibrant images
- •Book advanced open water certification before arriving — many sites require it due to strong currents
- •Carry cash in small bills — many local operators and warungs don't accept cards or large denominations
- •Bring backup camera batteries — charging opportunities are limited on day boats
- •Pack quick-dry clothing — humidity is intense and laundry services are basic
Frequently Asked Questions
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