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Flores and Komodo, Indonesia
Flores and Komodo

East Nusa Tenggara, eastern Indonesia (Labuan Bajo and the Komodo National Park)

Flores and Komodo

The honest read on Komodo from Labuan Bajo: why the cheap shared day boat misses Padar at sunrise, what the Komodo dragons actually cost to see, and when a two- or three-day liveaboard beats the speedboat.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

In short

Flores and Komodo at a glance

Flores and Komodo are the eastern Indonesian islands most people reach for the dragons and the Padar viewpoint, and the trip is run almost entirely by boat out of one small harbour town — Labuan Bajo, on western Flores, an hour-and-a-half flight east of Bali. The Komodo National Park itself is offshore: Komodo and Rinca islands for the giant monitor lizards, Padar for the three-bay sunrise photo everyone has seen, and Pink Beach (Pantai Merah) and Manta Point for snorkelling. The choice that shapes everything is the boat. A shared 'open trip' day boat is cheap — roughly Rp 350,000–600,000 (about £15–25) a head — but it leaves after sunrise, so you climb Padar in the midday heat with every other boat. A private speedboat charter (around Rp 3.5–5 million, ~£150–215 split between a group) lets you hit Padar at first light; a two- or three-day liveaboard (from about Rp 2.5 million, ~£105 per person sharing) reaches the quieter southern dive sites the day boats never see. Inland Flores — the tri-coloured crater lakes of Kelimutu, a long drive east near Moni — is a separate, slower trip most people skip on a first visit.

Flores and Komodo sit far east of Bali, and almost everyone reaches them the same way: a 1h20–1h30 flight from Denpasar into Komodo Airport at Labuan Bajo, the scruffy little harbour town on western Flores that runs the whole show. The dragons, the Padar viewpoint and the snorkelling are all offshore in Komodo National Park, so once you’ve landed the only real question is what kind of boat you put yourself on. That single choice decides whether you climb Padar in soft dawn light or in the mid-morning crush.

The cheap answer is a shared “open trip” day boat — roughly Rp 350,000–600,000 (about £15–25) a head — which loops Padar, a ranger-led dragon walk on Komodo or Rinca, Pink Beach and Manta Point. It’s good value and sociable, but it leaves after sunrise, so you reach the Padar steps mid-morning alongside a dozen other boats. To beat that you either charter a private speedboat (around Rp 3.5–5 million, ~£150–215 for the boat, split between your group) for a dawn start, or book a two- or three-day liveaboard (from about Rp 2.5 million, £105 per person sharing) that sleeps you on the water and wakes you anchored at Padar or a quiet southern reef. On every option the park’s layered entry, ranger and conservation fees — roughly Rp 250,000–450,000 (£11–19) per person per day, more at weekends and largely cash — land on top, so carry rupiah from Labuan Bajo.

For the dragons themselves, Rinca is the closer, cheaper island and often the better bet for actually seeing them gathered near the ranger station; Komodo is the bigger name. Either way you walk a 30–45 minute loop with a compulsory ranger and tip them a little. And if you’ve got three or four spare days and a tolerance for winding mountain roads, hire a car and driver for the trans-Flores haul east through Ruteng and Bajawa to Moni, where a dawn climb reaches Kelimutu’s three crater lakes, each a different colour. That’s a slow overland trip in its own right, not a Komodo add-on — so decide before you book whether you came for the boats or for the long road east.

The route

Two honest shapes, set by how much boat time you want. A tight version uses Labuan Bajo as a base and does the park on two day boats — fine, but you share Padar with the crowds. The better version puts you on the water overnight: a two-night liveaboard reaches Padar at dawn and the southern dive sites by day, then drops you back for a sunset over the harbour. Inland Flores and Kelimutu are bolted on only if you've got a spare three or four days and like long drives. Flight and drive times below are from Bali and from Labuan Bajo's waterfront.

  1. Day 1

    Fly Bali to Labuan Bajo, settle in

    Fly DPS to Komodo Airport (LBJ) — about 1h20–1h30 with Garuda, Citilink, Batik or Wings, often Rp 700,000–1,400,000 (~£30–60) one way booked ahead. It's a 10-minute, ~Rp 50,000 (£2) taxi into town. Walk the Jalan Soekarno-Hatta waterfront, line up a boat at a reputable operator for the next day, and watch the sunset from a rooftop bar over the harbour islands.

  2. Day 2

    The classic park day boat

    A full-day shared boat (~Rp 400,000–600,000 / £17–25 plus park fees) typically does Padar's viewpoint, a dragon walk on Komodo or Rinca with a ranger, Pink Beach for snorkelling and Manta Point. Honest expectation: you reach Padar mid-morning with a dozen other boats, and the dragons are a guided 30–45 minute loop, not a safari. Carry cash for the layered park fees and tip your ranger.

  3. Day 3 (better version)

    Sunrise Padar by private speedboat or liveaboard

    Either charter a private speedboat (~Rp 3.5–5 million / £150–215 for the boat, split between your group) to be climbing Padar at first light before the day fleet arrives, or — if you booked a 2-night liveaboard — you're already anchored there. Add Rinca for a quieter dragon walk and a southern reef for the better diving and the mantas.

  4. Days 4–6 (overland add-on)

    East across Flores to Kelimutu

    Only if you have the days and like the road: hire a car and driver (~Rp 800,000–1,000,000 / £34–43 a day) for the trans-Flores drive east, breaking the journey at Ruteng or Bajawa among rice terraces and traditional villages, to reach Moni for a dawn climb to Kelimutu's three crater lakes, which sit in different colours. It's a long, winding two-to-three-day haul each way, not a day trip.

Where to base yourself

Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.

Labuan Bajo town and waterfront

££ mid-range

The launch pad for everything in the park — a small harbour town of guesthouses, dive shops, rooftop bars and tour desks along Jalan Soekarno-Hatta. Stay here to line up boats easily and walk to the pier; it's lively and a little scruffy rather than a resort. Most first-timers base here for the whole trip.

Best for: First-timers, divers and anyone doing day boats

Browse hotels ~10 min / Rp 50,000 taxi from Komodo Airport (LBJ)

Waecicu and the bays north of town

£££ premium

A short ride or boat-shuttle north of the harbour, where a cluster of smarter beach resorts and dive lodges sit on their own quiet bays away from the town bustle. Better for a calmer, sea-facing base with a pool, at the cost of being further from the waterfront restaurants.

Best for: Couples wanting a quieter sea-view base

Browse hotels ~15–30 min from Labuan Bajo town

On a liveaboard inside the park

££ mid-range

Not a hotel at all — a 2- to 4-day boat that sleeps you on the water inside Komodo National Park, so you wake up anchored at Padar or a southern reef before any day boat arrives. The value choice for divers and sunrise-chasers; cabins range from basic shared bunks to a few private ensuites.

Best for: Divers, photographers and dawn Padar

Browse hotels Departs from Labuan Bajo harbour

Getting around Flores and Komodo

There is no useful road or ferry route from Bali — you fly. Garuda, Citilink, Batik Air and Wings/Lion run Bali (DPS) to Komodo Airport (LBJ) in about 1h20–1h30, often Rp 700,000–1,400,000 (~£30–60) one way if you book ahead, and there are also links from Jakarta and a quick hop from Lombok. From the airport it's a 10-minute, ~Rp 50,000 (£2) taxi into Labuan Bajo. After that the whole region is reached by boat, and the single biggest decision is which kind. A shared 'open trip' day boat (~Rp 350,000–600,000 / £15–25 per person) is the cheap, sociable option but leaves after sunrise; a private speedboat charter (~Rp 3.5–5 million / £150–215 for the boat) buys you a dawn start at Padar and a flexible route; and a 2- to 4-day liveaboard (from ~Rp 2.5 million / £105 per person sharing) is how divers and photographers reach the quieter southern sites. Park entry, ranger and conservation fees are charged on top — roughly Rp 250,000–450,000 (~£11–19) per person per day inside the park, higher at weekends, and largely cash, so bring rupiah. On land, the town is walkable; for the long trans-Flores road east to Bajawa, Ruteng and Kelimutu, hire a car with an English-speaking driver (~Rp 800,000–1,000,000 / £34–43 a day) rather than self-driving, as GOV.UK flags poor traffic discipline and the mountain road is slow and winding.

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Flores and Komodo FAQs

How do I get to Komodo, and is it a day trip from Bali?
It isn't a day trip — you fly. Garuda, Citilink, Batik and Wings fly Bali (DPS) to Komodo Airport (LBJ) at Labuan Bajo in about 1h20–1h30, often Rp 700,000–1,400,000 (~£30–60) one way booked ahead, and from there everything in the national park is reached by boat. Plan at least two or three nights in Labuan Bajo to do the park properly; trying to fly in, do the dragons and Padar, and fly out in a single day doesn't work because the boats and the flights don't line up.
Shared day boat, private speedboat or liveaboard — which should I choose?
A shared 'open trip' day boat (~Rp 350,000–600,000 / £15–25 per person) is the cheap, sociable choice, but it leaves after sunrise so you climb Padar in the mid-morning crowd. A private speedboat charter (~Rp 3.5–5 million / £150–215 for the boat, split between your group) buys a flexible route and a dawn Padar start. A 2- to 3-day liveaboard (from ~Rp 2.5 million / £105 per person sharing) sleeps you on the water inside the park, so you wake anchored at Padar or a southern reef — the best pick for divers and anyone serious about the sunrise. Park fees are extra on all three.
Where do I actually see the Komodo dragons, and is it safe?
On two islands inside the park: Komodo and Rinca. You walk a guided loop with a compulsory park ranger who carries a forked stick — about 30–45 minutes — and tip them around Rp 50,000–100,000 (~£2–4). Rinca is closer to Labuan Bajo, cheaper to reach and often the better bet for actually spotting dragons, which gather near the ranger station. The lizards are genuinely dangerous wild animals with a venomous bite, so keep your distance, follow the ranger and don't visit if you have an open wound, as they're drawn to blood.
What does Komodo National Park cost on top of the boat?
Quite a lot, and it's layered. On top of your boat price you pay park entry, a ranger/guide fee, conservation and trekking charges and per-activity fees for snorkelling or diving — roughly Rp 250,000–450,000 (~£11–19) per person per day inside the park, and noticeably more on weekends and holidays. It's largely cash, so bring enough rupiah from Labuan Bajo, where the ATMs are. Reputable operators will itemise what's included versus what you pay at the park, so ask before you book.
Is the Padar Island viewpoint worth it, and how hard is the climb?
It's the shot everyone comes for — three curved bays with different-coloured sand fanning out below a ridge — and yes, it's worth it. The climb is a stepped path of about 30–40 minutes, steep and exposed with no shade, so it's a sweaty effort rather than a hike but fine for most reasonably fit people. The catch is timing: the cheap day boats arrive mid-morning when it's hot and busy. For the soft light and an empty ridge you need a sunrise start, which means a private speedboat or a liveaboard anchored nearby the night before.

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