West Papua, Indonesia
Raja Ampat
The honest UK guide to Raja Ampat: the four flights it takes to get there, the Rp 1,000,000 marine-park permit, and why a liveaboard usually beats a homestay for your first trip.
In short
Raja Ampat at a glance
Raja Ampat is the most remote serious dive trip most UK travellers ever attempt โ an archipelago of 1,500-odd islands off the north-west tip of West Papua, with the richest reef life on the planet. Getting there is the whole challenge: it's typically four flights (UK to a Gulf or Asian hub, on to Jakarta or Makassar, then to Sorong) plus a sea crossing, so budget two full travel days each way and don't try to bolt it onto a short Bali break. Everyone pays the Rp 1,000,000 (about ยฃ43) marine-park permit, valid for a year. For a first visit, a liveaboard from Sorong is the easiest way to reach the best sites; land-based homestays around Waisai and the Dampier Strait are far cheaper but slower to move between dive spots. The diving season runs October to April; the rest of the year the sea can be rough.
Raja Ampat is not a place you wander into off a Bali itinerary. It sits off the north-west tip of West Papua, four flights and two travel days from the UK, and the reward for that effort is the densest reef life anyone has ever counted โ the trip experienced divers save for last. The hard part is never the diving; itโs the logistics of getting there, paying the marine-park permit, and accepting that youโre going somewhere with generator power, almost no signal and no ATMs worth trusting.
The mistake first-timers make is underestimating the journey and overestimating how much they can move around once they arrive. People book a homestay to save money, then spend half their dive budget on speedboat charters and fuel chasing the good sites against the weather. For a first visit a liveaboard out of Sorong is usually the smarter call: it costs more per night but reaches Cape Kri, Blue Magic and the Dampier Strait with no daily transfers, and it sidesteps the schedule slips that turn a land-based trip into a waiting game. Go between October and April, when the sea actually cooperates.
The route
Raja Ampat splits into a long getting-there leg and the diving itself, so plan the journey before the dive sites. This is a realistic 8-day skeleton built around a liveaboard out of Sorong; swap the boat for a Waisai-area homestay base and the diving stays similar but the transfers get longer. Times below are typical scheduled flight and boat durations, not best-case connections.
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Days 1โ2
UK to Sorong
Fly from the UK to a Gulf or Asian hub, on to Jakarta (CGK) or Makassar (UPG), then the roughly 4-hour domestic flight to Sorong (SOQ). With layovers this is two days door-to-door. Overnight in Sorong before any boat โ schedules slip and you don't want to miss your transfer.
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Days 3โ6
Liveaboard the Dampier Strait
Board your liveaboard at Sorong harbour and sail into the Dampier Strait โ the heart of the diving, with Cape Kri, Blue Magic and Sardine Reef. Four nights aboard gives you 10โ14 dives and no daily transfers; the boat repositions overnight so you wake up on the next site.
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Day 7
Wayag or Misool add-on
If your route runs north to Wayag's karst lagoons or south to Misool, expect a longer overnight crossing (8โ12 hours) to reach them โ stunning, but they eat a day each way, so confirm they're on your boat's itinerary before booking.
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Day 8
Back to Sorong and fly out
Disembark at Sorong and connect onward. Leave a clear buffer: missing the single useful daily flight to Jakarta or Makassar can cost you a day, and you may not dive within 24 hours of flying anyway, so the boat usually keeps the last morning shallow or dry.
Where to base yourself
Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.
Liveaboard from Sorong
ยฃยฃยฃ premiumThe simplest first-timer choice: you sleep on the boat, it moves you between the best sites overnight, and you dive three to four times a day with no transfers. Pricier per night but it removes the logistics that make land-based Raja Ampat hard.
Best for: Serious divers, reaching remote sites, no transfers
Waisai / Dampier Strait homestays
ยฃ valueSimple Papuan-run homestays and small dive resorts around Waisai and the Dampier Strait islands (Kri, Gam, Mansuar). Far cheaper than a liveaboard and the friendliest way to see local life, but you reach sites by daily speedboat, so weather and fuel costs add up.
Best for: Budget trips, local culture, longer stays
Misool (south)
ยฃยฃยฃ premiumThe far-southern islands, anchored by a single upmarket eco-resort and a few homestays, with quieter reefs and dramatic limestone scenery. A long boat transfer from Sorong, so it suits a longer, splurge trip rather than a quick first visit.
Best for: A quieter, upmarket splurge away from the crowds
Getting around Raja Ampat
There is no road network linking the islands, so Raja Ampat moves entirely by boat. From Sorong, a public ferry crosses to Waisai (the regional hub on Waigeo) in about 2 hours, running once or twice daily; from Waisai you reach the homestay islands by chartered speedboat, typically Rp 500,000โ1,500,000 (~ยฃ21โ64) one way depending on distance, with fuel surcharges that climb the further out you go. Liveaboards sidestep all of this by carrying you between sites. Note the Rp 1,000,000 (~ยฃ43) marine-park permit is compulsory for everyone and checked on the water โ buy it online before you travel or at the permit desks in Sorong or Waisai, and keep the card on you. Power is often generator-only and signal is patchy to non-existent on the outer islands, so download anything you need and bring cash, as ATMs are unreliable. GOV.UK's Indonesia advice notes that medical facilities outside the main cities are limited and that serious cases need evacuation, so travel insurance covering remote diving and repatriation is essential before you head this far off-grid.
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