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Sandbank trip, Maldives
Sandbank trip

Kaafu (South Malรฉ) Atoll

Sandbank trip

A boat out to a bare strip of white sand in the lagoon for a few hours of swimming, snorkelling and photos โ€” the signature cheap Maafushi excursion, best booked locally.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Maafushi, Maldives

Opening hours

Trips run daily in good weather, usually as a morning or half-day departure, and can be cancelled or rerouted if the sea or forecast turns. The sandbank itself shifts and shrinks with the tide. Confirm current times and prices on the official site.

Tickets

From about $25-40 per person (~ยฃ20-32) booked locally, often including snorkelling and sometimes lunch or gear; private charters cost more. Online rates are frequently inflated, so compare with guesthouse and local operator prices on the ground. Prices change, so confirm current prices on the official site.

Time needed

Around half a day: a short boat ride each way and a few hours on the sand, often combined with a snorkelling stop.

In short

Visiting Sandbank trip

The sandbank trip is the signature cheap Maafushi excursion: a short boat ride to a bare strip of white sand in the lagoon for a few hours of swimming, photos and usually snorkelling. Prices run from about $25-40 per person. Book it locally with a guesthouse or operator rather than at inflated online rates.

The signature Maafushi excursion

If thereโ€™s one outing everyone on Maafushi does, itโ€™s the sandbank trip: a short boat ride out into the lagoon to a bare strip of pure white sand sitting in turquoise shallows, where you spend a few hours swimming, taking photos and usually snorkelling before heading back. Itโ€™s the cheap, joyful, very Maldivian thing to do, and on a calm day with good light it delivers exactly the desert-island image you came for.

The key is how you book it. Done locally โ€” through your guesthouse or a Maafushi operator on the ground โ€” a shared half-day runs from about $25-40 per person, often with snorkelling thrown in and sometimes lunch or gear. The same boat sold through some online channels can cost several times that, so donโ€™t pre-book at inflated rates: wait, ask around once you arrive, and compare a couple of quotes. A private charter costs more but lets you set the timing and dodge the crowds.

What itโ€™s actually like

Be clear about what a sandbank is: a bare bank of sand with nothing on it โ€” no buildings, usually no shade beyond the boat or an umbrella you bring, no shop. That emptiness is the appeal, but it also means you must come prepared: water, plenty of sun protection, a hat, and your own snacks unless the trip feeds you. The sun is relentless out there.

It also hinges on weather and tide. Operators cancel or reroute when the sea turns rough, and the sandbank itself shifts and shrinks โ€” at high tide it can be barely above water, so the timing of your departure matters. If the sandbank is a must-do, keep a spare day in hand and confirm the plan and the tide with your operator the evening before. Reckon on about half a day all in, often paired with a snorkelling stop on the way. Confirm current times and prices on the official site before you commit.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Maafushi city guide.

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Sandbank trip FAQs

How much should a sandbank trip cost?
Booked locally on Maafushi, expect from roughly $25-40 per person for a shared half-day, often with snorkelling included. Online and resort-style rates can be several times that for the same boat, so it's worth comparing guesthouse and local operator prices once you arrive. A private charter costs more but lets you choose the timing.
Is there shade or facilities on the sandbank?
Usually not โ€” it's a bare strip of sand with no buildings, often no shade beyond what the boat or a brought umbrella provides, and no shop. Take water, sun protection, a hat and anything you want to drink or eat unless the trip includes it. The exposure is the point, but it's fierce, so plan for the sun.
Will the trip definitely run?
It depends on the weather and the tide. Operators cancel or reroute when the sea is rough, and the sandbank itself can be largely underwater at high tide, so timing matters. Build in a spare day if the sandbank is a must-do, and confirm the plan and the tide with your operator the day before.

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