West Coast (Black River District)
Flic en Flac public beach
Mauritius's long casuarina-shaded west-coast strip with a calm, shallow lagoon and reef close enough to snorkel from the sand โ what it's really like, and when it's busiest.
Where
Flic en Flac, Mauritius
Opening hours
Open access (always open). The public beach is free at any hour, with the calmest water and best light in the morning; food vans, beach traders and watersports operators keep their own daytime hours, busiest at weekends and in the high season.
Tickets
Free โ no ticket needed to use the beach or swim in the lagoon. You only pay if you hire snorkel gear, take a glass-bottom boat or watersports trip, or buy from the food vans and beach traders.
Time needed
A half-day to a full beach day; an hour or two if you just want a swim and a snorkel before moving on.
In short
Visiting Flic en Flac public beach
Flic en Flac's long casuarina-shaded strip is the real reason to base yourself here: a sheltered, shallow lagoon that is genuinely calm and safe for swimming, with reef close enough to snorkel straight from the sand. It is free and public, lined with shade trees rather than a wall of hotels. Busy with local families at weekends and quieter midweek, it is one of the most relaxed beaches on Mauritius's west coast.
The lagoon that does the work
Flic en Flac is one of the longest public beaches on Mauritiusโs west coast, and what makes it stand out isnโt the sand alone โ itโs the lagoon. The reef offshore takes the sting out of the open Indian Ocean, leaving a shallow, sheltered, genuinely calm stretch of water that is safe and easy for swimming. Itโs clear, warm and gentle, with a soft gradient that suits children and less confident swimmers. Behind it runs a thick belt of casuarina trees giving real shade, rather than the wall of resorts you get on some beaches, so you can actually sit out of the sun for free.
And it is free โ public, open at any hour, no ticket. You only spend if you hire snorkel gear, take a glass-bottom boat out towards the reef, or buy from the food vans and beach traders working the strip. The snorkelling is a genuine draw: in a few spots you can swim out straight from the sand, though the best marine life is a short boat trip towards the reef edge and the nearby marine park.
When to come, and the weekend crowd
The water is at its calmest and clearest in the morning, and the light is kinder then too, so an early start rewards you. Timing also depends on the day of the week. Weekends bring local Mauritian families out in force for picnics and barbecues under the casuarinas โ lively, friendly and a window into how islanders actually use the beach, but the popular central stretch fills up. Midweek itโs noticeably quieter.
If the main access point feels busy, just walk along the strip; it runs for a long way and the crowds thin quickly. Treat it as a slow beach day โ swim, snorkel, shade, repeat โ and itโs about as relaxed as the west coast gets. The sunsets here, straight out over the lagoon, are reliably excellent.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Flic en Flac city guide.