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Raja Ampat Dive Lodge

Raja Ampat Dive Lodge

Package Rate on Request - Accommodations 95 € per person/night Dive packages 56 € per dive



Nitrox $
WIFI Available
Star Rating
Nestled on Waigeo Island, just 20 minutes from Waisai harbor, Raja Ampat Dive Lodge is a West Papua-based getaway. Guests arrive at the resort through Domine Eduard Osok Airport Sorong. The airport can be reached directly through the following Indonesian cities: Jakarta, Makassar, Ambon, Manado, and Manokwari through LionAir, Wings Air, Batik Air, Garuda Indonesia, Sriwijaya Air, or AirAsia. There are no international flights to the airport, but guests can coordinate ferry rides and private speedboat transfers to reach the resort. The resort offers three styles of accommodation: twelve cottages with private terraces, ten double rooms, and two family rooms. All rooms feature traditional wood design and construction, room service, space for extra beds, AC, private bathrooms, hot showers, mosquito nets, toiletries, fans, and drinkable water.

Raja Ampat Dive Lodge
Raja Ampat Dive Lodge
Raja Ampat Dive Lodge
Raja Ampat Dive Lodge
Raja Ampat Dive Lodge
Raja Ampat Dive Lodge
Raja Ampat Dive Lodge
Raja Ampat Dive Lodge
Raja Ampat Dive Lodge
Raja Ampat Dive Lodge
Raja Ampat Dive Lodge WEATHER
The restaurant serves three daily meals, including an international food buffet, western, and Indonesian meals. Fresh fruit is offered during breakfast, lunch, and dinner, and guests can enjoy fresh juice during breakfast. Traditional snacks are offered during tea time, ideal for relaxing after a day of diving. Coffee, tea, chocolate milk, and oatmeal are provided at breakfast daily.
With over 30 Dampier Strait-based dive sites, typically 10 to 30 minutes away, the resort has dive experiences for any visitor. Blue Magic is one of the most popular spots for its healthy, diverse coral reef, where barracudas, jacks, tuna, and even wobbegong sharks thrive. Other pelagic life, such as oceanic mantas, black tips, white tips, and gray sharks, are often spotted at this site 10 minutes from the resort. Sardines Reef is a small but stunning sight to see. The underwater hill is located east of Kri and is home to soft coral, gorgonian fans, and black coral bushes. Marine life ranges from schools of sardines and damsels to barracudas and mackerel to black- and white-tip sharks. A record-breaking site, Cape Kri, is famous for the nearly 300 species registered during a single dive. It is overflowing with life, from dogtooth tuna to gray sharks across the hard and soft coral. This site is popular amongst divers, photographers, and snorkelers.
While the daily schedule is subject to change, it typically includes three daily dives: two in the morning and one in the afternoon. Depending on the schedule, diving can be a full-day trip with a prepared stop for a shaded lunch break. The on-site wooden dive center is home to five unique dive boats, ranging from eight to 12 meters long, that carry eight to 15 divers. The center offers PADI dive courses, two BAUER compressors, over 100 12 Aluminum tanks (DIN and international), and Aqualung and Cressi dive gear. The dive shop offers nitrox to EAN-certified dives but does not support technical diving or rebreathers.
Other activities include hikes through the jungle with sightings of the red bird-of-paradise and Wilson’s bird-of-paradise, which are specific to the island. Guests can also snorkel along the house reef or at Cape Kri, where village trips are also available.
2022 Rates: Accommodation 95 € per person per night double diver occupancy. Dive packages: 1-5 dives - 56 € per dive; 6-10 dives 53 € per dive; 11 + dives 49 € per dive; nitrox 9 € per tank. Dive courses are available on request.
Narrative text and photographs courtesy of the Raja Ampat Dive Lodge.



Dive Conditions

Conditions can make or break your trip. Temperature, visibility and the current vary greatly across this expansive country. Be sure to check the conditions of each destination you’re planning to dive before you leave. Diving is excellent year-round, but the best time is from May to September. Monsoon season is from December to June. Visibility may not be as good during the monsoon, however, certain locations like the Komodo Islands are a diver’s dream during this time due to an influx of mantas.
Most of Indonesia can be dived year-round with March to October being the most popular time of year to dive. This period of time marks the dry season in most parts of the country, with the exception of some dive areas like Ambon and southern Raja Ampat where most rainfall occurs in May/June to October/September due to the southern monsoon. It's best to visit these areas in the months of November to April for optimal dive conditions.
Generally speaking, Indonesia's climate is almost entirely tropical, with May to September as the dry season, and October to April the rainy season, and with heavier rainfall from December through February. However, the opposite might be true for certain dive areas in Indonesia like Raja Ampat and Ambon, and the best time of year to visit Indonesia really depends on where you intend to stay in the country.
The water temperatures remain quite consistent through the country, hovering at 26°-29°C (82°- 85°F) year-round. Typically, you won't need anything more than a 3-5mm wetsuit, or even a skinsuit. However, the diving conditions and difficulty in Indonesia hugely vary, depending on where and when you dive in the country.
Ambon Bay, Maluku – world class muck diving. Critters that can be seen here include rhinopias, frogfish, ghost pipefish, lots of juvenile fish, stonefish, mandarin fish, nudibranchs, harlequin and coleman shrimps, wonderpus, mimic and flamboyant cuttlefish, and even the much-sought-after psychedelic frogfish.
Alor, East Nusa Tenggara – the hidden gem. This off-the-beaten-path dive destination offers a mix of both world-class wide-angle and macro sites. Pristine coral reefs, steep walls, sloping muck sites--the diving in Alor is really diverse and would please the most discerning diver and underwater photographer.
Banda Sea, Maluku – sea snakes and hammerheads. Most of the diving around the Banda Sea involves excellent wall dives, and great macro sites, but the biggest draw is probably the resident sea snakes at Manuk and Gunung Api islands.
Bali – wrecks and mola molas. Unique critters, fascinating wrecks, beautiful walls, colorful corals, excellent muck dives, huge schools of fish, pelagics--Bali has it all. Technical diving and freediving are also possible in Bali with a good number of reputable dive operations.
Derawan Islands, Borneo – manta rays and whalesharks. Derawan is a remote group of islands in East Kalimantan (East Borneo), and is home to one of the three jellyfish lakes known to men, with the other two located in Palau and Misool Island in Raja Ampat.
Komodo, East Nusa Tenggara – drift dives and world class reefs. Komodo National Park is a group of volcanic islands with over 5,700 giant lizards known as Komodo dragons. This UNESCO World Heritage Site also hosts a world-class scuba diving scene. Imagine drift dives with colorful corals in various formations teeming with marine life, big and small. Divers can see big schools of fish pretty much year-round, as well as eagle and manta rays.
Lembeh, North Sulawesi – muck diving capital. Known as the world's capital for muck diving, Lembeh Strait in North Sulawesi offers second-to-none macro biodiversity. The number species that you can cross off your list within a week of diving Lembeh is staggering.
Manado and Bunaken, North Sulawesi – wall dives and reefs. Manado Bay offers a mix of great muck and reef sites, treating divers to unique critters like mimic octopus and flamboyant cuttlefish, as well as various seahorses, squid, nudibranchs, and frogfish.
Raja Ampat, West Papua – the holy grail of Indonesia. Alongside Kaimana Regency and Triton Bay in the south, and Cenderawasih Bay in the east, Raja Ampat archipelago makes up a massive area, collectively known as the Bird’s Head Seascape. Divers can visit the Raja Ampat area many times in their lifes and discover something new each time.
Wakatobi, South East Sulawesi – beautiful coral reefs. Wakatobi's reefs are extremely healthy and offer unique large coral formations, various sea fans, and sponges which are overflowing with marine life. The underwater topography is no less unique, featuring various walls, ridges, and overhangs. While it's not the place for large pelagics, eagle rays and reef sharks can typically be seen.