Honeymoon Planning
The Maldives is the world's most popular honeymoon destination for good reason — here is how to plan a trip that lives up to the dream.
Why the Maldives for a Honeymoon
The Maldives consistently ranks as the world's top honeymoon destination, and the appeal is straightforward: private islands, overwater villas, turquoise lagoons, world-class dining, and a level of seclusion that is almost impossible to find elsewhere. Every resort is on its own island, which means you are never sharing your holiday with a neighbouring hotel or a busy public beach. For couples seeking romance, privacy, and natural beauty, the Maldives delivers on all three.
That said, the Maldives is not one-size-fits-all. The experience varies enormously depending on your budget, the resort you choose, and what matters most to you as a couple. This guide helps you navigate those choices.
Choosing Your Resort
There are over 160 resort islands in the Maldives, ranging from ultra-luxury properties charging $3,000 or more per night to mid-range resorts starting around $200 to $400 per night. The key factors for honeymooners:
- Villa type: Overwater villas are the iconic honeymoon choice — glass floors, private decks, direct lagoon access, and sunrise or sunset views depending on orientation. Beach villas with private pools offer more space and a different charm. Some resorts offer both, letting you split your stay between the two.
- Size and atmosphere: Smaller resorts (30 to 60 villas) tend to feel more intimate and exclusive. Larger resorts (100+ villas) offer more facilities, restaurants, and activities but with more guests around. For a honeymoon, smaller often feels more special.
- Meal plan: Most honeymooners choose all-inclusive or full-board plans to avoid worrying about costs during the trip. A la carte dining on a remote island adds up quickly — a single dinner can cost $100 to $300 per person at a luxury resort. See resort stays explained for a breakdown of meal plan options.
- Transfer type: Resorts in North and South Male Atoll are reached by speedboat, meaning you arrive quickly after landing. More distant resorts require seaplane or domestic flight transfers, which add cost and time but are an experience in themselves.
- House reef: If you enjoy snorkelling, a resort with a good house reef accessible directly from the beach or villa is a major advantage. Some of the best house reefs in the Maldives offer turtle and shark sightings steps from your room.
Romantic Experiences
Most resorts offer honeymoon-specific experiences that can be booked in advance or on arrival:
- Private dining: Dinner on the beach, on a private sandbank, or on the deck of your overwater villa — set up with candles, a dedicated server, and a multi-course menu. This is the signature Maldives romantic experience and typically costs $200 to $500 per couple.
- Couples spa treatments: Overwater spa pavilions with glass floors, outdoor treatment rooms surrounded by tropical gardens, and treatments incorporating local ingredients like coconut oil and sea salt. See spa and wellness.
- Sunset cruises: A private sunset cruise on a traditional dhoni, often with champagne and canapes, watching dolphins play as the sun goes down.
- Sandbank picnics: Being dropped on a deserted sandbank with a picnic hamper and snorkelling gear, completely alone in the middle of the ocean.
- Underwater dining: A handful of resorts offer underwater restaurants where you eat surrounded by the reef — a genuinely unique experience.
Budget Tiers
Honeymoons in the Maldives can work across a wide range of budgets:
- Budget ($150 to $300 per night): Stay at a mid-range resort or combine a few nights on a local island guesthouse with a few nights at an affordable resort. You sacrifice some luxury but still get the beaches, the water, and the sunsets. A week-long honeymoon in this range costs roughly $2,000 to $4,000 for accommodation.
- Mid-range ($400 to $800 per night): Access to overwater villas, good house reefs, all-inclusive meal plans, and most resort amenities. This is where most honeymooners land. A week costs roughly $4,000 to $8,000 for accommodation.
- Luxury ($1,000 to $3,000+ per night): The top-tier resorts — private pools, butler service, fine dining, and villas the size of apartments. A week at this level starts around $10,000 and can exceed $30,000 for the most exclusive properties.
Remember that accommodation is only part of the cost. Add flights, transfers (seaplanes cost $400 to $600 per person return), meal plans, excursions, and spa treatments. For a realistic total budget breakdown, see our budget basics guide.
Best Time for a Honeymoon
The dry season from November to April offers the most reliably sunny weather, calm seas, and clear skies — ideal for honeymoon photography and outdoor dining. December to March is peak season with the highest prices and fullest resorts, so book well in advance.
The shoulder months of November and April offer a good balance: still mostly dry, slightly lower prices, and fewer guests. The wet season (May to October) brings occasional rain and rougher seas but also lower prices, lusher vegetation, and better manta ray sightings in some atolls. A rainy afternoon in the Maldives often means a dramatic downpour followed by sunshine — not days of grey skies.
Booking Tips
- Book early for peak season. The best overwater villas for December to March sell out six to twelve months in advance. If your honeymoon falls during these months, start looking early.
- Mention it is your honeymoon. Many resorts offer complimentary honeymoon extras — room upgrades, a bottle of sparkling wine, a fruit plate, flower arrangements, or a couples photo shoot. Let them know when booking, not on arrival.
- Consider splitting your stay. Some couples book two different resorts — a few nights at one for relaxation and a few nights at another in a different atoll for snorkelling or diving. This adds variety but also adds a transfer.
- Check what is included. Some resorts include non-motorised water sports, snorkelling gear, and bicycles. Others charge for everything. An all-inclusive package that initially looks expensive may save money compared to a room-only rate plus daily extras.
What to Know Before You Go
The Maldives is a Muslim country. Alcohol is available on resort islands but not on inhabited local islands. Dress codes on local islands are conservative — bikinis and swimwear are for the beach and pool, not for walking around the island. On resort islands, there are no restrictions. See our local etiquette guide for more.
If your wedding is shortly before your trip, update your passport and travel documents if you are changing your name. Mismatched names between your passport and booking can cause complications at check-in and immigration.