Liveaboard Diving in Rasdhoo Atoll
What To Expect On A Rasdhoo Atoll Liveaboard
A liveaboard cruise to Rasdhoo Atoll is the highlight of many divers' Maldives dive trips. To see why, you will have to board your dive dhoni at dawn and speed toward the atoll's outer edge. What deserves this early morning wake-up? Schooling scalloped hammerhead sharks. However, Rasdhoo Atoll actually offers a great deal more than just hammerheads (as if they werenít enough). Whilst only a small atoll just northeast of Ari Atoll in the Central Atolls, Rasdhoo's small area is graced with a bounty of world-class dive sites, frequented by heavy-hitters like reef sharks, mantas, and big pelagic fish.
Rasdhoo Atoll Underwater
The topography at Rasdhoo consists of walls, thilas, and kandus. Some dives contain interesting combinations of the above, such as channels with the wall of an island on one side, a sandy bottom in the middle, and thilas on the other side, beyond which lies the deep-water drop-off. Rasdhoo's marine life ticks all the boxes, even for seasoned Maldives divers, offering manta rays, eagle rays, and big stingrays, whitetip, blacktip, and grey reef sharks, Napoleon wrasse, schools of pelagic hunters, and big reef fish. Overhangs and caverns (and currents) make the dives challenging and engaging. The area is not known for colorful corals, though a couple of sites do have notable patches of healthy coral cover.
Dive Sites Of Rasdhoo Atoll
Hammerhead Point is a given on Central Atolls liveaboard dive tours. Here, on the outside corner of Madivaru Island, the blue water holds an unparalleled sight, but divers must be prepared to wake up before dawn to catch it. At around 6 AM, schools of scalloped hammerheads rise from the deep, and if you're just a bit lucky and wait quietly in the right place, you stand a good chance of seeing them glide past you. The ridge at Hammerhead Point can be explored for interesting reef life, but remember to keep one eye on the blue since tuna and other impressive pelagics may join the hammerheads for a visit.
Manta Block in the North Channel gives divers a very good chance to observe manta rays hanging out at a shallow cleaning station (about 13 meters down). Other areas of the North Channel are also frequented by mantas and schools of jacks, Napoleon wrasse, sharks, and various reef fish.
Rasdhoo Channel is an underwater crossing from one island to another; hopping from thila to thila, divers often find sharks, pelagic rays, and big fish.
Madivaru is a crescent-shaped reef off Madivaru Island that offers good hard coral and the incredible fish life common to Rasdhoo.
Top Tips For Divers
In the Maldives, a new Green Tax of 6 USD per person per night applies to every tourist in the country. The official language is Maldivian, also called Dhivehi.
Gear to bring includes your own mask, booties, fins, and dive computer. These are personalized pieces of equipment that we donít recommend renting. An ill-fitting mask or pair of fins can make diving virtually impossible, and a dive computer is your most important piece of safety equipment.
Getting To Rasdhoo Atoll
Rasdhoo Atoll is best dived by Maldives liveaboard to combine it with other world-class dive sites in the Central Atolls and beyond. The length of liveaboard cruises visiting Rasdhoo usually ranges from 7 to 11 nights, with a budget of under 200 to 400 euros per night. Liveaboards often spend at least one morning in Rasdhoo on itineraries, including Ari, Male, Vaavu, and sometimes the Northern or Deep South Atolls as well.
Male is the main liveaboard departure location for Rasdhoo Atoll liveaboards, accessible by direct flights from Dubai, Singapore, and Colombo. Longer international flights from Europe, America, China, India, and Australia often connect through the regional airports mentioned above.
Diving Rasdhoo Atoll is possible all year round, but the northeast monsoon from December to May allows the calmest surface conditions and the least rain. The water temperature usually stays between 26 and 29 C, and visibility between 15 and 30 meters. Manta lovers should note that the manta season runs from November through April.
Rasdhoo Atoll Diving Reviews
- 9.1 Superb
- 9.2 Superb
- Derek N
- United Kingdom
Love Rasdhoo Madivaru Rasdhoo amazing shark gallery dive with plenty of small stuff as well.
Diving Rasdhoo Atoll in January on the Emperor Serenity
- 9.6 Exceptional
- Shitai Z
- China
Strong current and we stay there watch the school of sharks, amazing.
Diving Rasdhoo Atoll in June on the Scubaspa Ying
- 8.0 Very good
- Karl E
- United States
This would make a great first dive; very pretty, simple, easy transition.
Diving Rasdhoo Atoll in May on the Emperor Leo
- 9.6 Exceptional
- Jan-Eric M
- Germany
Overall, the scuba diving in the Rasdhoo Atoll is a memorable experience that offers divers a chance to explore one of the most diverse and beautiful underwater environments in the Maldives
Diving Rasdhoo Atoll in August on the Maldives Aggressor II
- 8.8 Fabulous
- Robert H
- United States
Saw eagle rays, turtles, many fish
Diving Rasdhoo Atoll in April on the Emperor Serenity
- 8.4 Very good
- Jody H
- Malaysia
some sharks action but low vis didn't make it exciting
Diving Rasdhoo Atoll in January on the Carpe Vita
- 8.8 Fabulous
- Mark R
- United Kingdom
Unbelievably good!! Tiger and hammerhead in a single dive plus about 40 Grey reef sharks!
Diving Rasdhoo Atoll in December on the Emperor Serenity
- 8.8 Fabulous
- Rafael M
- Brazil
AMAZING Shark observation spot!!!
Diving Rasdhoo Atoll in December on the Maldives Aggressor II
- 8.4 Very good
- Etienne B
- France
no current unfortunately so few sharks
Diving Rasdhoo Atoll in December on the Maldives Aggressor II
- 8.8 Fabulous
- sofia A
- Sweden
Amazing! So many sharks (grey reefs, white tips, black tips)
Diving Rasdhoo Atoll in November on the Carpe Diem
See all liveaboards from $1,421 to $6,300 per trip