Up to four dives a day across Cape Kri, Magic Mountain, Boo Windows, and the world’s richest reef.
Raja Ampat sits at the very centre of the Coral Triangle. A diving charter here is a chance to log dives at the literal world-record site for fish biodiversity, swim with oceanic manta rays at a known cleaning station, and photograph the rare pygmy seahorses that thrive on Raja Ampat’s fans.
Conservation International’s biodiversity surveys catalogue more than 1,500 fish species and 600 coral species in Raja Ampat — more than anywhere else on Earth. A single dive at Cape Kri set the world record at 374 species, and the surrounding Dampier Strait remains the densest dive-site cluster in the region.
Two sites consistently deliver manta encounters: Manta Sandy in the Dampier Strait (reef mantas, year-round) and Magic Mountain in Misool (oceanic mantas, December–March peak). Our dive briefings cover the conservation protocols for both species — minimum approach distance, no flash photography, and respecting cleaning-station behavior.
Most sites range from gentle drifts at 18–28 metres to advanced channel currents at Mike's Point and the Passage. Water temperature stays 27–29°C year-round; visibility runs 20–40 metres in the dry season. Surface intervals are spent at karst-island anchorages where the snorkeling itself is world-class.
World record holder for fish biodiversity — 374 species in a single dive.
Oceanic manta cleaning station; best on slack tide, December–March peak.
Karst light shafts pouring through twin underwater arches.
Reef mantas, schooling pelagics, and macro photographers’ favourite nudibranchs.
Year-round reef manta cleaning station, gentle 12–18m dive.
Advanced channel currents and a tunnelled wall dive in the central archipelago.
Share your certification, dive count target, and dates. Our marine biology team designs a tailored dive itinerary, usually within two working hours.
or call +62 811 3823 875