Atoll profile
VaavuVaavu Atoll.
The Maldives' least populous atoll, with world-class channel diving and almost no boat traffic.
Destination brief
Vaavu — administratively Felidhu Atoll with the adjacent Vattaru reef — sits roughly 65 to 80 kilometres south of Malé and is officially the least populous administrative atoll in the Maldives, with just five inhabited villages spread across 19 islands. That scarcity is the point: with only a small handful of resorts in operation, the channel dives along the atoll's eastern rim — Fotteyo Kandu, Miyaru Kandu, Devana Kandu and Alimatha Kandu — are regularly dived with no other boats in sight. Fotteyo in particular has a long-standing reputation among dive operators and publications as the finest channel dive in the country, combining a dramatic 30-metre pass with soft-coral overhangs, swim-throughs and near-guaranteed grey reef shark encounters on an incoming tide.
The neighbouring Miyaru Kandu ('shark channel' in Dhivehi) delivers similar pelagic action, while Devana Kandu offers a more photographable wall with eagle rays and reef sharks at gentler depths. For travellers, the atoll is accessible by a 70 to 90 minute speedboat or a 20 minute seaplane from Velana International, and the resort options — Alimatha and Dhiggiri, now operating under the NAKAI brand, together with Cinnamon Velifushi and Cocogiri — are deliberately small and diving-focused. Vaavu is not the place for full-spectrum resort pampering; it is the place to dive the Maldives' most serious channels without competition.
Vaavu contains Fottheyo, the largest single reef in the Maldives, which marks the easternmost geographic point of the country. The adjacent dive site, Fotteyo Kandu, is widely cited by dive operators and publications as the finest channel dive in the archipelago.
Field notes
Fotteyo Kandu
Miyaru Kandu
Devana Kandu
Alimatha Kandu
Rakeedhoo Kandu
Vattaru Kandu
Grey reef sharks patrolling Fotteyo's channel entrance on incoming tide
Eagle ray squadrons and schooling barracuda at Miyaru Kandu
Soft-coral overhangs and swim-throughs at 20-35 metres
Night-time nurse shark feeds at Alimatha's house reef
Accommodation Collection
Showing 25–31 · Page 2 of 2
Frequently Asked
Vaavu Atoll sits approximately 65-80 km from Velana International Airport (Malé). The standard transfer is Speedboat (70-90 min) or Seaplane (20 min). Your resort or guesthouse will typically arrange the transfer as part of your booking.
December to April for calm seas; May to November when currents run strongest for shark and pelagic action. The northeast monsoon (December to April) delivers the calmest surface conditions and best visibility. During the southwest monsoon (May to October) the currents through Fotteyo and Miyaru intensify, pulling in larger numbers of pelagic fish and sharks at the cost of more challenging dive conditions.
We currently list 31 properties in Vaavu Atoll on Resortlife. The atoll has roughly 3 resort islands in total, with options ranging from intimate guesthouses on local islands to ultra-luxury overwater resorts.
For travel trade
Contracted net rates, multilingual GROs at Velana, charter-flight coordination and 24/7 partner support.
Notable properties include NAKAI Alimatha Resort, NAKAI Dhiggiri Resort, Cinnamon Velifushi Maldives, Cocogiri Island Resort. Which resort suits you depends on travel style — honeymoon, family, dive-focused, or budget-conscious — our specialists can match you to the right island.
Key dive sites include Fotteyo Kandu, Miyaru Kandu, Devana Kandu, Alimatha Kandu. Highlights: Grey reef sharks patrolling Fotteyo's channel entrance on incoming tide; Eagle ray squadrons and schooling barracuda at Miyaru Kandu; Soft-coral overhangs and swim-throughs at 20-35 metres. Most resorts operate PADI-certified dive centres with daily boat dives and house-reef snorkelling.
Vaavu contains Fottheyo, the largest single reef in the Maldives, which marks the easternmost geographic point of the country. The adjacent dive site, Fotteyo Kandu, is widely cited by dive operators and publications as the finest channel dive in the archipelago.