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Aerial view of a Maldivian atoll at sunrise
Maldives, Indian Ocean

Where the Indian Ocean offers a thousand islands and the finest reef system on earth

The Maldives sits in the Indian Ocean, 700 kilometres southwest of Sri Lanka, spread across an area larger than most people imagine. Twenty-six natural atolls. Around 1,200 islands. A handful of them developed into some of the finest resorts on earth. The rest as they have always been, low, quiet, surrounded by water that changes colour with the light and a reef system that remains among the most intact in the world.

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An overwater villa above a turquoise lagoon
A private dhoni anchored beside a sandbar
A reef system seen from above the lagoon surface
The Destination

Where Land Ends and Everything Else Begins

There is a version of the Maldives that most people never find. Not because it is hidden, but because finding it requires knowing which atoll, which island, and which hour of the day the light does what it does to the water. The Maldives is not one place. It is a thousand islands spread across 90,000 square kilometres of the Indian Ocean, each one surrounded by a lagoon of a colour that exists nowhere else on earth and a reef system that remains among the most intact in the world.

The water here is the reason everything else exists. Clarity that reaches thirty metres below the surface. Manta rays moving through it with the particular unhurried grace of creatures that have never needed to be anywhere quickly. Whale sharks passing beneath the hull of a vessel in water shallow enough to see them from the deck. The coral has been here for longer than the resorts, longer than the islands in some cases, and in the atolls far enough from the main population centres it shows — alive, dense and completely undisturbed.

The finest properties in the Maldives understood early that the only thing worth building here was something that made the water more accessible, not less. Overwater villas with direct sea access. Glass floors above the reef. Retractable roofs that open the bedroom to the night sky. The architecture exists to frame the environment rather than compete with it. In the best of them, it disappears entirely.

Signature Experiences

Extraordinary Experiences Available on Request

Some of the most remarkable experiences we offer cannot be booked instantly, by their nature, they require a private conversation.

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The Zameera Collection

Experiences Crafted by Zameera

A series of original experiences, conceived and curated entirely by Zameera. Coming soon.

Zameera Collection
Experiences That Exist Nowhere Else
Zameera Collection

Experiences That Exist Nowhere Else

The Zameera Collection is a series of original journeys conceived, designed and operated entirely by Zameera, created for those who have seen much of the world and still believe it has more to offer.

Before You Go

What to Know About the Maldives

Dhivehi is the official language. English is spoken universally across all resorts and tourist facilities throughout the country.

Maldives Time, UTC +5. No daylight saving.

Maldivian Rufiyaa (MVR). All resort transactions are conducted in US dollars. Major international cards are accepted everywhere. Cash is rarely necessary.

November to April. The dry season brings calm seas, clear skies and the finest visibility for diving and snorkelling. The shoulder months of May and October offer lower occupancy and occasionally exceptional conditions. The wet season from May to October brings stronger winds and some rain.

Velana International Airport in Malé is the main gateway to the Maldives. Onward transfer to the resort is by seaplane or speedboat depending on the atoll. Seaplane transfers operate during daylight hours only and are one of the most spectacular ways to arrive anywhere in the world.

Resort islands operate with a relaxed dress code. When visiting local inhabited islands, modest dress covering shoulders and knees is expected and appreciated.

A seaplane on a Maldivian lagoon at midday
From the Journal

The Maldives, Through Our Eyes

For those who want to understand the destination before they arrive.

The Journal