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Filtered Articles: Maldives · Honeymoon
Planning GuideHow to Plan the Perfect Honeymoon — A Specialist’s Honest Guide
In eight years of arranging honeymoons, I have learned one thing above all else: the couples who have the best honeymoons are almost never the ones who spent the most money. They are the ones who made the right decisions early — about destination, timing, pace and expectation — and avoided the mistakes that trip up everyone else. This guide covers everything I tell my clients in the first conversation. It is not a list of destinations. It is the decisions that determine whether your honeymoon is good or genuinely unforgettable. When to Start Planning Start planning your honeymoon at the same time you start planning your wedding — 9 to 12 months before your departure date. Not 9 months before the wedding, 9 months before you actually travel. If you are getting married in June and honeymooning in September, that means starting in September the year before. The reason is availability. The properties that make a honeymoon extraordinary — Soneva Fushi in the Maldives, Angama Mara in Kenya, COMO Laucala in Fiji — have limited room counts. The best villas and suites at these properties book 6–9 months ahead for peak season. Leave it until three months before and your first-choice property will almost certainly be full. The single most common mistake I see is couples who plan the wedding first, collapse afterwards, then start thinking about the honeymoon with eight weeks to go. By that point, you are choosing from what is left rather than what is best. Destination: Start with the Feeling, Not the Place Most couples start with a destination: “We want to go to the Maldives.” That is fine. But the better question is: what do you want to feel? Do you want to do nothing for two weeks? The Maldives, Seychelles or Mauritius will deliver that. Do you want adventure with luxury? Kenya and Tanzania, followed by a beach in Zanzibar, will give you both. Do you want culture, food and exploration? Japan, Italy or Vietnam. Do you want something nobody else has done? Antarctica, Galápagos, French Polynesia. The destination should serve the feeling, not the other way around. I have had couples insist on the Maldives because it is the “honeymoon destination”, only to discover on day four that two weeks of doing nothing is not what either of them actually wanted. The right conversation at the start prevents this entirely. “The couples who have the best honeymoons are the ones who were honest about what they actually enjoy — not what honeymoons are supposed to look like on Instagram.” — Anna, Romance & Honeymoon Specialist Budget: How to Think About It Honeymoon budgets range from £3,000 per person to £30,000 per person. Both can produce extraordinary trips. The difference is not quality — it is scope. At £3,000–5,000 per person, you can have a genuinely luxurious week in Mauritius, the Seychelles or Bali. At £5,000–10,000, the Maldives, a Kenya-Zanzibar combination, or two weeks in Japan become realistic. Above £10,000, you are in private island and Aman territory. Two things that consistently catch couples off guard: internal transfers (seaplane transfers in the Maldives cost £400–600 per person return) and meal plans (half-board at a top Maldives resort adds £150–250 per person per day). Build these into your budget from the start, not as surprises at the end. The Multi-Centre Question Should you visit one destination or two? My general guidance: if your honeymoon is 7–10 days, stay in one place. If it is 10–14 days, two destinations work well. If it is longer than 14 days, three is possible but two is usually better. The classic multi-centre honeymoon combinations that work consistently: safari in Kenya or Tanzania followed by beach in the Maldives or Zanzibar. Dubai city break followed by the Maldives. Bali culture and rice terraces followed by an overwater villa in the Maldives or a private island in Fiji. Japan followed by beach time in Thailand or Bali. The combinations that look good on paper but often do not work in practice: three countries in two weeks (too rushed, too many flights, too many hotel check-ins). Anywhere involving long layovers in transit cities. Mixing a very active itinerary with a very relaxed one in a way that creates whiplash rather than flow. The Five Mistakes Couples Make Most Often 1. Leaving immediately after the wedding. You will be exhausted. Build in at least two days between the wedding and your departure. Ideally three. The first day of your honeymoon should not be spent recovering from the day before. 2. Choosing a destination because of a single photograph. A photograph tells you nothing about the weather, the transfer logistics, the dining options or whether the resort is under renovation. A conversation with a specialist tells you all of it. 3. Overcomplicating the itinerary. The temptation to see and do everything is strongest on a honeymoon — this is your one big trip. Resist it. The best honeymoons have generous pace and deliberate downtime. You should be bored at some point. That is how you decompress. 4. Not telling the resort it is your honeymoon. Every good property offers complimentary honeymoon touches — champagne on arrival, a romantic dinner setup, a room upgrade if available. But they need to know. Your specialist should flag this at booking, and you should mention it at check-in. 5. Booking without ATOL protection. Your honeymoon is likely the most expensive holiday you will ever take. ATOL protection means your money is financially protected if anything goes wrong — airline failure, operator collapse, anything. Every booking through HighStreet Holidays is ATOL protected (No. 12118). Our Top Honeymoon Destinations by Type The One Thing That Matters Most After hundreds of honeymoons arranged, the one thing I know for certain is this: the couples who talk to a specialist early, honestly, and without a fixed idea have better honeymoons than those who arrive with a Pinterest board and a rigid plan. Your honeymoon is not a checklist. It is a trip that should feel like the first chapter of the next part of your life. Getting it right takes a conversation — not a search engine.
When to VisitBest Time to Visit the Maldives — A Month-by-Month Guide
The honest answer to “when should I go to the Maldives?” is: it depends entirely on what you want from your trip. November to April is the dry season and the easy recommendation. But “dry season” is a broad brush that obscures the real differences between months — differences in price, in crowds, in marine life, and in which atoll will give you the best experience. I have visited the Maldives in every month of the year across 15 years of arranging holidays there. Here is what I actually tell my clients. The Two Seasons — Dry vs Wet The Maldives has two monsoon seasons. The northeast monsoon (iruvai) runs from November to April and brings dry weather, calm seas and excellent visibility. The southwest monsoon (hulhangu) runs from May to October and brings more rain, stronger winds and rougher seas — but also lower prices, fewer tourists and some of the best marine life encounters of the year. Temperatures barely change. The Maldives sits close to the equator, and air temperatures hover between 28°C and 31°C year-round. Water temperature ranges from 27°C to 30°C. You will never be cold in the Maldives, regardless of when you visit. The real variable is rainfall — and even in the wet season, rain in the Maldives typically arrives in short, intense bursts rather than all-day downpours. A “rainy day” in the Maldives often means an hour of dramatic tropical rain followed by blue skies and sunshine. “I have been to the Maldives in August and had seven days of unbroken sunshine. I have been in February and had two days of rain. The seasons are averages, not guarantees.” — Almas, Travel Specialist January & February — Peak Season This is the most popular time to visit. The weather is at its driest and most reliable. Skies are consistently blue, seas are calm, and underwater visibility is at its best — typically 30 metres or more. If you are visiting for the first time and want a guaranteed-good-weather experience, January and February are the safest choices. The trade-off is price and availability. January and February are peak season across every resort in the Maldives. Prices are at their highest, and the most popular villas — particularly overwater suites at Soneva Fushi, One&Only Reethi Rah and Four Seasons Landaa Giraavaru — book out months in advance. If you want to travel in these months, we typically recommend booking 6–9 months ahead. Best for: First-time visitors, honeymooners who want certainty, anyone who prioritises guaranteed sunshine over everything else. Diving & snorkelling: Excellent visibility on the east side of atolls. Manta rays can be spotted at cleaning stations in the central atolls. Whale shark sightings are less frequent than in the wet season. March & April — The Sweet Spot March and April are, in my experience, the best overall months to visit the Maldives — and the months I most often recommend to clients who are flexible on dates. The weather is still reliably dry, though clouds begin to build towards the end of April. Visibility remains excellent. The crucial difference is price: March rates are typically 15–20% lower than January peak, and April can be 25–30% lower. Availability is also significantly better — you can book 3–4 months ahead rather than 9. The water is at its warmest in March and April, which makes for the most comfortable snorkelling of the year. The seas remain calm. The resorts are noticeably quieter than in January. Best for: Experienced travellers who want peak-season weather without peak-season crowds or prices. Couples. Divers. Anyone who values seclusion. Our recommendation: If your dates are flexible and you want the single best value-to-weather ratio in the Maldives, book the second or third week of March. May to July — The Wet Season Begins May marks the transition into the southwest monsoon. Rain increases, winds pick up, and the western sides of atolls begin to receive more weather. Visibility drops on some reefs. This is when many travellers assume the Maldives is “closed” or not worth visiting. They are wrong. May to July is when the Maldives becomes genuinely interesting for marine life. The change in current brings plankton-rich water from the deep ocean, which in turn attracts manta rays and whale sharks in significant numbers. If you want to dive or snorkel with mantas, May to July on the western side of the atolls is where to be. Prices drop substantially — often 40–50% below January rates. A Water Retreat at Soneva Fushi that costs £4,200 per night in February might be available for £2,400 in June. The quality of the resort, the food, the service — all identical. The only difference is occasional rain and slightly choppier seas. Best for: Budget-conscious luxury travellers, divers, marine life enthusiasts, families (school half-terms in May), repeat visitors who want a different side of the Maldives. August to October — Surf, Savings & Mantas August through October is the deepest wet season. Rainfall is at its peak in September, and some days will be overcast. Seaplane transfers can occasionally be delayed by weather. This is the lowest season in the Maldives, and prices reflect it. But this is also when Hanifaru Bay — in the Baa Atoll, accessible from Soneva Fushi and other northern resorts — comes alive with the world’s most spectacular manta ray feeding aggregation. Hundreds of manta rays gather in a single bay to feed on concentrated plankton. It is one of the most extraordinary marine wildlife events on earth, and it happens between June and November, peaking in August and September. Surfers also know this period well. The southwest monsoon creates consistent swells on the outer reefs, and several resorts in the Male and North atolls offer access to world-class surf breaks that are flat for the rest of the year. Best for: Surfers, manta ray enthusiasts, repeat visitors, anyone who wants genuine value. Avoid if you need guaranteed sunshine every day. Pricing: September is typically the cheapest month. Expect savings of 40–50% versus peak season at most resorts. November & December — Transition & Christmas November is a transition month. The wet season is ending but has not fully cleared. You may get some rain, but the days are increasingly sunny. It is an underrated month — prices are still low, mantas are still present in the northern atolls, and the resorts are beginning to prepare for the high season rush. December is a different matter. The first two weeks of December offer excellent weather at prices that are still below peak — this is one of the best times to visit for value. From around December 20th, Christmas and New Year rates apply, and they are the highest of the entire year. Most resorts enforce minimum stays (typically 7–10 nights) over the festive period, and many require a gala dinner supplement for Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve. Best for: November — budget-conscious travellers who want improving weather. Early December — excellent value. Late December — families and couples celebrating Christmas, if budget is not a constraint. Which Atoll, Which Month? This is the question that most “best time to visit” guides miss entirely, and it is arguably the most important one. The Maldives stretches across 900 kilometres of ocean. Weather conditions in the northern atolls (Baa, Raa, Noonu) can be quite different to conditions in the southern atolls (Addu, Laamu, Gaafu). During the wet season, the southern atolls tend to receive less rainfall than the north. During the dry season, the difference is less pronounced. For marine life: the Baa Atoll (Soneva Fushi, Amilla) is the manta ray hotspot from June to November. The South Ari Atoll (Conrad, LUX*) is the best year-round location for whale sharks. The North Male Atoll (One&Only Reethi Rah, Cheval Blanc) has the most reliable dry-season diving. This is exactly the kind of detail that is impossible to convey in a generic guide — and exactly why speaking with a specialist who knows the atolls personally makes the difference between a good Maldives trip and the right one. The Verdict There is no single “best time” to visit the Maldives. There is a best time for you, and it depends on what matters most. The right month, the right atoll and the right resort are three decisions that together determine whether your Maldives trip is good or genuinely special. A 20-minute conversation with one of our Indian Ocean specialists will answer all three.
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