7-Day Nosy Be Itinerary: Islands, Diving and Local Life 2026
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At a Glance
- Best time: May–November — dry season with best dive visibility; whale sharks present November–January
- Getting there: Direct flights Tana–Nosy Be (Fascene Airport) in 2h — Air Madagascar 4x/week, Tsaradia 3x/week
- Where to stay: Compare Nosy Be resorts on Agoda — Ambatoloaka and Madirokely are the main beach resort zones
- Island hopping: Nosy Komba (40 min boat), Nosy Tanikely (1h boat), Nosy Iranja (2h boat)
- Diving: 30+ dive sites, visibility 10–30m, hammerhead and whale shark encounters possible
- Whale watching: Humpbacks pass July–September in the Sainte-Marie channel, visible from Nosy Be boats
- Travel insurance: SafetyWing covers diving to 40m depth from $1.82/day
Nosy Be — ‘the big island’ in Malagasy — is Madagascar’s most developed and visited island destination. Seven days is the right length to move beyond the resort beach and experience the full archipelago: black lemurs on Nosy Komba, pristine reef at Nosy Tanikely, the white sandbar at Nosy Iranja, and the cultural texture of Hell-Ville’s market streets.
Plan your Madagascar trip:
Day 1–2: Arrival, Hell-Ville and Ambatoloaka Beach
Arrive at Fascene Airport and transfer to your accommodation (tuk-tuk or taxi: 15,000–25,000 MGA to Ambatoloaka or Madirokely beach areas). Day 1 afternoon: walk Hell-Ville town, the island’s commercial hub. The Hell-Ville market (Marché de Andoany) sells ylang-ylang perfume, vanilla pods, spices, and fresh fish. The market is the authentic local pulse of Nosy Be — nothing like the resort souvenir shops. Explore the backstreets near the port for colonial-era buildings and the Alliance Française. Day 2: Ambatoloaka and first beach day. Ambatoloaka is the main traveller beach — budget guesthouses, dive shops, restaurants, and a long stretch of sand. Madirokely, 2 km north, is slightly more upscale with larger resort hotels. Spend the day choosing your dive operator or snorkelling provider: most are clustered on the Ambatoloaka beach street. Day 2 evening: the nightlife area on Rue Passot in Ambatoloaka is the most lively on the island — restaurants serve grilled zebu, seafood platters, and fresh fruit juice. Compare beachfront accommodations for different budgets and areas at our Nosy Be beachfront hotel guide.
Day 3–4: Nosy Komba and Nosy Tanikely
Day 3 — Nosy Komba island. The island directly south of Nosy Be, 40 minutes by speedboat. Nosy Komba is famous for its habituated black lemurs (Eulemur macaco) — the village of Ampangoriana feeds them banana scraps and they approach visitors freely. Entry to the village lemur area: 5,000 MGA donation. Beyond lemurs, the island has excellent snorkelling on its south coast coral reef, a small vanilla plantation accessible by guided walk, and a craft village selling handwoven raffia and carved items. Full-day tours from Ambatoloaka (combining Nosy Komba and Nosy Tanikely): $45–65 per person. Day 4 — Nosy Tanikely Marine Reserve. A 45-minute boat trip from Ambatoloaka, Nosy Tanikely is Madagascar’s most famous snorkelling site — a protected marine reserve with 100% coral coverage in the shallows, visibility reaching 25–30 m in good conditions, and regular green turtle sightings. Entry fee: 15,000 MGA per person. Snorkelling is the main activity; scuba diving in the reserve requires a prior permit. The island has no accommodation — day trips only. The turtle population is remarkable: guides report 15–30 individuals in the snorkelling zone on most days. Check best dive sites in our Nosy Be dive guide.
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Day 5–6: Nosy Iranja and Diving or Whale Watching
Day 5 — Nosy Iranja. The most iconic image of Nosy Be — two islands connected by a white sandbar that appears at low tide. Nosy Iranja is 2 hours south of Nosy Be by speedboat (book a full-day tour: $70–100 per person including boat, guide, lunch, snorkelling). The sandbar is completely submerged at high tide and walkable for 3–4 hours around low tide. The surrounding water has excellent snorkelling — lionfish, octopus, and eagle rays in the seagrass. Sea turtles nest on the beach from November to January; turtle monitoring tours are available in season. Time your visit with the tide schedule — operators book based on low tide timing, not departure time. Day 6 — Diving or Whale Watching. Choose based on your interests and the month. Diving: The Nosy Be archipelago has 30+ named dive sites. Manta Point and Sakatia Pass are the standouts for large pelagic encounters (manta rays, whale sharks November–January). Most dive centres charge $45–65 for a two-tank dive with equipment. PADI courses start at $350. Whale watching (July–September only): Humpback whales pass through the Mozambique Channel en route to winter calving grounds — boats from Nosy Be encounter them regularly during this window. Half-day whale-watching tours from $50–80. Advance dive bookings: Nosy Be dive guide.
Day 7: Mount Passot and Vanilla Plantation Before Departure
Save the island’s interior for the last morning. Mount Passot (329m) is the highest point on Nosy Be and the site of the Crater Lakes (Lacs Sacrés) — seven small lakes in volcanic craters that are sacred in Malagasy tradition. The sunrise over the lakes, with the Indian Ocean behind them, is one of the most atmospheric views in Madagascar. Access: 4×4 or motorbike rental from Hell-Ville (motorbike: 40,000–60,000 MGA/day, basic 4×4: 80,000–120,000 MGA/day). The summit road is unpaved and requires at least a high-clearance vehicle. Guided tuk-tuk tours are available for $15–25 per person. Before departing: The Plantation Millot vanilla and perfume plantation near Marovato offers 45-minute guided tours of the ylang-ylang distillation process and organic vanilla cultivation. Entry 10,000 MGA, tours in French and English. Departure from Fascene Airport: Allow 45 minutes for transfer from Ambatoloaka. The airport has no SIM card kiosk — buy at Ivato on your onward connection to Tana. For island-to-island transfers and ferry details: Madagascar island transport guide.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best time to visit Nosy Be?
May to November is the optimal window — dry season, calm seas, and best dive visibility (15–30m). July to September adds whale watching. November to January brings whale sharks to Manta Point. December to March is the wet season with choppy seas, occasional cyclones, and reduced visibility.
Do I need to be a certified diver to enjoy Nosy Be?
No. Nosy Tanikely Marine Reserve, Nosy Komba, and Nosy Iranja offer world-class snorkelling accessible to non-divers. Most day trips combine snorkelling with lemur and beach stops. PADI discover scuba courses (no certification required) are offered by most dive centres from $80–120.
How do I get to Nosy Komba and Nosy Iranja from Nosy Be?
Organised day tours from the Ambatoloaka beach are the easiest approach — speedboats depart daily and tours include guide, entry fees, and lunch. Private speedboat hire is also possible if you want flexible timing. Nosy Komba: 40 min. Nosy Iranja: 2 hours.
Seven days in Nosy Be covers the essential archipelago loop while leaving room for unhurried diving and beach time. The island rewards those who leave the resort zone — black lemurs, whale shark encounters, and the Crater Lakes are experiences not replicated anywhere else in the Indian Ocean. Book accommodation early for peak season via Agoda Nosy Be. Activate SafetyWing before flying — diving cover, boat accident cover, and emergency evacuation are all included from $1.82/day.
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