Fiji Liveaboard Diving
Soft Coral Capital of the World
About Fiji
Fiji's 333 islands deliver the world's most spectacular soft coral diving alongside legendary shark encounters in warm, crystal-clear waters.
Scattered across 1.3 million square kilometers of the South Pacific, **Fiji's 333 islands** sit at the meeting point of warm tropical currents and cooler southern waters — a unique convergence that has earned the country its reputation as the **Soft Coral Capital of the World**. The combination of nutrient-rich upwellings, abundant sunlight, and protected lagoons creates conditions where soft corals reach extraordinary size and color intensity rarely seen elsewhere.
The **Somosomo Strait**, separating Vanua Levu from Taveuni, is home to the legendary **Rainbow Reef** and the Great White Wall — a sheer drop-off cloaked in white soft corals that bloom in unison when current sweeps along the wall. Divers describe descending past curtains of fluorescent yellow, magenta, and crimson dendronephthya corals as one of the most surreal experiences in tropical diving.
**Bligh Water**, the deep channel between Fiji's two main islands, is a current-swept wilderness of pinnacles and seamounts. Sites like **E-6** and **Mount Mutiny** rise from 1,000 meters of blue water to within meters of the surface, attracting pelagic schools of barracuda, trevally, and the occasional bull or tiger shark. Visibility regularly exceeds 30 meters and the action runs from reef sharks to manta rays.
**Beqa Lagoon**, just south of Viti Levu, is famous for one of the most respected shark feeding programs in the world. Up to eight species — including bull sharks, lemon sharks, tawny nurse sharks, and the apex tiger shark — patrol the same arena, all without bait cages. The program funds local marine reserves and contributes to ongoing shark population research in the region.
The **Lau Group** and **Northern Yasawas** remain Fiji's last frontier. Reachable only by liveaboard, these remote chains offer untouched coral gardens, traditional Fijian villages, and reefs that see only a handful of divers each year. Hard coral coverage above 80 percent is common, and reef fish populations recall what the Pacific looked like decades ago.
Fijian culture is inseparable from the diving experience. Traditional sevusevu ceremonies welcome guests to village reefs, and the warmth of the locals — their famous "Bula!" greeting — is part of why so many divers return year after year. With water temperatures of 26–29°C, dry-season visibility above 30 meters, and seven distinct dive regions, Fiji offers something genuinely different on every itinerary.
Liveaboard Vessels in Fiji
- Nai'a — 4.8/5 stars, from €536/day
Top Dive Sites in Fiji
- Great White Wall — advanced (10-40m)
- Rainbow Reef — intermediate (5-30m)
- Shark Reef Marine Reserve — advanced (15-30m)
- E6 — advanced (5-35m)
- Nigali Passage — advanced (10-35m)
- Zoo — intermediate (5-25m)
- Manta Channel - Kadavu — intermediate (8-20m)
- Purple Wall — intermediate (8-35m)
- Coral Corner — beginner (5-18m)
- Cat's Meow — intermediate (8-25m)
- Instant Replay — intermediate (6-28m)
- Frigates Passage — advanced (15-35m)
- Jerry's Jelly — intermediate (8-22m)
- Wakaya Island — intermediate (5-35m)
- Blue Ribbon Eel Reef — beginner (5-15m)
- Vatu-I-Ra Passage — intermediate (8-30m)
- Samu Reef — beginner (5-20m)
- Jack's Place — intermediate (8-25m)
- Cathedral — intermediate (10-25m)
- Fiji Dream — intermediate (8-30m)