Papua New Guinea Liveaboard Diving

The Last Frontier of Diving

Papua New Guinea

About Papua New Guinea

Papua New Guinea delivers pristine, unexplored reefs with the highest marine biodiversity on the planet, dramatic WWII wrecks, and authentic cultural encounters.

**Papua New Guinea** sits at the heart of the Coral Triangle and consistently records some of the highest marine biodiversity numbers ever measured — the **Milne Bay** region alone hosts over 500 reef-building coral species and more than 1,000 fish species. This is one of the planet's last great underwater frontiers, where vast areas of reef have never been formally surveyed and traditional clan ownership of reefs has preserved entire ecosystems for centuries. **Kimbe Bay** in West New Britain is one of the most studied reef systems in the world and the headquarters of multiple international marine research programs. Sites like **Bradford Shoals**, **Inglis Shoal**, and **Susan's Reef** rise from 300-meter-deep water as isolated pinnacles. Schooling barracuda, silvertip sharks, and the occasional hammerhead are common, while the shallows host healthy populations of orangutan crabs, pygmy seahorses, and ghost pipefish. **Milne Bay** in the country's southeast is the birthplace of muck diving as a recognized discipline. The black volcanic sand at sites like **Dinah's Beach** and **Observation Point** hosts an extraordinary density of cryptic species — mimic octopus, hairy frogfish, ornate ghost pipefish, and dozens of nudibranch species. The same region offers world-class reef diving at sites like **Tania's Reef** and the dramatic walls of Wahoo Point. **Tufi**, on the Cape Nelson peninsula, sits among unique drowned rias — flooded volcanic valleys that create deep bays with healthy fringing reefs and unspoiled coral gardens. The region offers some of the best macro photography in the Pacific alongside reef walls hosting reef sharks, manta rays, and dense fish life. The local Tufi resort runs in close cooperation with neighboring villages. **Madang** and the **Bismarck Sea** offer healthy fringing reefs, WWII wrecks, and a remarkable concentration of muck diving sites within sheltered bays. The **B-25 Mitchell bomber**, the **S'Jacob freighter**, and several Japanese Zero fighters lie in diveable depths, slowly being absorbed by the reef. The **Witu Islands** and **Father's Reef** in northern Papua are accessible only by liveaboard and represent some of the most remote diving on Earth. Active underwater volcanic vents, fields of stinging hydroids the size of trees, and pristine fish populations make these expeditions unlike anything else in the region. Water temperatures of 27–30°C year-round, visibility above 30 meters in the dry season, and the deep cultural richness of PNG's 850 indigenous languages make this a truly singular destination.

Liveaboard Vessels in Papua New Guinea

Top Dive Sites in Papua New Guinea