
A steep coral wall off Hatta Island with clear water, schooling fish, and sharks.
Hatta Island, on the outer edge of the Banda group, has one of the best walls in the archipelago. The reef drops away steeply just off the shore into deep blue, with dense hard and soft coral, clouds of schooling fish, and regular sightings of reef sharks, turtles, and the occasional larger pelagic. Visibility out here is often excellent, and snorkelers can enjoy the top of the wall as much as divers explore its depths.
The island is named after Mohammad Hatta, one of Indonesia's founding leaders, who was exiled to Banda by the Dutch.
This suits divers and confident snorkelers who want healthy, dramatic reef and accept that reaching it means an open-water boat ride from Banda Neira.
Getting there
Hatta is reached by boat from Banda Neira, usually a dive or snorkel day trip arranged through an operator or guesthouse, taking around an hour or so each way over open water. There is no scheduled service, so you go with a chartered or shared boat. Conditions on the crossing depend heavily on the season.
Best time
The calmer-sea months (roughly March to April and September to November) bring the best visibility and the safest open-water crossings, and are the prime diving windows. Rough-weather periods can make the trip uncomfortable or cancel it.
Good to know
There can be current along the wall, so dive with a local guide who knows the site, and snorkelers should mind their drift and the boat. Bring your own mask if you can, plus water and sun cover for the boat. Carry cash, as everything here is paid locally.
Both. Divers get the full steep wall and its deeper life, while snorkelers can drift over the shallow top of the reef, which is rich in coral and fish. Watch for current either way.
Healthy hard and soft coral, big schools of fish, reef sharks, turtles, and sometimes larger pelagics, all in typically clear water. It is considered one of the standout reefs around the Banda Islands.
Through a local dive operator or your guesthouse, as a day trip by boat of roughly an hour each way over open sea. There is no scheduled ferry, and trips run subject to weather and sea conditions.
Add it to a route across Indonesia and we will work out the travel time and cost between every stop.
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