Our Maldives holidays take in the best beaches from idyllic resorts to cruising the Atolls. All our Maldives holidays are provided by operators committed to supporting local people & the environment.






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These full and frank independent Maldives holidays reviews are from travellers who have booked directly through responsibletravel.com. They are not edited by us or any of the companies we work with. Find the real story, from real travellers below.

Sri Lanka is teeming with animals and bird life and our highlight was the trip to the national park, where we saw wild elephants bathing, saw spotted deer, as well as many rare and exotic birds.
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I feel extremely lucky to have experienced everything that I did, I have plenty of memories from this trip that will stay with me forever.
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I really can’t think how to single out one particular part of this trip to label as the most memorable or exciting because, without meaning to sound too cheesy, it was all so memorable. The people I met were incredible, all the other volunteers and the locals.
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Swimming with Manta Rays on the final day of the holiday topped the whole wonderful experience!
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The Maldive islands are renowned for their pristine beaches and spectacular diving. But global warming is a dark cloud on their horizon. The four seasons resort at kuda huraa in the Maldives understands well the 'Robinson Crusoe' factor, identified by the Maldivian Ministry for Tourism as key to the Maldives appeal. All Maldivian resorts occupy islands that are otherwise uninhabited, so for the length of your holiday, you really are a castaway on your own desert island. The Four Seasons Resort knows all about castaway comfort, about clean towels for the beach and fresh fruit cocktails on tap. There are several staff for each guest, three restaurants, and fantastic water sports and diving facilities on an island so tiny that you can walk its circumference in ten minutes. Yet amid the luxury, there are signs of concern. Every night in the library, guests gather for the 'Fish Talk', a serious 45-minute lecture given by the resort's marine biologist and aimed at raising awareness of the underwater environment, including the creation of coral and the recent bleaching phenomenon. The Maldives may have become a luxury destination, but these same resorts that pander to the international jetset also have a part to play in preserving these islands if they want the country to survive. With sea levels on the rise (a study undertaken in 2000 suggested that sea levels in the Indian Ocean had risen by as much as 25cm since the start of the 1980s) and global warming showing no signs of slowing down, it may be a matter not of whether – but when – the islands will finally be submerged by the ocean.
Find out more about the Maldives in Kamin Mohammadi's 'Calling Robinson Crusoe' Maldives article.