Baa Atoll vs Ari Atoll: Where to See Mantas and Whale Sharks in the Maldives

Two of the Maldives' most famous atolls sit on opposite sides of the country and run opposite seasons. Here is which one gives you the encounter you want.

Two atolls dominate every conversation about Maldives wildlife diving. Baa Atoll in the west, Ari Atoll in the centre. Both are famous. Both are beautiful. Both attract different animals, in different months, for slightly different reasons.

If you are trying to work out which one your trip should be built around, this is what matters.

Where they sit, and why that matters

The Maldives is roughly a north-south strip of 26 atolls, each a ring of small coral islands around a lagoon.

Baa Atoll sits on the western edge of the country, north of Malé.

Ari Atoll, and specifically South Ari, sits toward the central-western edge, south-west of Malé.

The Maldives has two monsoons that flip the wind and current direction every six months or so.

  • Southwest monsoon (May to November): plankton piles up on the eastern side of the atolls.
  • Northeast monsoon (December to April): plankton piles up on the western side.

Since mantas and whale sharks are filter feeders, they go where the plankton is. That is what drives most of the difference below.

Baa Atoll, in one paragraph

Baa Atoll is famous for Hanifaru Bay, a small inlet on its eastern edge that turns into the single most concentrated manta ray gathering on the planet during the southwest monsoon. You cannot dive Hanifaru itself, only snorkel it, and access is regulated through licensed operators on a 45-minute rotation. Outside Hanifaru, Baa has excellent cleaning stations, healthy reefs, and gentler currents than Ari. It feels quieter, less commercial, and its resorts are spaced out.

Ari Atoll, in one paragraph

Ari Atoll, particularly South Ari, is famous for whale sharks. Its outer edge has an ocean wall that whale sharks patrol year-round, with success rates on dedicated whale shark trips running very high in the right conditions. It has more established dive infrastructure than Baa, more channel drift diving (kandu diving), reliable manta cleaning stations that work year-round, and busier daily boat traffic. The action tends to be pelagic and moving.

Manta rays: side by side

Baa Atoll produces the single most spectacular manta event in the country. Hanifaru Bay during the southwest monsoon full moon can hold 50 to over 100 mantas in a bathtub-sized space. This is the picture you have seen. It is the reason most people book Baa.

  • Peak months: August, September, October.
  • Best around full moon and new moon tides.
  • Access is regulated. You need to be on a licensed boat.

Ari Atoll does not produce Hanifaru's aggregation, but it does produce reliable, year-round manta encounters at fixed cleaning stations. Numbers are typically single digits at a time. In the northeast season the encounters are often clearer and calmer, on cleaning stations you can visit repeatedly through the week.

  • Peak months: August to November for the small aggregations, with reliable sightings year-round.
  • Access is unregulated. You can dive most of the sites through any dive centre.

If your whole trip is about mantas at scale, book Baa in the southwest monsoon. If you want a mix of mantas and other pelagic action, Ari.

Whale sharks: side by side

Baa Atoll does produce whale shark sightings, especially inside Hanifaru during the peak feeding aggregation. But whale sharks in Baa are seasonal and, honestly, a bonus rather than a guarantee.

Ari Atoll, specifically the outer wall of South Ari, is where the Maldives' whale shark reputation was built. Whale sharks live along that wall year-round. Dedicated whale shark trips run every morning from local operators, with aerial spotting from the boat and drop-ins as soon as an animal is seen.

  • South Ari whale sharks are easiest to spot in November to April, when water is clearer and calmer.
  • They are still there in the southwest monsoon, but harder to see through greener water.
  • You do not need to dive to see them. Almost all whale shark encounters in South Ari are surface swims.

If your priority is whale sharks specifically, book Ari.

Reef and channel diving beyond the pelagic stars

Baa's non-Hanifaru diving is genuinely lovely. Cleaning stations at Nelivaru, drift dives at Dhonfanu Thila, healthy hard corals almost everywhere. It suits divers who like their week calm, with a couple of highlight days at Hanifaru.

Ari's non-whale-shark diving is more dramatic. The kandus, or channels between atolls, produce strong drift dives with reef sharks, eagle rays, and schooling fish. This suits divers who like current, movement, and a bit of edge.

Which one for which trip

  • You want the Hanifaru manta aggregation, once in your life: Baa Atoll, August to October, around a full or new moon.
  • You want the highest odds of a whale shark encounter: South Ari Atoll, November to March.
  • You want both mantas and whale sharks in the same week: liveaboard that visits both. Most Central Atolls liveaboard routes cover Baa and Ari across seven days.
  • You want the calmer, quieter Maldives: Baa Atoll. Fewer boats, quieter resorts.
  • You want more dive infrastructure and busier social scene: Ari Atoll.
  • You want strong channel drift diving: Ari, especially South Ari and North Ari.

Getting there, briefly

Both are seaplane transfers from Malé.

  • Baa Atoll: seaplane, roughly 30 to 45 minutes. Some resorts operate speedboat transfers as an alternative but they take longer.
  • Ari Atoll: seaplane, roughly 25 to 35 minutes for North Ari, 40 to 55 for South Ari.

Seaplanes stop flying at sunset. Book flights that land before mid-afternoon in Malé so you do not sleep a night in the city.

What we do

The Maui Maldives expedition is built around Baa Atoll during the southwest monsoon peak, from a small liveaboard. We time the week around a full or new moon so that Hanifaru is producing on our access day, and we visit manta cleaning stations either side of it. On other trip formats we run Ari-focused itineraries in the northeast season. If you would rather leave the atoll decision to us and just book the wildlife encounter, the expedition page is here and Kenny is on WhatsApp.

The one-sentence answer

Baa Atoll gives you the biggest manta ray moment in the country during the southwest monsoon. Ari Atoll gives you the most reliable whale shark encounter year-round. Pick your priority, and book the season that matches.

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