Nilandhoo
One reef, shared by 5 properties on Nilandhoo. Measured from satellite — the same water whichever of them you book.
Generated 2026-07-18 · Modelled from satellite · No in-water survey yet
4.7Average
The reef at Nilandhoo’s island — shared by 5 properties here. Every guesthouse on this island snorkels the same reef, so we score the island, not the doorstep.
This is Reef Conditions — what a satellite can measure. The full Maldives Index, which adds fish life and big-animal encounters confirmed in the water, has not been awarded to any property yet.
What this is, and isn’t. Measured from the Allen Coral Atlas benthic and geomorphic maps (CC BY 4.0) and NOAA Coral Reef Watch heat-stress records (public domain). Its benthic class is “Coral/Algae” combined — a satellite cannot tell live coral from algae — so this is modelled reef cover, not verified coral health, and never a substitute for being in the water. Imagery vintage 2018-2021; heat stress since then is applied as a penalty.
No wildlife research has been published for Faafu Atoll that we can cite. The monsoon applies; beyond that, nobody knows.
Against the rest of the country.
The national median across 297 measured reefs is 6.
No species records for Faafu Atoll yet.
No wildlife study we can cite has been published for Faafu Atoll. That is an honest gap, not an empty sea.
Almost certainly more lives here. We list only what a citable study records for Faafu Atoll. Turtles and reef sharks live on nearly every Maldivian reef — but no atoll-level study exists for us to point you at, so we do not claim them. Per-reef sighting odds do not exist in any source we could find; where you see a wildlife chart for one resort, someone estimated it.
Full seasonality & every source for Faafu Atoll →5 properties on this reef.
They share one reef, so they share one score. Which you pick changes your room, your dinner and your budget — it does not change the water.
Pack for this reef.
Chosen from what we measured here — not a generic list.
The Reef Code
Non-negotiable. These reefs take decades to grow and seconds to damage — the same rules apply on every reef in the index.