The Yasawa Islands: Island Hopping Guide and Best Lodges (2026)

Yasawa Islands Fiji aerial view

Last updated: 3 June 2026 · Written by Lucy Cameron

The Yasawa Islands are Fiji’s most rewarding island-hopping region — a 90-kilometre chain of long volcanic islands north of the Mamanucas, served by a single ferry that opens up dozens of beach lodges across a wide budget range. After running the Yasawa Flyer with a Bula Pass three separate times, we have a clear picture of which lodges and which sections of the chain are worth the trip.

Key Takeaways

  • The Yasawa Flyer + a Bula Pass (5/7/9/12/21 day tiers) is the standard way to do this chain.
  • The manta-ray channel between Naviti and Drawaqa is the chain’s headline activity — peak May to October.
  • Standout lodges: Mantaray Island Resort, Barefoot Manta, Naqalia Lodge, Yasawa Island Resort & Spa (luxury bookend).
  • The chain runs south to north: Kuata → Wayasewa → Waya → Naviti → Drawaqa → Tavewa → Nanuya Lailai → Yasawa Island.
  • Resort scale is small — most lodges have 10–25 rooms, so book ahead in peak season.
Aerial view of the Yasawa Islands chain Fiji

How the Yasawa Chain Works

The Yasawa Flyer ferry

The Yasawa Flyer is a high-speed catamaran operated by Awesome Adventures Fiji that runs the entire Yasawa chain once daily from Port Denarau. The boat departs Denarau at 8:30 am, stops at every accommodating island in sequence, reaches the northern terminus around 1 pm, and returns south arriving back at Denarau by 6 pm.

The Flyer drops passengers at each island via a local resort tender — the boat doesn’t dock; a small longboat comes out to collect arrivals and drop departures. Allow 15 minutes per stop.

One-way fares vary by distance: roughly FJD 145 to Kuata (southern Yasawas), FJD 200 to Naviti (mid-chain), FJD 235 to Nanuya Lailai (north). Round trip to the far north is FJD 460+ — at which point the Bula Pass becomes the obvious play.

The Bula Pass — and why you want one

The Bula Pass is Awesome’s open-ticket product that lets you hop on and off the Flyer at any island during the pass validity. Tiers and approximate FJD pricing:

Pass lengthPriceBest for
5-dayFJD 495Quick 2-island sample
7-dayFJD 595The standard Yasawa trip
9-dayFJD 6953-island deep dive
12-dayFJD 795Slow travel
21-dayFJD 995Long-stay budget

The Bula Combo Pass bundles the ferry pass with accommodation and meals at Awesome’s resort partners — a single package price across the trip. Convenient for budget planning but limits your lodge choice.

Book passes directly via the Awesome Adventures site or at the Port Denarau ticket office on arrival day.

Geography from south to north

The chain runs roughly south-to-north along a single ridge of volcanic islands. From Denarau:

For a broader picture of the Yasawas in the context of Fiji’s other island groups, see our Fiji islands guide.

Where to Stay in the Yasawas

The mid-chain mantra-channel lodges

Mantaray Island Resort sits on Nanuya Balavu (in the channel between Naviti and Drawaqa). It’s our most-visited Yasawa lodge — dorms from FJD 90, private bures from FJD 480, full board included. The reef is among the best in the chain and the lodge’s manta-snorkel programme is the most professional on the channel.

Barefoot Manta Island Resort sits on Drawaqa across the channel — dorms FJD 95, private rooms FJD 440. Conservation-focused (NGO partnerships for manta-ID research), slightly more low-key than Mantaray. Both lodges share the same channel and the same manta encounters.

If you only have time for two Yasawa nights, this is where to spend them.

Southern Yasawas (cheaper, shorter transfers)

Naqalia Lodge (Wayasewa) is a locally-run lodge — 14 bures, FJD 130–250 full board. The beach is small but well-set; the highlight is the host family and the village walks they organise. Strong value at the lower end of mid-range.

Octopus Resort (Wayalailai, Waya Island) is the southern luxury option — 30 bures, FJD 420–950, the best beach in the southern chain. Includes the Wayasewa hike to Mount Vatuvonu — a 90-minute climb with panoramic views.

Kuata Beach Resort is the entry-tier option — dorms FJD 80, twins FJD 220, shortest Flyer transfer in the chain. Decent for a 1–2 night sample if you have a 5-day pass.

Northern Yasawas (Blue Lagoon area)

Blue Lagoon Beach Resort (Nacula, near Nanuya Lailai) is the mid-range pick for the northern chain — 26 bures, FJD 280–620. Walking access to the Blue Lagoon itself. Quieter than the mid-chain manta lodges.

Nanuya Island Resort sits on Nanuya Lailai with a much smaller footprint — 12 bures, FJD 420–880, family-owned and locally run. The Sawa-i-Lau cave excursions launch from here.

Yasawa Island Resort & Spa is the chain’s luxury bookend — 18 villas, FJD 1,800–4,200 per night, full board included, helicopter or charter-flight access typical. The most isolated luxury resort in Fiji.

Wooden jetty in a Yasawa lagoon Fiji backpacker beachfront

What to Do in the Yasawas

Manta-ray snorkelling

The manta channel between Naviti and Drawaqa is the chain’s signature activity. Reef mantas pass through this channel daily from May through October as part of their seasonal feeding cycle. Mantaray Island Resort and Barefoot Manta run guided snorkel drops within minutes of a sighting — typically two trips per day, included in most lodge rates.

The encounter typically lasts 20–40 minutes. Wing spans of 2.5–4 metres are normal; occasional larger animals (5 m+) are tagged in the lodge research databases. Visibility is best on slack tide.

For a wider activity overview, see our Fiji activities guide.

Blue Lagoon and Sawa-i-Lau caves

The Blue Lagoon between Nanuya Lailai and Nanuya Sewa is the wide turquoise inlet famous from the 1980 Brooke Shields film. The water is calm, shallow, and ringed by small uninhabited motus. Most northern lodges run a half-day boat trip to the lagoon paired with a Sawa-i-Lau cave excursion.

The Sawa-i-Lau caves are limestone sea caves on the northern Yasawa terminus — an outer chamber accessible by short swim and an inner chamber reached through a 1-metre underwater swim-through. Local guides accompany every visit. The inner chamber has a magical acoustic effect; the outer is a more straightforward swim.

Combined Blue Lagoon + Sawa-i-Lau day trip runs FJD 80–140 per person depending on the lodge.

Hiking, kayaking, village life

The Mount Vatuvonu climb on Wayasewa is the chain’s standout hike — a 90-minute walk to a 350-metre summit with views over the southern Yasawas. Octopus Resort runs guided trips at FJD 60 per person.

Most Yasawa lodges include kayaks and snorkel gear in the daily rate. SUP boards are common at the larger lodges. Several lodges run guided sunset kayak tours — FJD 30–50.

Village visits to Soso (Naviti), Naviti village, and the smaller settlements on Waya are the most rewarding cultural experiences in the chain. Bring yaqona root (FJD 30) as a sevusevu.

Planning Your Yasawa Trip

How many nights and where

Our recommended Yasawa itineraries:

For a wider 7-day all-Fiji itinerary that includes the Yasawas plus Mamanucas and Coral Coast, see our 7-day Fiji itinerary.

Best time of year

The Yasawa season runs broadly with the dry season — May through October. May, September and October are our recommended windows: peak weather, full manta season, lower prices than July/August.

The chain functions through the wet season but has more weather disruption — afternoon thunderstorms can affect Flyer schedules, and outer-lodge transfers may be delayed. Some smaller lodges close for 3–6 weeks in February for staff leave.

For full month-by-month detail, see our best time to visit Fiji guide.

Practical tips

A few small things that make a Yasawa trip easier:

Mosquitoes are minimal on the small islands but present at the larger lodges (Octopus, Nanuya). Bring repellent for evening dinner sittings.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you get to the Yasawa Islands?

The Yasawa Flyer ferry departs Port Denarau daily at 8:30 am and stops at every accommodating Yasawa island. Pair it with a Bula Pass (5/7/9/12/21 day tiers) to hop on and off freely. There is also a small airstrip on Mana that serves Yasawa Island Resort.

What is the Bula Pass?

The Bula Pass is Awesome Adventures Fiji’s open-ticket product for the Yasawa Flyer — letting travellers hop on and off at any island during the pass validity. A 7-day pass costs FJD 595 and is the standard pick for a one-week Yasawa trip.

Are the Yasawa Islands good for backpackers?

Yes — the Yasawas are Fiji’s main backpacker region. Lodges like Mantaray, Barefoot Manta, Octopus and Kuata Beach offer dorm beds from FJD 80–95 including full board, with the social atmosphere and activity programmes you expect in a hostel network.

When can I see manta rays in the Yasawas?

The manta-ray season in the channel between Naviti and Drawaqa runs reliably from May through October. Peak sighting density is generally July and August; May and September offer the best sightings-to-crowd ratio.

Mamanucas vs Yasawas — which should I visit?

Mamanucas for shorter transfers, overwater bures, and a wider resort tier range. Yasawas for island-hopping, the manta-ray channel, more budget options, and a more remote feel. For trips longer than 10 nights, combining both is ideal. Our Fiji islands guide breaks down the differences.

How long is the Yasawa Flyer journey?

The full one-way journey from Port Denarau to Yasawa Island (the northern terminus) takes about 4.5 hours. Mid-chain stops (Naviti, Drawaqa) sit at 2.5–2.75 hours. The Flyer returns to Denarau in the evening.


About the author: Lucy Cameron is the founder of Hideaway Fiji. Three Yasawa Flyer + Bula Pass trips; lodges stayed at: Mantaray, Barefoot Manta, Octopus, Naqalia, Blue Lagoon Beach, Kuata.

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