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Gili Islands vs Raja Ampat

Which destination is right for your next trip?

🏆 Gili Islands wins 75 OVR vs 61 · attribute matchup 52

Gili Islands
Gili Islands

Indonesia

75OVR

VS
Raja Ampat
Raja Ampat

Indonesia

61OVR

70
Safety
80
90
Affordability
35
72
Food
58
50
Culture
60
86
Nightlife
44
99
Walkability
44
99
Nature
99
77
Connectivity
58
44
Transit
44
Gili Islands

Gili Islands

Indonesia

Raja Ampat

Raja Ampat

Indonesia

Gili Islands

Safety: 70/100Pop: ~3000 across 3 islandsAsia/Makassar

Raja Ampat

Safety: 75/100Pop: 45KAsia/Jayapura

💰 Budget

budget
Gili Islands: $25-40Raja Ampat: $40–70
mid-range
Gili Islands: $55-110Raja Ampat: $100–200
luxury
Gili Islands: $250+Raja Ampat: $300–700

🛡️ Safety

Gili Islands70/100Safety Score75/100Raja Ampat

Gili Islands

The Gili Islands are generally safe for tourists, but several specific risks require genuine attention. Fast-boat accidents are the most serious concern — there have been multiple fatal incidents on the Bali-Gili route over the years, caused by overcrowding, unseaworthy vessels, and inadequate safety equipment. Only book with reputable, established operators and always confirm that life jackets are on board. Ocean hazards include strong currents between the islands (not safe for casual swimming), fire coral, stonefish, and sea urchins. Drug activity is present on Gili Trawangan — street dealers offering mushrooms and harder substances are a fixture, and some have reported police involvement in scams targeting buyers. The risks of purchasing drugs here are real and severe. Trawangan also has a petty theft problem particularly at night — secure your belongings. Off the beach, Muslim cultural norms apply: cover up in the village areas and be respectful of the call to prayer.

Raja Ampat

Raja Ampat is physically safe in terms of crime — the communities are welcoming and tourist-related crime is essentially unheard of. The main risks are maritime (rough seas, boat safety), diving-related (decompression illness, strong currents), and remoteness (medical facilities are 1.5 hr away in Sorong).

Ratings

Gili Islands4/5English Friendly2/5Raja Ampat
Gili Islands5/5Walkability1/5Raja Ampat
Gili Islands1/5Public Transit1/5Raja Ampat
Gili Islands3/5Food Scene2/5Raja Ampat
Gili Islands4/5Nightlife1/5Raja Ampat
Gili Islands1/5Cultural Sites2/5Raja Ampat
Gili Islands5/5Nature Access5/5Raja Ampat
Gili Islands3/5WiFi Reliability2/5Raja Ampat

🌤️ Weather

Gili Islands

The Gili Islands have a tropical climate with two distinct seasons: a dry season from April to October and a wet season from November to March. Temperatures are warm year-round, typically 25-32°C, and the sea stays at 27-29°C in all months — making diving and snorkeling comfortable throughout the year. The key variable is not temperature but sea conditions: during the wet season, strong winds and rough seas can cancel fast-boat services from Bali and make some dive sites inaccessible. The dry season brings reliably calm water, excellent visibility for diving (15-25 meters), and near-constant sunshine. Humidity is high in both seasons; even in the dry season, brief morning showers are not unusual. Mosquitoes are present year-round but significantly worse in the wet season — dengue fever is a real risk, particularly from November to February, and DEET-based repellent is strongly recommended.

Dry Season (Best) (April - October)25-32°C
Shoulder Season (March - April, October - November)25-31°C
Wet Season (Avoid Jan-Feb) (November - March)25-30°C

Raja Ampat

Raja Ampat has a tropical climate with two monsoon seasons. The dry season (October–April) has the calmest seas, best diving visibility, and most reliable weather. The wet season (May–September) brings stronger winds and rougher seas but also more dramatic skies and reduced tourist numbers.

Dry Season (Prime) (October–April)27–32°C
Wet Season (May–September)26–30°C

🚇 Getting Around

Gili Islands

There are no motorized vehicles of any kind on the Gili Islands — no scooters, no cars, no tuk-tuks. This is one of the defining features of the islands and makes them uniquely peaceful. Getting around each island is done on foot, by bicycle, or via cidomo (traditional pony-drawn cart). All three islands are small enough that walking is the primary mode of transport. For moving between islands, public island-hopping boats run throughout the day and are cheap and reliable in the dry season. Cidomo carts are available for heavier luggage but welfare concerns around the working ponies are real — many animals are visibly overworked, particularly on Trawangan during high season. If you use one, choose healthy-looking animals and avoid forcing multiple runs for short distances you could easily walk.

Walkability: Extremely high. The Gili Islands are essentially car-free pedestrian spaces. Every attraction, restaurant, and dive school is reachable on foot. Gili Air (roughly 1.5 hr circumference walk) and Gili Meno (1.5-2 hr) are fully explorable by foot; Trawangan (2.5+ hr full circle) benefits from a bicycle for cross-island trips.

WalkingFree
Bicycle Rental30,000-50,000 IDR (~$2-3.25) per day
Cidomo (Pony Cart)50,000-200,000 IDR (~$3.25-13) per trip depending on distance and load

Raja Ampat

All transport in Raja Ampat is by boat. The main port is Waisai on Waigeo Island. Speedboats (sewa kapal) can be chartered between sites; public ferries connect major islands on a slow schedule. Most resorts and homestays arrange transport for guests.

Walkability: Very low — essentially all movement is by boat.

Charter SpeedboatIDR 1,500,000–3,000,000/day
Public Ferry (Waisai–Sorong)IDR 120,000–250,000
KayakIDR 100,000–200,000/day or included with accommodation

The Verdict

Choose Gili Islands if...

you want three tiny car-free islands off Lombok — turtles guaranteed, diving world-class, and Gili Trawangan party on demand

Choose Raja Ampat if...

you want the world's richest marine biodiversity — 75% of all coral species, manta ray cleaning stations, whale sharks, and karst island magic. Pure expedition diving; not a beach-bars destination