Destination: Seychelles

Seychelles boasts warm-water beach access without geographic complexity. Three islands connected by daily ferries mean you can visit multiple distinct locations in a single week without flying between countries or managing complex logistics. The water is always swimmable. It’s home to endemic species found nowhere else (giant tortoises, specific seabirds, coco de mer palms).  The appeal is straightforward: warm water, manageable size, reliable ferries, and specific wildlife.

Why Seychelles?

Seychelles works as a destination because it’s small enough to navigate as island hopping within a single trip. The archipelago contains 115 islands scattered across the Indian Ocean but only three support regular tourism: Mahé (the largest, entry point, contains the capital Victoria), Praslin (ferry accessible from Mahé), and La Digue (ferry accessible from Praslin).

Endemic wildlife exists nowhere else. Giant tortoises occupy Curieuse Island as a protected reserve. The Seychelles warbler and Seychelles fody live only on Cousin Island, a birdwatching destination. The coco de mer produces the world’s largest seed and grows naturally only in Vallée de Mai. This specificity matters because collectors and naturalists can’t access these species or ecosystems elsewhere.

Why Seychelles

Travel Guides

  • Seychelles Overview

    The population is approximately 100,000 people across all three main islands. The culture is Creole, the result of centuries of French colonization, British rule, African ancestry (via slavery and later immigration), Indian immigration, and Chinese traders. The language is Creole (French-based), but French and English function as practical languages for tourism.

    The food reflects this mixture: curries from Indian influence, French techniques applied to local seafood, African preparation methods. The baseline meal is grilled fish with rice and vegetables.

    Seychelles gained independence in 1976 after French and British colonial administration. The country is stable, English-speaking tourism infrastructure exists, and the economy depends on tourism, fishing, and limited agriculture.

    The islands formed as granite outcrops, creating distinctive rock formations rather than coral atolls. This produces the visual signature: granite boulders line beaches, creating landscape contrast between sand and stone.

  • Seychelles things to do

    Culture and Heritage

    Seychellois culture blends African, French, South Indian, and Creole influences. Local markets on Mahé and Praslin provide a clear sense of daily life without feeling staged. Small museums, plantation houses, and craft studios offer context in manageable doses, ideal for travellers looking for cultural texture rather than deep historical immersion.

    Cuisine and Wine

    Seafood is central: grilled fish, curries with clean spice, and seasonal fruit that actually tastes seasonal. Resorts take this foundation and elevate it through tasting menus, private beach dinners, and partnerships with local fishermen. Wine programs tend to be globally curated, with a focus on light, warm-weather pairings.

    Nature and Marine Life

    The Seychelles are easy to explore without specialist skills. Shallow reefs sit just offshore on many islands, making snorkeling simple and rewarding. Marine parks such as Sainte Anne and Curieuse offer structured, conservation-led experiences. On land, walking trails vary from short coastal paths to steeper routes with views across multiple islands.

  • Seychelles hidden gems

    Curieuse Island

    Curieuse Island is a 1.9-square-kilometer protected reserve accessible by boat from Praslin (10 to 15-minute crossing). The island contains an active giant tortoise sanctuary with approximately 250 tortoises roaming freely. The island has no accommodation, no restaurants, no infrastructure. Day trips are 3 to 5 hours (typically arranged through tour operators like us, including boat, guide, barbecue lunch). Visitor numbers are managed because it’s a protected reserve.

    Anse Georgette, Praslin

    Anse Georgette, Praslin requires either hiking 20 minutes through private resort property or boating access (some resorts permit nonguests, some don’t). The beach itself is small, perhaps 200 meters of sand. Water depth is moderate. The “controlled access” means you’re navigating resort permissions rather than discovering something hidden. Visibility and swimming conditions vary by season and tide, not as constants.

    Silhouette Island

    Silhouette Island is 19 square kilometers, larger than La Digue, located 20 kilometers northwest of Mahé (40-minute boat crossing). The island has limited development: a single luxury resort occupies part of it, the rest is protected. Hiking trails exist through tropical forest to peaks offering views of surrounding islands.

  • Seychelles Overview weather

    Spring (March to May)

    Warm and settled at 27–31°C. Good visibility for diving and snorkeling as currents ease. A comfortable time for island-hopping.

    Summer (June to August)

    Trade winds cool the air to 25–28°C. Seas can be livelier on some coasts, but humidity drops and hiking becomes more pleasant. Popular for families.

    Autumn (September to November)

    Calm seas return, with temperatures around 27–30°C. Ideal for marine life, photography, and private island stays.

    Winter (December to February)

    Warm and humid at 27–31°C, with brief tropical showers. Water clarity is strong between rainfall, making underwater excursions rewarding.

  • Seychelles getting there

    Most travellers arrive via Mahé International Airport (SEZ), with reliable connections from Dubai, Doha, Istanbul, Paris, and London. Flights from the Middle East are particularly smooth, offering quick transfers and strong premium cabins.

    US, UK, Canadian, Australian, and EU travellers do not require a visa for short stays, though entry formalities must be completed online before arrival. Regulations can shift, so checking current requirements is essential.

    Domestic transfers are straightforward. Helicopters are commonly used for private islands, while ferries link Mahé, Praslin, and La Digue on frequent schedules. Driving on Mahé and Praslin is simple for confident drivers, though many guests prefer private transfers for comfort and ease.

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Editorials

Banyan Tree Seychelles 7 min read

Seychelles occupies a singular position in the luxury travel imagination. The beaches here aren’t merely beautiful; they’re primordial, their granite boulders worn smooth over millions of years, their sands shifting between shades of white and pink depending on the light. The resorts that have established themselves on these shores understand their responsibility: to frame this […]

28 November 2025

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