The Maldives has always set the standard for overwater luxury. Its best resorts are now pushing that standard further than ever. The question is no longer whether to go, but where.

The seaplane banks left over the Indian Ocean and below you, for a few suspended seconds, there is nothing but water in every shade between turquoise and ink. Then a coral island appears, a strip of white sand fringed by a lagoon so still it looks solid, and you understand immediately why people rearrange their lives to get here. The Maldives is one of those destinations that lives up to its reputation, which is rarer than it should be. The harder question, the one that occupies most honeymooners for longer than they expect, is which resort to choose.

There are hundreds of properties across the archipelago’s 26 atolls, and the spread in quality, character, and experience between them is considerable. The eight resorts below represent the strongest cases for a honeymoon in 2026, each with a particular strength that sets it apart from the others.

About Do Not Disturb

Do Not Disturb is a luxury travel company specializing in carefully designed journeys and considered experiences. Each itinerary we build for our clients is informed by real destination knowledge, offering insight into places, cultures, and moments that shape how a trip comes together.

If this destination has sparked ideas, the itinerary can be developed into a private journey tailored to your interests and travel style, with hand-picked stays, thoughtful routing, and experiences curated around what matters most to you.

Soneva Jani - Noonu Atoll

Soneva Jani is the resort that redefined what overwater living could look like, and its reputation has only solidified since its opening. The villas are generously proportioned, built from natural materials, and designed with a retractable roof panel above the bed that opens to reveal the full Maldivian night sky. The private water slide from the villa deck into the lagoon has become one of the most photographed features in Maldives travel, and it remains, in person, genuinely delightful rather than gimmicky. The resort operates on a “no news, no shoes” philosophy that sounds like a marketing line until you’ve been there for 24 hours and realized you haven’t thought about your phone once.

Soneva Jani - Noonu Atoll

The Ritz-Carlton - Fari Islands, North Malé Atoll

The Ritz-Carlton’s Fari Islands property takes a different approach to the traditional isolated-island model. The villas, designed as striking white spheres inspired by the movement of the ocean, are among the most architecturally considered in the country. What genuinely distinguishes this property, however, is its position within the broader Fari Islands development, which means guests can take a short boat ride to a nearby marina with high-end dining and shopping. In a destination where most resorts are deliberately self-contained, this degree of choice and movement feels like a meaningful luxury.

The Ritz-Carlton - Fari Islands, North Malé Atoll

Anantara Kihavah - Baa Atoll

Anantara Kihavah sits within a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve, and the snorkelling accessible directly from the resort is the best argument for that designation: manta rays, whale sharks, and reef fish in concentrations that even experienced divers find exceptional. The property also houses SEA, an underwater restaurant that has accumulated enough accolades to fill its own press file, where dinner is served beneath the lagoon surface with the fish life moving past the glass throughout the meal. A resident astronomer operates the overwater observatory on clear nights, which in the Baa Atoll, far from any light pollution, means most nights.

Anantara Kihavah - Baa Atoll

Waldorf Astoria Ithaafushi - South Malé Atoll

Ithaafushi is one of the largest resort footprints in the Maldives, and it uses that scale well. Eleven dining venues cover a range serious enough to sustain a longer stay without repetition, including Terra, where meals are served in bamboo pods suspended above the tree canopy. For couples who want to take the concept of a private honeymoon to its extreme conclusion, the resort also manages Ithaafushi Private Island: a standalone island that can be booked exclusively by a single group, with its own pool, staff, and beach. It is, by any reasonable measure, one of the most private honeymoon options on earth.

Waldorf Astoria Ithaafushi - South Malé Atoll

Joali Maldives - Raa Atoll

Joali approaches resort design as a curatorial exercise, and the results are apparent throughout the property, where original art installations are woven into the architecture and landscape rather than placed as afterthoughts in a lobby. The effect is of staying somewhere that has been genuinely thought about, where the aesthetic decisions were made by people with specific intentions rather than a committee working from a template. It is widely considered the most glamorous property in the country, a claim that holds up on arrival.

Joali Maldives - Raa Atoll

Gili Lankanfushi - North Malé Atoll

Gili Lankanfushi is 100% overwater, with every villa built above the lagoon on stilts, and it has appeared consistently at the top of best-resort lists for long enough that the distinction has become self-reinforcing. The Private Reserve, the resort’s flagship villa, is the largest overwater structure of its kind in the world, positioned alone in the middle of the lagoon with no connecting jetty and accessible only by boat. Reaching it requires a short ride across open water, which sets the tone for a stay oriented entirely around the idea of genuine remove.

Gili Lankanfushi - North Malé Atoll

One&Only Reethi Rah - North Malé Atoll

One&Only Reethi Rah is one of the largest islands in the Maldives, with 12 private beaches and villas positioned far enough apart that other guests are rarely visible. The service here operates at the level that the One&Only name has built its reputation on: anticipatory, unobtrusive, and calibrated to each guest rather than delivered from a standard script. It has long been a destination of choice for travellers who require both exceptional quality and the confidence that their presence will go entirely unnoticed.

One&Only Reethi Rah - North Malé Atoll

Kudadoo Private Island - Lhaviyani Atoll

Kudadoo operates on a model that remains genuinely unusual in the Maldives: a small island of just 15 villas where every spa treatment, private excursion, and bottle of champagne is included in the stay, eliminating the incremental decisions that accumulate into background noise on most resort holidays. The island is fully solar-powered, which matters both environmentally and experientially since the absence of generators contributes to a particular quality of quiet. For a honeymoon, the logic of arriving, putting the wallet away entirely, and not retrieving it until departure is a compelling one.

Kudadoo Private Island - Lhaviyani Atoll

Choosing Between Them

Eight exceptional resorts in a destination already defined by exceptional resorts means that the differences between them are specific and contextual rather than matters of absolute quality. Soneva Jani and Gili Lankanfushi represent the most complete expression of the overwater barefoot philosophy. Joali and the Ritz-Carlton lean into design and aesthetics. Anantara Kihavah is the choice for marine life and dining. Kudadoo and Ithaafushi Private Island are for couples who want to remove every external consideration from the equation entirely.

This is precisely where Do Not Disturb earns its reputation. Choosing a Maldives resort from a shortlist of the world’s best requires the kind of nuanced, current knowledge that goes well beyond what any website can offer: which properties have genuinely improved with recent renovations, which house reefs are performing particularly well this season, which villa categories deliver on their promise and which ones look better in photography than they feel in person. Do Not Disturb has those relationships and that knowledge, and because no two itineraries they build are alike, the trip they design for you will reflect your specific priorities rather than a generic best-of list. For a honeymoon, that level of care in the planning stage is not an indulgence. It’s the whole point.

When to Go

The Maldives is at its best between November and April, when the northeast monsoon brings dry, clear weather and optimal visibility for diving and snorkelling. May through October sees more rainfall and occasional rougher seas, though many resorts in more sheltered atolls remain exceptional year-round. The most popular honeymoon window, December through February, books out well in advance at the top properties, so early planning is genuinely necessary rather than merely advisable.

Whether you know exactly which resort you want or you’re still weighing the options, Do Not Disturb will design a Maldives honeymoon itinerary built around who you are as a couple rather than who the average guest happens to be. Get in touch with their specialists to start putting it together.

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