Dining in the Middle of the Ocean
Eating in the Maldives is unlike dining anywhere else in the world. Your resort is a tiny island in the middle of the Indian Ocean, which means virtually every ingredient — from the butter on your breakfast toast to the Wagyu steak at dinner — has been shipped in by boat or flown in by air. That logistical feat is reflected in the prices, but also in the extraordinary dedication resorts put into their culinary programs.
The good news is that Maldivian dining has evolved dramatically over the past decade. What was once limited to standard hotel buffets now spans everything from underwater restaurants and treehouse dining to tasting menus by Michelin-starred chefs. Whether you are a passionate foodie or simply want to know what meal plan makes sense for your budget, this guide covers it all.
Understanding Meal Plans
Choosing the right meal plan is one of the most impactful financial decisions of your trip. Here is what each option means, what it costs, and who it suits best.
Bed & Breakfast (BB)
- What is included: Breakfast only (usually a buffet)
- Typical cost: Included in room rate or $20-$40 per person per day
- Best for: Travelers who want maximum flexibility and are comfortable with a la carte pricing
With BB, you pay for lunch, dinner, and all drinks separately. At most resorts, a la carte main courses cost $25-$60 each, and a glass of wine costs $15-$35. A couple can easily spend $200-$400 per day on food and drinks beyond breakfast.
Half Board (HB)
- What is included: Breakfast + dinner (buffet or set menu)
- Typical cost: $60-$150 per person per day above room rate
- Best for: Most travelers — covers the two most important meals
Half board is the most popular choice in the Maldives. You get a substantial breakfast and a full dinner, leaving you free to have a light lunch (or skip it entirely — you will be busy snorkeling). This hits the sweet spot between value and flexibility.
Full Board (FB)
- What is included: Breakfast + lunch + dinner
- Typical cost: $80-$200 per person per day above room rate
- Best for: Families, big eaters, those who want predictable costs
Full board adds lunch to the equation. The upgrade from HB to FB is usually modest ($20-$50 per person per day), making it good value if you eat three full meals. Drinks are still extra, which is the key distinction from all-inclusive.
All-Inclusive (AI)
- What is included: All meals + selected beverages (house wine, beer, spirits, soft drinks, water)
- Typical cost: $150-$400 per person per day above room rate
- Best for: Travelers who want zero surprise costs, those who enjoy cocktails and wine with meals
All-inclusive eliminates the worry of a mounting bar tab. However, "all-inclusive" varies enormously between resorts. Read the fine print carefully:
- Standard AI: House wines, selected cocktails, domestic beer. Premium brands cost extra
- Premium AI: Top-shelf spirits, champagne by the glass, extensive wine list included
- Ultra AI (Kudadoo-style): Everything included — spa, excursions, premium drinks, fine dining. No bills, no signatures, no limits
Meal Plan Comparison
| BB | HB | FB | AI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breakfast | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Lunch | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| Dinner | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Drinks | No | No | No | Selected |
| Daily add-on cost (per person) | $20-$40 | $60-$150 | $80-$200 | $150-$400 |
| Estimated daily food spend (per person) | $200-$400+ | $50-$100+ | $20-$50+ | $0 |
| Best for | Foodies, short stays | Most travelers | Families | Drink lovers, budget clarity |
Traditional Maldivian Cuisine
While resort dining tends to be international, traditional Maldivian cuisine is a fascinating blend of South Asian, Sri Lankan, and Arab influences shaped by centuries of island life. Most resorts offer at least one Maldivian-themed dinner or buffet night per week, and we strongly encourage you to try it.
Essential Dishes
Mas Huni
The national breakfast dish. Shredded smoked tuna (known as valhomas) mixed with fresh coconut, onion, chili, and lime, served with roshi (flatbread). Simple, savory, and deeply satisfying. If you try one Maldivian dish, make it this one.
Garudhiya
A clear fish broth made from skipjack tuna, served with steamed rice, lime, chili, and onion. It sounds plain but the depth of flavor is remarkable — clean, umami-rich, and comforting. This is the dish Maldivians eat daily.
Hedhikaa (Short Eats)
A category of savory snacks traditionally eaten with afternoon tea:
- Bajiya — Deep-fried pastries filled with tuna, coconut, and chili (similar to samosas)
- Gulha — Small dumplings filled with smoked tuna and coconut
- Mas Roshi — Flatbread stuffed with spiced tuna
- Keemia — Deep-fried fish rolls, like a Maldivian spring roll
- Bis Keemiyaa — Egg-filled pastry, the local answer to a savory crepe
Rihaakuru
A thick, intensely flavored fish paste made by boiling tuna for hours until it reduces to a dense, dark concentrate. Spread on bread or used as a condiment, it is packed with umami. An acquired taste, but one that islanders adore.
Huni Roshi
Flatbread spread with a mixture of coconut and sugar — the simplest Maldivian sweet. Often served at breakfast or as a snack.
Where to Try Local Food
- Resort Maldivian nights — Most resorts offer a weekly Maldivian-themed buffet or dinner featuring local dishes alongside international options
- Local island visits — Excursions to inhabited islands often include a meal at a local cafe or a home-cooked experience
- Malé — If you overnight in the capital, seek out local cafes (hotaa) on Chaandhanee Magu street. Dishes cost $3-$5
- Cooking classes — Several resorts offer Maldivian cooking classes where you learn to make mas huni, hedhikaa, and curries
Celebrity Chef Restaurants
The Maldives has quietly become one of the world's most interesting destinations for fine dining, with several resorts hosting restaurants conceived by internationally acclaimed chefs.
Notable Restaurant Experiences
Cheval Blanc Randheli — The LVMH resort's dining program rivals any luxury hotel in the world. Japanese, Mediterranean, and Middle Eastern restaurants, each with an exceptional wine program. Private dining on the sandbank is the ultimate splurge.
Soneva Fushi — Multiple unique dining concepts including Fresh in the Garden (organic, garden-to-table), Out of the Blue (overwater seafood), and a chocolate and ice cream room. The astronomy dinner — a meal served on the observatory platform — is unforgettable.
Anantara Kihavah — Home to Sea, one of the Maldives' most celebrated underwater restaurants. Dine surrounded by marine life six meters below the surface. The wine cellar is also underwater and houses a remarkable collection.
Hurawalhi — 5.8 Undersea Restaurant is the world's largest all-glass underwater restaurant, seating 24 guests. A multi-course tasting menu served while sharks and rays glide past the windows. Booking essential — capacity is extremely limited.
Ithaa at Conrad Rangali — The original underwater restaurant in the Maldives, opened in 2005. Seating only 14 guests, it remains one of the most intimate dining experiences in the country.
Specialty Dining Experiences
Beyond the traditional restaurant, Maldives resorts have elevated dining into an event. These experiences typically cost $200-$500+ per couple and need to be booked well in advance.
Underwater Dining
Eating six meters below sea level while fish drift past the glass walls is a bucket-list experience unique to the Maldives. Several resorts now offer underwater restaurants, each with a different atmosphere:
- Sea (Anantara Kihavah) — Fine dining with an extensive cellar
- 5.8 Undersea (Hurawalhi) — Tasting menu in the world's largest underwater venue
- Ithaa (Conrad Rangali) — The intimate original, with just 7 tables
- Subsix (Niyama) — Underwater club and dining venue, also hosts music events
Sandbank Dining
A private table set on a pristine sandbank in the middle of the lagoon, accessible only by boat. Torches, a personal chef, and the sound of waves. This is the quintessential Maldivian romantic dinner, and it lives up to every fantasy.
Available at most luxury resorts. Typical cost: $300-$800 per couple for a multi-course dinner with wine.
Treehouse and Treetop Dining
Several resorts have built dining platforms in the treetops of mature banyan or palm trees:
- Soneva Fushi Treepod — A bamboo pod hoisted into the canopy, with food delivered by zip line
- Niyama Nest — A woven treehouse dining experience overlooking the ocean
Destination Dining
Some resorts offer "destination dining" — a meal prepared at a unique location on the island that changes with the experience:
- Jungle clearings with bonfire cooking
- Beach barbecues under the stars
- Floating breakfast in your villa pool (now an institution at many resorts)
- Sunrise fishing trips followed by a chef preparing your catch
Dietary Requirements and Considerations
Vegetarian and Vegan
Maldivian resort dining has become increasingly accommodating of plant-based diets. Most resorts can cater to vegetarian and vegan guests, but the extent varies:
- Luxury and ultra-luxury resorts: Typically have full vegan menus or can prepare dedicated plant-based meals at every restaurant. Soneva Fushi and Joali Being are particularly strong
- Mid-range resorts: Vegetarian options are standard at buffets. Vegan options exist but may require advance notice
- Best practice: Inform the resort of your dietary requirements before arrival. This allows the chef to prepare specifically for you rather than improvising
Halal
The Maldives is an Islamic nation, and all meat served in the Maldives is halal. This applies to resort dining as well. Pork is not served at local restaurants, though some resorts with international clientele may include pork items (clearly labeled) in their buffets. You can be confident that all chicken, beef, and lamb at any Maldivian resort is halal-certified.
Gluten-Free
Gluten-free options are available at most resorts, particularly at the buffet. Dedicated gluten-free menus are standard at luxury resorts. Inform the restaurant of your requirement when ordering, as cross-contamination is possible at buffet stations.
Allergies
Resort kitchens take food allergies seriously — this is not a destination where communication barriers are likely to cause problems. Inform the resort before arrival and again at each restaurant visit. Nut allergies, shellfish allergies, and lactose intolerance are all routinely accommodated.
Alcohol in the Maldives
The Rules
The Maldives is an Islamic country, and alcohol is prohibited on local (inhabited) islands, in the capital Malé, and at the airport. However, resort islands operate under a tourism license that permits the sale and consumption of alcohol.
In practice, this means:
- Alcohol is freely available at every resort — wine, beer, spirits, cocktails
- You cannot bring alcohol into the country (customs will confiscate it)
- If you visit a local island on an excursion, alcohol is not available
- Do not attempt to bring alcohol from your resort to a local island
What to Expect at the Bar
Resort bars in the Maldives are often spectacular — overwater sunset bars, swim-up pool bars, and candle-lit beach bars are standard. Drinks are expensive, reflecting the import costs:
- Beer (local or imported): $8-$15
- Glass of wine: $15-$35
- Cocktails: $18-$30
- Premium spirits: $15-$25 per measure
- Champagne (by the glass): $25-$50
This is where the all-inclusive calculation becomes important. Two cocktails before dinner, a bottle of wine with the meal, and a nightcap can add $100-$200 to your daily tab.
Tipping Etiquette
Tipping is not mandatory in the Maldives — a 10% service charge is automatically added to all bills at resorts, and a 16% GST (Goods and Services Tax) is applied on top. This means the prices you see on menus are rarely the final amount.
General guidance:
- The service charge covers most gratuities — staff receive a share of the mandatory 10%
- Additional tipping is appreciated but not expected — if someone goes above and beyond (a waiter who prepares something special, a bartender who remembers your drink, your butler), $5-$20 is a generous acknowledgment
- Room attendants and villa hosts: $5-$10 per day is common at luxury resorts
- Dive instructors and guides: $10-$20 per day, particularly if they provided exceptional service
- How to tip: US dollars are preferred. You can also add tips to your room bill at most resorts
Cooking Classes
Several resorts offer cooking classes that let you learn to prepare Maldivian dishes — or master international cuisines — with the resort's chefs:
- Maldivian cooking class — Learn to make mas huni, garudhiya, hedhikaa snacks, and coconut-based curries. Typically 1-2 hours, $50-$100 per person
- Sushi masterclass — Popular at Japanese-influenced resorts. Learn nigiri and maki preparation with fresh Indian Ocean fish
- Pasta making — Italian restaurants at several resorts offer hands-on pasta workshops
- Cocktail classes — Learn to mix tropical cocktails with the resort bartender. Often complimentary or $30-$50 per person
These classes make excellent rainy-day activities and provide a skill you can take home.
Practical Tips for Dining in the Maldives
Reservations
At larger resorts with multiple restaurants, dinner reservations are essential — particularly for specialty restaurants. Book on arrival or even before you fly. The most popular restaurants (especially underwater dining) can be fully booked for your entire stay if you delay.
Dress Code
Most Maldivian resorts maintain a "smart casual" dress code for dinner — no swimwear, cover-ups, or bare feet in the main restaurant. This typically means:
- Men: Collared shirt or smart t-shirt, trousers or smart shorts, closed or open shoes
- Women: Sundress, smart separates, or resort wear
- Barefoot luxury resorts (Soneva): Genuinely barefoot — shoes are optional everywhere, including restaurants
Bringing Your Own
You cannot bring alcohol into the Maldives. However, some resorts allow you to bring non-alcoholic specialty items (baby food, specific dietary supplements, particular snacks). Check with your resort before packing.
Water
Tap water at resorts is desalinated and safe to drink. Most premium resorts provide unlimited bottled still and sparkling water in your villa, replenished daily. Some resorts have switched to reusable glass bottles with on-site filtration — a sustainability improvement worth supporting.
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