How the Maldives Islands Work
Atolls, reef structures, lagoons, and the system that organises over a thousand islands into a functioning nation.
Around 1,200 coral islands spread across 26 atolls — each with its own character, purpose, and story.
The Maldives is not one island but many — approximately 1,200 of them, scattered across the Indian Ocean in a chain that stretches nearly 900 kilometres from north to south. These islands are grouped into 26 natural atolls, ring-shaped coral formations that have been building and reshaping themselves for thousands of years. Some islands are home to thriving Maldivian communities. Others are occupied by a single luxury resort. Many remain entirely uninhabited, little more than a sandbank and a handful of palm trees.
Understanding the island system is one of the most useful things you can do before visiting the Maldives. The type of island you stay on shapes your entire experience — from what you eat and how you get around to what you can wear on the beach. The pages below break down how the islands are structured, the key differences between resort islands and local islands, and how to move between them.
Atolls, reef structures, lagoons, and the system that organises over a thousand islands into a functioning nation.
Two very different ways to experience the Maldives — compare the costs, vibes, and practicalities of each.
Community life, guesthouses, bikini beaches, and what it is really like to stay among Maldivians on an inhabited island.
The one-island-one-resort concept that made the Maldives famous — what it means and what to expect.
How to move between islands by speedboat, ferry, and seaplane to see more of the Maldives in a single trip.
Sandbanks, picnic islands, protected areas, and the vast majority of Maldivian islands where no one lives.
Dhoni boats, public ferries, speedboats, seaplanes, and domestic flights — how to move across a scattered archipelago.
Coral reef growth, sand production, wave deposition, and the biological processes that create land from the sea.
Land reclamation projects including Hulhumale, resort island expansion, and why the Maldives builds new land.
How tiny coral islands provide fresh water, electricity, waste management, internet, and essential services.
Daily life on compact Maldivian islands — community dynamics, social rhythms, challenges, and island culture.