The Andaman Islands are the top-notch destination to experience the best scuba diving in Andaman. The Islands are blessed with diverse sea life, beautiful coral reefs, aquatic plantation, and colorful species of marine animals. Crystal clear waters of Andaman make it the most suitable location for underwater dive adventures.
A number of incredible dive sites exist in Port Blair, Havelock, and Neil Island. The dive sites are compatible with beginners, nonswimmers, scuba dive courses, and fun divers. Basic scuba dive training is mandatory for beginners or nonswimmers to have a smooth dive experience. Each participant is accompanied by a personal instructor during the dive and is equipped with proper safety arrangements.
How do we conduct scuba diving for beginners?
Scuba diving is a daring and disciplined watersport and requires at least 50% of participants' effort to explore the amazing marine life. First of all, we take you to Govind Nagar beach 3 for the practical training session. Scuba dive training is mandatory to learn all required skills and make you comfortable with underwater dive conditions. Every participant is personally accompanied by personal instructors during the whole activity.
After training, we take you to the recommended dive site via a speed boat. You enter the water by making a backroll entry from the boat. Your divemaster will hold you and descend gradually. You will see beautiful marine life, colorful species of fish, eye-catching coral reefs, multiple schools of fish, and other sea animals during your actual dive. One additional divemaster will be there to capture your memories with the camera.
Best place for scuba diving in Andaman?
Havelock island is the hottest destination to experience the best scuba in Andaman. Havelock offers the most diverse marine life, maximum dive sites, splendid coral reefs & creeks, and clear crystal waters. The geographical location of Havelock makes it an ideal place for watersports. The diversity of marine life is quite impressive and fully loaded with colorful sea animals.
Deep diving in Andaman
We do offer deep sea diving in Andaman from 12 meters to 40 meters depth. Beginners, nonswimmers, and non-certified divers can go up to 12 meters deep while certified divers can go up to 40 meters deep depending on their certification levels.
Popular dive sites
Deep dive sites in Havelock (12 meters)
Tribe Gate: It is one of the most recommended dive sites for beginners or nonswimmers to experience deep diving up to 12 meters. It is an oval-shaped reef located between the channels of Havelock and John Lawerence Islands. The dive site is popular for its dense marine life and colorful species of fish usually in groups. You can find other sea animals such as octopuses, turtles, sea cucumbers, and lobsters.
Juvis: The dive site is located 500 meters away from Tribe Gate and located on the shores of John Lawerence Island. The reef starts from 3 meters and goes down to 18 meters. The dive site is popular for multiple species of live coral reefs, especially potato corals. You can explore colorful species of small fish, hidden lobsters, and multiple habitats of other sea animals. It is the recommended dive site to witness numerous colorful coral species.
Turtle beach: The dive site is suitable to experience tree-shaped live coral reefs. Turtle beach is located close to Elephanta beach with a maximum depth of 12 meters. The reefs start at 3 to 4 meters and go down to the endpoint of the dive site.
Deep dive sites (40 meters)
Slope: The dive site is located in front of Havelock lighthouse and is preferred for deep dives in Havelock. The maximum depth of the dive site is 24 meters, the reef starts from 6 meters and goes all the way down to 24 meters. It has some awesome coral reefs and beautiful marine life to have a pleasant dive experience.
The wall: It is the deepest dive site for scuba diving in Havelock. It has a maximum depth of 60 to 70 meters and is recommended for advanced adventurers or scuba dive courses. You can find different species of sea animals, lobsters, sting rays, squid, stonefish, lionfish, and many more.
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