Nobody warns you about the research spiral. You start looking at a Maldives tour package from India one evening, thinking it will take an hour. It does not take an hour. Somehow, you end up deep in a travel forum at midnight, reading a debate about whether the lagoon at a specific resort is too shallow for proper swimming, and you have seventeen tabs open, and you still have not booked anything. Praxis Holidays gets calls from people in exactly this state all the time. The Maldives is actually a simple trip. The internet has made it feel like a project. Here is what you actually need to know.
The Water Villa Is Worth It. But Ask These Questions First.
Yes, get a water villa. That part everyone gets right.
What people get wrong is assuming all water villas are the same thing and that the price tells you everything. It does not. The direction the villa faces is something nobody thinks to ask about, and it matters a lot more than it sounds. West-facing means you get sunset from your deck every single evening. East-facing means sunrise. If you are a morning person, that is perfect. If you sleep in until nine, that sunrise villa is wasted on you.
Shallow lagoon water photographs better. Deep water feels better when you are actually swimming in it. Some villas are right at the end of a long jetty, fully isolated, nothing around them. Others are packed closer together and feel less private than the resort photos suggest. These are the things you find out only after you arrive, unless you ask beforehand.
And beach villas. People dismiss them without thinking. Bad move. They are quieter. More private in practical terms. Easier to stumble out of at 11 pm when you want to sit by the water without walking a jetty in the dark. Some of the best Maldives experiences come from beach villas that people almost did not book because they had convinced themselves that only a water villa counted as a real Maldives trip.
It is not true. Both work. Know what you are optimising for before you choose.
The Transfer Situation Genuinely Surprises People
So you land in Male. The resort is not in Male. Getting there is either a speedboat or a seaplane, and this is where first-timers get their first real shock of the planning process.
Seaplanes are beautiful. Flying low over the atolls, watching the water change colour underneath you, landing on the ocean. It is genuinely one of those travel moments. It is also sometimes more expensive than the flight you took from India to get there. That part does not make it into most blog posts.
They also only fly in daylight. An evening international arrival means you are spending the night in Male first. Extra cost, extra night, extra logistics that no one mentioned on the resort website.
Speedboat resorts are not the second choice option. Some of the best properties in the entire country use speedboat transfers. Closer to Male, simpler, and perfectly good. The seaplane does not signal a better resort. It signals a different atoll and a much bigger transfer bill.
Figure out which transfer your resort uses before you fall in love with it. Seriously. Before.
All-Inclusive Has Small Print, and the Small Print Matters
Three meals a day and non-alcoholic drinks. That is what most Maldives all-inclusive packages actually cover.
Not cocktails. Not wine. Not the scuba dive you had been planning since before you booked the trip. Not the jet ski. Not the speciality Japanese restaurant that looks incredible in the resort photos. Not the spa. Those are all extras. Sometimes very extra. A single scuba dive at a resort dive centre can cost more than your daily package rate. Nobody puts that in the headline.
It is not a scam. It is just how it works, and people arrive not knowing and then feel blindsided at checkout when the bill is twice what they expected.
The Super Value Maldives package lays this out clearly from the beginning. What is in, what is out, no surprises at the end. That sounds basic. After hearing enough checkout horror stories, it does not sound basic at all.
One Question That Filters Everything: Is There a House Reef?
If you care about snorkelling, this is the only question that matters before you book anything else.
A house reef is a coral reef you can reach by walking into the water from the resort. No boat. No excursion. No extra cost. Just mask, fins, and whatever is living in there. Turtles mostly. Reef sharks if you are lucky. Rays. Fish in numbers that make you stop swimming for a second and just float there watching.
Some resorts do not have one.
Gorgeous water. Perfect photos. Nothing in it. To see any marine life, you would need to take a boat out and pay for it every single time you wanted to go.
Ask. Before everything else. Does this resort have direct house reef access? The answer changes everything about whether that specific property is right for you.
What Actually Happens to You There
Three and a half hours from Chennai, Mumbai or Delhi. Visa on arrival and the Maldives pre-arrival declaration must be completed before travel. Indian food at almost every resort because Indian guests are one of the biggest visitor groups in the Maldives, and the resorts know it.
Getting there is not the complicated part.
What gets people is the silence. Not silence like nothing is happening. Silence like nowhere to be. No monuments. No city to navigate. No itinerary that needs following. You wake up and the whole day is just. There. Open. With no particular requirements.
For most people, that takes about a day to adjust to. Day one, you feel slightly restless, slightly like you should be doing something. Day two, it clicks. On day three, you are genuinely not sure how you are going to return to your normal life.
The Luxury Maldives Holiday and the Super Luxury Maldives Holiday are both built with enough nights to actually get to that day two feeling, rather than leaving just as the trip starts working on you.
Four nights minimum. Five if you can. After three nights, you leave feeling like you only just arrived.
The resort selection in the Maldives is genuinely one of the most overwhelming things about planning this trip. There are hundreds of properties, and the photos all look the same, and the price difference between a good choice and a bad choice is not always obvious from a website. Talk to Praxis Holidays before you commit to anything. Plan your trip here.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do Indians need a visa for the Maldives?
Free 30-day visa on arrival for Indian passport holders. Nothing to arrange before travel, no application process.
What is the best time to visit from India?
September to April for dry weather and calm water. December to March is peak season, so book early if that is when you plan to go.
How many days do you actually need?
Four to five. Three feels too short once you are there. Five days and you leave feeling like the trip actually happened.
Is the Maldives just for couples?
No. Families and friend groups both have great trips there. It works for anyone who genuinely needs to stop moving for a few days.
Super Value vs Super Luxury. What is the real difference?
Resort category, villa type, and the level of everything around you. Super Value is a real Maldives experience at a more accessible price. Super Luxury is what happens when you remove all the constraints.






