Gili Lawa

Gili Lawa — The Twin-Peak Viewpoint

Sweeping vistas from twin peaks over saltwater channels, reef walls, and the most photogenic anchorages in the northern Komodo park area.

About Gili Lawa

A Lesser-Known Sunrise Climb

Gili Lawa — sometimes written Gili Lawa Darat — is a small, uninhabited island near the northern tip of Komodo National Park, and one of the great open secrets of the region. Twin grassy peaks rise straight from the shoreline, and the ridgeline that links them delivers a clean 360-degree panorama: braided saltwater channels, sheer reef walls dropping into deep blue, a scatter of neighbouring islands, and the liveaboard fleet sitting like scale models in the turquoise bay below. A good number of seasoned travelers quietly rate the Gili Lawa climb above Padar — the view is arguably wider, and the crowds a fraction of the size.

The hike takes roughly 30 to 45 minutes from the beach to the first peak, with another 15 to 20 minutes of ridge-walking to reach the higher summit. The terrain is open, golden grassland threaded with a well-trodden track — moderately steep in places but never technical, and manageable for anyone with reasonable fitness and a head-torch for the pre-dawn start. Sunrise, around 5:45 AM, is the magic window: the savanna glows amber, mist sits in the channels, and the light is impossibly soft. Sunset climbs, timed correctly with the captain, are every bit as dramatic.

The reward is not only the climb. The sheltered, deep bay beneath Gili Lawa is one of the finest overnight anchorages anywhere in the park — calm enough for a flat night’s sleep, remote enough that the sky overhead fills edge to edge with stars. Wake on deck here and the first thing you see is the ridge you are about to climb, catching the first light.

What to Expect

On Gili Lawa

Twin-Peak Panorama

360-degree views over channels, reefs and neighboring islands.

Sunrise / Sunset

Both magical — sunrise has fewer crowds, sunset has dramatic light direction.

Moderate Climb

30-45 min to first peak — steady ascent on grassy ridgeline.

Drone Heaven

Wide-open ridgeline panorama makes for spectacular drone shots.

Premium Anchorage

Sheltered bay below — one of the best overnight anchorages in northern Komodo.

Less Crowded

Popular but quieter than Padar — most boats prioritize Padar at sunrise.

Visit at a Glance

Practical Information

Location
North Komodo NP
Climb
30–60 min
Best Time
Sunrise / Sunset
Difficulty
Moderate
Drone
Excellent
Anchorage
Overnight ideal
The Sunrise Climb the Crowds Miss
Why Gili Lawa Is Special

The Sunrise Climb the Crowds Miss

Most boats race each other to Padar at dawn. Gili Lawa is where the travelers in the know go instead. The ridgeline is wider, the panorama arguably grander, and on a good morning you may have the whole golden summit to yourselves — just the wind, the savanna turning amber, and the channels far below catching the first light.

The magic is in the start: a head-torch climb in the cool dark, the grassland slowly emerging around you, and then the moment at the top when the sun breaks and the entire northern park is laid out in soft gold. Climb back down to a sheltered bay that ranks among the best overnight anchorages in Komodo, and the day is only just beginning. It is the kind of morning that stays with travelers long after the trip ends.

Gili Lawa in Pictures

Ridgelines and Anchorages

The twin-peak panorama, the sunrise climb and the sheltered bay below — a glimpse of Gili Lawa.

The twin-peak ridgeline view
The twin-peak ridgeline view
A traveler at the summit
A traveler at the summit
Sunrise over the channels
Sunrise over the channels
Grassland slopes and reef walls
Grassland slopes and reef walls
The fleet in the bay below
The fleet in the bay below
A premium overnight anchorage
A premium overnight anchorage
Ready to Set Sail?

Climb Gili Lawa

Usually included on 4D3N+ itineraries. Easy to add to private trips as an alternative to a second Padar climb.