Pristine shallow reefs perfect for first-time snorkelers and families. White sand beaches, swaying palms, and the gentlest current in all of Komodo waters.
Kanawa Island sits just a short sail from Labuan Bajo harbor, which makes it one of the most-loved opening or closing stops on a Komodo liveaboard itinerary. It is a small, low-lying island ringed by powder-soft white sand and shaded by leaning coconut palms — the kind of place that looks rendered rather than real. Because it lies inside the sheltered inner waters near the mainland, the sea here stays glassy and warm even when the open channels further into the park are choppy, giving it a deserved reputation as the gentlest reef in all of Komodo.
The fringing reef begins in just one to two meters of water directly off the beach and slopes gradually into a vivid coral wall. Visibility holds at a consistent 20 metres or more throughout the year, currents are negligible, and the water sits at a bathwater 28–30°C. The reef itself is in genuinely healthy condition — dense thickets of staghorn and table coral interspersed with soft corals that sway with the swell. Green and hawksbill turtles graze the seagrass beds, schools of parrotfish and butterflyfish patrol the shallows, and lucky snorkelers regularly spot blacktip reef sharks cruising the drop-off at dawn.
For travelers who have never floated face-down over a living reef before, Kanawa is the perfect introduction — no current to fight, no depth to fear, and a guide always within arm’s reach. For everyone else, it is simply a beautiful place to spend a slow afternoon swimming, walking the sandbar, and watching the light change over the water before the boat turns for home.
What makes Kanawa unforgettable is not drama but ease. There is no current to brace against, no deep water to second-guess, no rush — just warm shallows that hold you up while a coral garden unfolds an arm’s length below. It is the place where nervous first-timers discover they can breathe through a snorkel and never want to lift their head again, and where seasoned travelers slow right down and simply drift.
Arrive in the late afternoon and the island shows its other face. The day-trip boats have gone, the sandbar empties, and the light turns the shallows the colour of liquid glass. Walk the beach barefoot, swim out to watch turtles graze the seagrass, then climb back aboard as the sky softens — the gentle, golden bookend to a day in the wild heart of Komodo.
Crystal water, white sand and easy reefs — a glimpse of a slow afternoon on Kanawa Island.
Included on most 2D1N and 3D2N itineraries as the final reef stop. Easy to add as a sunset stop on private trips.