Palau
Islands & OceaniaDivingNatureAdventureEco-Tourism

Palau

Pristine Diving Paradise

Jellyfish Lake, Blue Corner dive site, WWII wrecks, and the most biodiverse coral reefs in the Pacific Ocean.

Palau is a small island nation in the western Pacific that is universally recognised as one of the world's top three diving destinations. The Palau barrier reef protects a lagoon of extraordinary biodiversity — manta rays, whale sharks, and thousands of reef fish species in water of exceptional clarity. Jellyfish Lake on Eil Malk Island is one of the world's most unique natural phenomena — a marine lake of 5 million golden jellyfish that have lost their sting, allowing visitors to swim among them. The Blue Corner dive site is famous for its shark patrol — over 200 grey reef sharks circling in a majestic, prehistoric ritual. Peleliu Island holds the sobering WWII battlefield where 12,000 American and Japanese soldiers died in 1944. Palau was one of the world's first countries to ban certain sunscreen chemicals to protect its reefs — a model of environmental leadership.

Best For

Divers, snorkellers, eco-tourists, WWII history enthusiasts

Duration

7–10 Days

Best Season

November–May

Visa

Visa-free for Indian passport holders

Capital City

Ngerulmud

Province / Country

Melekeok State

Koror is Palau's main city and tourist hub — a small, relaxed island town with excellent dive shops, restaurants, and access to the extraordinary Rock Islands just offshore.

Must-Know

What Palau Is Famous For

The experiences, landscapes and moments that define a trip here.

Jellyfish Lake

Jellyfish Lake

Swim with 5 million stingless golden jellyfish in a landlocked marine lake — one of the world's most extraordinary experiences.

Blue Corner Dive Site

Blue Corner Dive Site

Palau's most famous dive — 200+ grey reef sharks patrolling a coral wall in an adrenaline-charged current.

Rock Islands

Rock Islands

200 mushroom-shaped limestone islands — a UNESCO World Heritage lagoon of extraordinary natural beauty.

WWII Wrecks

WWII Wrecks

Operation Desecrate's Japanese Zero fighters and transport ships — accessible recreational wreck dives.

Ngemelis Reef

Ngemelis Reef

The world's best snorkelling — a pristine shallow reef of extraordinary colour and biodiversity.

Peleliu Battlefield

Peleliu Battlefield

A sobering Pacific WWII battlefield where 12,000 soldiers died in 1944 — well-preserved and deeply moving.

Take Home

What to Shop in Palau

From artisan workshops to open-air markets — things worth packing an extra bag for.

🪸

Palau Eco-Souvenirs

Reef-safe, sustainably made gifts — Palau enforces strict environmental standards on all visitor activities.

🐠

Reef-Safe Sunscreen

Palau-approved mineral sunscreen — the only kind permitted in the world's first reef-safe nation.

🪵

Storyboard Carvings

Traditional Palauan storyboard — a carved wooden narrative of ancient legends and daily life.

🪟

Bead Money

Traditional Palauan glass bead money (udoud) — the most valuable traditional currency in the Pacific.

Explore

Top Attractions in Palau

The places everyone tells you to visit — and they're right.

🦈

Shark City Dive

Grey reef sharks, white tips, and occasional hammerheads at Palau's legendary shark congregation site.

🐟

Chandelier Cave

An underwater cave system of stalactites and stalagmites accessible by scuba dive.

🏝️

Milky Way Lagoon

A sheltered cove of white limestone mud with reported skin-softening properties — snorkel and slather.

🌊

Manta Ray Season

September–November brings manta rays to Palau's cleaning stations — one of the Pacific's best wildlife encounters.

🏛️

Palau National Museum

The island's cultural and natural history — traditional bai meeting houses and Palauan art.

🌿

Ngardmau Waterfall Trek

Palau's highest waterfall — a jungle hike through dense tropical forest to a spectacular cascade.

Taste & Culture

Food, Rituals & Palau's Soul

Eat with your hands. Watch the ceremony. Understand why people keep coming back.

Palauan Chiefly SystemBai Meeting HousesWWII LegacyReef Conservation LeadershipMicronesian Heritage

"Palau protects what it loves — the reef, the jellyfish, the sharks. In doing so, it shows the world what it means to truly value a place."

Taro Soup

Taro Soup

Palau's most traditional dish — taro leaves simmered with coconut cream and fresh fish from the lagoon.

Grilled Reef Fish

Grilled Reef Fish

Freshly caught parrotfish, snapper, or tuna grilled over charcoal — simple, fresh, and Palauan.

Coconut Crab

Coconut Crab

The world's largest land arthropod — a rare delicacy in Palau, slow-cooked or steamed with coconut.

Filipino Influences

Filipino Influences

Palau's large Filipino community means excellent adobo, kare-kare, and lechon alongside local dishes.

Bat Soup

Bat Soup

A traditional Palauan delicacy — fruit bats boiled in coconut broth, not for the faint-hearted.

Before You Go

Essential Facts

Everything an Indian traveller needs before booking a Palau trip.

Getting There

✈️

10–13 hrs (via Manila, Tokyo, or Guam)

Non-stop from major Indian cities

Weather

🌤️

27–32°C; tropical, diving best Nov–May

Budget / Couple

💳

₹1.5L–3.5L / person (mid-range)

Flights, hotels & activities included

Visa for Indians

🛂

Visa-free for Indian passport holders

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