Andaman Travel Guide
20 Travel Tips for First-Time Andaman Visitors
Everything you need to know before you land in Port Blair — from booking flights and reserving ferries to packing smart, staying safe, and making the most of every island day.
Overview
Why First-Time Visitors Need an Andaman Travel Guide
The Andaman & Nicobar Islands are among the most rewarding destinations in India — but they reward the prepared. A trip that isn't planned carefully can mean missed ferries, sold-out water sports slots, sunburned afternoons with no shade in sight, or a beautiful island ruined by a bag full of wrong clothes. First-time Andaman travel tips exist precisely because the islands operate differently from mainland travel.
There are no trains. Roads end at the coast. Moving between islands means booking ferries that fill up weeks in advance during peak season. ATMs are limited on outer islands. And the weather — warm, humid, occasionally unpredictable — requires different gear than most Indian holiday destinations. This Andaman travel guide covers everything a first-time visitor needs to know, from the moment you book your flight to the moment you board your return.
Before You Travel · Tips 1–5
Flight, Ferry & Pre-Trip Planning Tips
The most common mistakes in Andaman trip planning happen before the trip even starts — wrong travel dates, last-minute flights, and no ferry reservations. These five tips eliminate the most expensive errors first-timers make.
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Flights
Book Flights Early — at Least 6–8 Weeks Ahead
Why This Matters for Andaman Trip Planning
Port Blair's Veer Savarkar International Airport has limited flight slots from mainland India. During peak season (October–February) and school holidays, fares from cities like Chennai, Bangalore, Delhi, and Kolkata spike dramatically. Booking flights for Andaman 6–8 weeks in advance typically saves ₹3,000–₹8,000 per person compared to booking two weeks out.
Smart booking windows
Tuesday–Thursday departures are consistently cheaper than Friday or Sunday. Morning flights from Chennai (2 hours) are often the best value. Avoid booking the day before any island ferry — buffer time matters more in Andaman than almost anywhere else.
Pro tip
Set fare alerts on Google Flights or Ixigo 10–12 weeks before your travel date. The biggest drops come 6–7 weeks out.
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Ferries
Reserve Ferries in Advance — Don't Assume Seats Are Available
The Single Most Critical Andaman Travel Tip
Inter-island ferries are the lifeline of Andaman travel. Private operators like Makruzz, Nautika, ITT Majestic, Green Ocean 1, and Green Ocean 2 run the primary routes between Port Blair, Havelock, and Neil Island. These ferries sell out 2–3 weeks ahead during peak season.
What to book
Andaman ferry reservation is non-negotiable for peak-season travel. Book your Port Blair → Havelock, Havelock → Neil Island, and Neil → Port Blair slots at the same time you book your hotels. Missing a ferry in Andaman often means losing an entire day — there's no easy alternative when the next sailing is 24 hours away.
Government ferries
Government ferries are cheaper but slower, less comfortable, and harder to book online. Stick with private operators unless you're on a very tight budget and have flexible dates.
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Documents
Keep Original ID Proof Handy at All Times
An Essential Andaman Travel Essential Often Overlooked
Port Blair airport, ferry terminals, and certain protected area entry points all require valid government-issued photo ID. For Indian nationals, this means Aadhaar card, voter ID, or passport. For foreign nationals, a passport and a Restricted Area Permit (RAP) — obtainable at Port Blair airport on arrival — are mandatory for visiting Andaman.
What to carry
Carry originals, not just phone photos. Cellular Jail entry, the light-and-sound show, and permit-gated islands all require ID verification at the gate. Keep a photocopy in your bag separate from the original.
Foreign visitors note
RAP is free and issued on arrival for most nationalities. Check current permit requirements before travel as rules are subject to periodic updates.
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Timing
Check the Weather Forecast Before Every Island Day
Andaman Weather Can Change Your Entire Plan
Andaman weather is tropical — warm year-round but subject to sudden squalls, especially between April and September. Andaman weather forecast checking isn't just about comfort; a bad weather day can ground ferries, cancel scuba diving sessions, and close outer island access entirely. Check the India Meteorological Department (IMD) forecast the night before any boat trip or water sport booking.
Best time to visit Andaman
October to February is the gold standard — clear skies, calm seas, underwater visibility of 25–30 metres. March–April is excellent and less crowded. May gets hot. June–September is monsoon season; most water sports close and many ferries are cancelled.
Traveller's rule of thumb
If the forecast shows wind speeds above 25 knots or rainfall above 30mm for your ferry day, have a backup plan. Ferries will still run in moderate rain; they cancel for rough seas.
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Water Sports
Book Water Sports Activities in Advance
Don't Leave Adventure to Chance
Popular Andaman water sports — particularly scuba diving, snorkelling at Elephant Beach, sea walk, and glass-bottom boat rides — fill up quickly during peak months. Walk-in slots at Elephant Beach and North Bay Island are often sold out by 9 AM. Pre-booking through your tour operator or directly with dive centres saves wasted mornings.
Activities to pre-book
Parasailing, kayaking, speed boat rides, and game fishing can usually be booked 24–48 hours ahead. Scuba diving certification courses need 3–5 days; beginner dives need at least 24 hours' notice.
Timing hack
Book your most important activity for the second or third day of your island stay — gives you a buffer if your ferry arrives late.
Packing Smart · Tips 6–9
Andaman Packing List: What to Bring, What to Leave Behind
Andaman's tropical climate, water-heavy itinerary, and limited shopping options on outer islands make the Andaman packing list more important than for most Indian holidays. The golden rule: pack light, pack waterproof, pack for heat.
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Clothing
Pack Light Cotton Clothes — Leave Heavy Fabrics at Home
What to Pack for an Andaman Trip
Andaman's average temperature hovers between 23°C and 32°C year-round with humidity above 70% for most of the year. Heavy synthetic fabrics — jeans, polyester, anything with lining — will feel punishing within an hour on the beach or walking between ferry terminals. Light cotton, linen, and quick-dry fabrics are the only sensible choices.
What to bring
Loose cotton shirts and shorts, one light layer for evening AC on ferries, a rash guard or UV-protective shirt for long boat rides, flip flops for beaches, and one pair of closed-toe shoes for forest or cave walks at Baratang's limestone caves. Light cotton clothes also dry overnight, which matters when you're moving between islands every 1–2 days.
What not to pack
Heavy jeans, formal shoes, or anything you'd be upset to ruin with salt water or sand.
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Sun Protection
Carry Reef-Safe Sunscreen — and Carry Enough of It
The Most Underestimated Item on Every Andaman Packing List
Andaman's equatorial sun is aggressive. Most visitors underestimate how quickly they burn on the water, where UV rays reflect off the surface and hit you twice. Standard sunscreens containing oxybenzone and octinoxate are harmful to Andaman's coral reefs — some beaches actively discourage their use, and responsible eco-friendly travel in Andaman means switching to reef-safe alternatives.
What to buy
Bring reef-safe sunscreen (SPF 50+ mineral-based) from home or your departure city. Options in Port Blair are limited and expensive. Apply 20 minutes before water entry and reapply every 90 minutes. Bring more than you think you need — one tube per person per week is a realistic estimate for an Andaman trip.
Also carry
A wide-brim hat and UV-blocking sunglasses. Lips burn easily on water; bring an SPF lip balm.
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Gear
Carry Waterproof Bags for All Beach and Ferry Days
A Non-Negotiable for Andaman Beach Travel
Waterproof bags for beach travel are one of the most practical items you'll use every single day in Andaman. On ferries, waves occasionally splash the deck. On beach trips, your bag sits in the wet sand. During water sports, everything gets wet. A dry bag (5–10 litre) keeps your phone, wallet, and ID protected. A larger waterproof bag or dry sack (20–30 litre) handles camera equipment, spare clothes, and documents during island-hopping days.
What to protect
Phone, passport or ID copy, cash, power bank, camera, and any medication. A waterproof phone case that also allows touchscreen use is worth buying before you leave home — cheap options are widely available but break easily in saltwater.
Budget option
Ziplock bags work for phones and small documents in a pinch, but a proper dry bag is under ₹500 and lasts for years.
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Essentials
Download Offline Maps and Keep Power Banks Charged
Connectivity Is Unreliable on Outer Islands
Airtel and Jio have 4G coverage on Port Blair, Havelock, and Neil Island. On outer islands — Baratang, Long Island, Diglipur, and Rangat — connectivity is patchy or absent. Offline maps for Andaman via Google Maps or Maps.me (downloaded before you leave your hotel) ensure you can navigate without signal. Download the maps for each island the night before you travel there.
Power bank rule
Charge every device every night. Some beach resorts and guesthouses on outer islands have limited generator hours and may not have bedside sockets in all rooms. A 20,000 mAh power bank handles two phones for 2–3 days without a wall charge.
Also useful
Screenshot your ferry ticket QR codes and hotel confirmations before entering low-connectivity zones — you'll need them for check-in even without internet.
Ferry & Island Travel · Tips 10–13
Andaman Ferry Booking Tips and Island Hopping Guide
Getting between islands is the part of Andaman trip planning that trips up first-timers most often. These tips cover what you need to know about ferry timing, seasickness, island transfers, and buffer time.
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Ferries
Arrive at the Ferry Terminal at Least 30–45 Minutes Early
Andaman Ferries Don't Wait
Private ferry operators in Andaman are strict about departure times — stricter than most domestic airlines. The boarding gate closes 15–20 minutes before departure. Arriving at the terminal on time doesn't mean you'll board on time; you'll need to collect your boarding pass at the counter, pass through security, and walk to the correct jetty. First-time visitors routinely miss ferries by 5–10 minutes after arriving "on time."
Terminal logistics
Phoenix Bay Jetty (Port Blair) handles most inter-island departures. It's a large, busy terminal and signage is inconsistent. Go directly to your operator's counter on arrival — don't wait to figure out which jetty to use. Makruzz, Nautika, and ITT Majestic all operate from different berths.
Buffer travel time
From most Port Blair hotels to Phoenix Bay Jetty: 15–25 minutes by auto-rickshaw in normal traffic. Double this estimate during morning rush hours (7–9 AM).
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Ferries
Carry Motion-Sickness Medicine if You're Prone
Andaman Crossings Can Be Rough — Especially October–December
The crossing between Port Blair and Havelock Island takes 60–90 minutes; between Havelock and Neil Island, about 30–45 minutes. During the early part of the season (October–November), swells in the open water between islands can be significant. Motion-sickness medicine for ferry travel — Avomine (promethazine), Stugeron (cinnarizine), or ginger-based alternatives — should be taken 30–60 minutes before boarding, not after you start feeling unwell.
Seat selection tip
Lower deck seats in the middle of the boat have the least rocking. Upper-deck open-air seating is more scenic but more exposed to movement. Request lower-middle when you collect your boarding pass.
Natural alternatives
Ginger candy or ginger tea 30 minutes before boarding is effective for mild susceptibility. Acupressure wristbands work for some travellers. Fresh air on deck helps — don't stay seated below if you start feeling queasy.
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Island Hopping
Plan Island Transfers Carefully — Sequence Matters
Andaman Island Hopping Travel Guide
The most efficient island hopping in Andaman sequence for most first-timers is: Port Blair (1–2 nights) → Havelock Island (2–3 nights) → Neil Island (1–2 nights) → back to Port Blair. This direction follows the natural ferry routes and avoids backtracking, which wastes time and money. Trying to do it in reverse or skipping the logical sequence adds unnecessary transit.
Don't over-plan
Three islands in four nights is the minimum comfortable pace. Four islands in four nights is a logistical nightmare — you'll spend more time on ferries than on beaches. Build at least one rest day per island into your Andaman tour planning for unplanned activities, weather delays, and simply slowing down.
Outer island additions
Adding Baratang Island (limestone caves and mangroves), Diglipur (turtle nesting at Ramnagar Beach), or Little Andaman requires at least an extra 2–3 days and separate permit arrangements. These are best for return visitors or trips of 8+ days.
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Flights
Leave Buffer Time Before Your Return Flight
The Last-Day Mistake That Ruins Trips
The single most stressful scenario in Andaman travel: a traveller books a return flight from Port Blair at 11 AM and a ferry from Havelock at 8:30 AM — a crossing that takes 90 minutes, gets them to Phoenix Bay at 10 AM, still needing a 30-minute auto ride to the airport. In good conditions, this is possible. Any ferry delay, rough seas, or traffic makes it impossible. Andaman travel advice from anyone who has done this: never book your return flight on the same day as your last island ferry.
The safe rule
Return to Port Blair the night before your flight. Book one night in a Port Blair hotel as your buffer. This also gives you time for any last-minute sightseeing — Chidiya Tapu sunset or a final meal at the waterfront.
If you must fly same-day
Only book a flight after 3 PM and only after taking the earliest available morning ferry. Even then, it's a risk not worth taking during rough-sea season.
On the Ground · Tips 14–17
Practical Andaman Travel Tips Once You're There
The tips below cover money, food, hydration, and safety — the day-to-day Andaman travel essentials that determine whether the trip runs smoothly or becomes an endless set of small problems.
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Money
Keep Sufficient Cash — ATMs Are Scarce on Outer Islands
Andaman Travel Essentials: Cash Over Card
Port Blair has multiple ATMs and most restaurants and hotels accept cards. Havelock Island has a handful of ATMs, but they run out of cash on busy weekends. Neil Island has just one reliable ATM. Beyond these three islands, card infrastructure essentially disappears. Local vendors, boat operators, and small eateries operate cash-only across all of Andaman.
How much to carry
Withdraw enough cash in Port Blair before travelling to outer islands. Budget ₹1,500–₹2,500 per person per day for meals, local transport, tips, and small purchases. Water sports, ferry tickets, and hotels are best paid in advance by card or transfer — these are your big-ticket items that don't need to be in cash.
Emergency fund
Keep ₹3,000–₹5,000 per person in a separate pocket or bag as a trip emergency reserve. Never let this touch your daily spending.
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Health
Stay Hydrated — Andaman Heat Is Deceptive
A Simple Andaman Travel Health Tip Most People Ignore
The ocean breeze in Andaman creates a false sense of cool — you don't always feel yourself sweating until you stop moving. Dehydration is one of the most common reasons visitors feel unwell mid-trip. The humidity makes it worse: your body loses fluids faster than in dry heat but the sensation is muted. Drink at least 3 litres of water per day on any active beach or island day.
What to drink
Packaged mineral water is available at most hotels and stores on the main islands (₹20–₹30 per litre). Carry a refillable bottle and ask your hotel or resort to fill it. Coconut water from local vendors is excellent electrolyte replacement — ₹40–₹60 per nut on most beaches. Avoid unfiltered tap water.
Signs of dehydration to watch for
Headache after morning beach walks, dark urine, or unusual fatigue mid-afternoon. These are the early signals — rehydrate immediately with water and electrolytes before they worsen.
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Food
Try the Local Seafood — It's Among the Best in India
An Andaman Travel Experience Not to Miss
Fresh seafood in Andaman — grilled snapper, butter garlic crab, prawn masala, and lobster — is caught the same morning it's served. Local restaurants in Aberdeen Bazaar (Port Blair), the village shacks near Radhanagar Beach (Havelock), and the beachside spots on Neil Island serve seafood at a fraction of what it costs on the mainland. A full meal with fish, rice, and vegetables at a local eatery runs ₹200–₹400 per person.
What to try
Red snapper (laal machli), tiger prawn fry, crab curry, and the Andaman-style fish tikka. Ask what came in that morning — local restaurants will tell you, and the answer determines what you order.
Vegetarian options
Available but limited on outer islands. Stock up on packaged snacks and inform your resort in advance if you require vegetarian meals — most can accommodate with notice.
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Safety
Follow Beach Safety Guidelines and Swim Between Flags
Andaman Beach Safety Tips Every Visitor Needs
Andaman's beaches look calm from the shore but can have strong lateral currents, particularly during tide transitions. Radhanagar Beach is patrolled by lifeguards during the day — always swim within the flagged zones. Kalapathar Beach and Vijay Nagar Beach on Havelock are scenic but have no lifeguards — wade carefully and never swim alone.
Underwater safety
Never touch coral — it takes 10 years to grow a centimetre and dies instantly under pressure. Don't feed fish during snorkelling or diving; it disrupts natural behaviour. Don't stand on coral formations. Travel safety in Andaman underwater is mostly about awareness: know where you are, stay close to your dive guide, and surface slowly.
Night safety
The main islands are safe after dark but poorly lit outside tourist zones. Carry a torch and use hotel-recommended transport after 9 PM. Avoid isolated beach stretches after sunset.
Responsible Travel · Tips 18–20
Eco-Friendly and Responsible Andaman Tourism Tips
Andaman's marine ecosystem is one of the most biodiverse in the world — and one of the most fragile. These final three tips aren't optional extras. They're the baseline behaviour every visitor owes the islands that are giving them their holiday.
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Environment
Respect Marine Life — Observe, Never Touch or Feed
Marine Conservation in Andaman Starts With Every Visitor
Andaman's reefs support over 500 species of fish, 200 species of coral, six species of sea turtle, dugongs, and dolphins. This ecosystem exists because the water is still largely undisturbed. Every visitor who touches coral, feeds fish, or stands on reef formations permanently damages an environment that cannot recover quickly. Marine conservation in Andaman depends entirely on tourist behaviour — there is no park ranger at every reef.
What this means in practice
During snorkelling and diving: maintain neutral buoyancy, fins clear of reef, hands to yourself. On beaches: don't collect shells, sand, or coral fragments — even dead ones. Don't purchase seashell souvenirs; the trade drives illegal collection. If you see a sea turtle nesting at Ramnagar Beach or near Laxmanpur Beach, observe from 10 metres and use no flash photography.
Night turtle walks
Guided night turtle-watching sessions are available at Diglipur (Kalipur Beach) through the Forest Department. These are legal, guided, and the responsible way to witness nesting.
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Environment
Avoid Littering — Carry a Reusable Bag for Your Waste
Plastic-Free Travel in Andaman Is Both Possible and Necessary
Andaman has limited waste processing infrastructure. Plastic bags, water bottles, straws, and food packaging that end up on beaches or in the sea stay there for years. Some outer islands — particularly around Jolly Buoy Island and the Mahatma Gandhi Marine National Park — have introduced restricted-entry policies partly because of plastic damage from tourism.
What to do differently
Carry a cloth bag for beach days — it becomes your rubbish carrier. Refill water bottles instead of buying single-use plastics where possible. Most restaurants will give you a bag or wrapper; put it in your cloth bag until you reach a bin. If you're on a private island picnic, everything you bring, you take back.
Beach clean-up
Several NGOs and dive operators in Havelock run voluntary reef and beach clean-up sessions. Participating is free and takes 1–2 hours — many travellers find it the most meaningful thing they do all trip.
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Environment
Wear Reef-Safe Sunscreen — Protect the Coral You've Come to See
The Connection Between Your Sunscreen and Andaman's Coral Reefs
Chemical sunscreens containing oxybenzone and octinoxate have been shown to cause coral bleaching, disrupt fish hormone cycles, and accumulate in marine organisms at concentrations that damage their DNA. Andaman's coral reefs are already under pressure from rising sea temperatures. Adding chemical sunscreen runoff from thousands of swimmers daily accelerates damage that is visible within years, not decades.
What reef-safe means
Mineral sunscreens using zinc oxide or titanium dioxide as their active ingredient are considered safe for reefs. Look for labels that explicitly say "reef-safe" and check the ingredient list — some products claim to be reef-safe while still containing harmful chemicals. Brands like Kokua Sun Care, Stream2Sea, and Badger are widely considered good options; check availability in India before travel.
A practical note
Reef-safe sunscreens are harder to find in Andaman itself. Buy before you leave home. A white mineral SPF 50 sunscreen from a pharmacy is better than any chemical SPF 100 when you're swimming over coral.
Seasonal Guide
Best Time to Visit Andaman: A Month-by-Month Overview
Choosing the right travel window is one of the most impactful Andaman travel decisions a first-timer can make. Here's a clear breakdown for anyone planning an Andaman holiday.
| Month | Weather | Sea Conditions | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| October – November | 28–30°C, post-monsoon freshness | Calm, visibility improving | First-timers, water sports, photography |
| December – January | 24–28°C, pleasantly cool | Calm, best visibility (25–30m) | Diving, honeymoon, families |
| February – March | 27–30°C, minimal rain | Excellent | All travellers, best overall window |
| April – May | 30–35°C, getting hot | Good but warming | Budget travellers, fewer crowds |
| June – September | High rainfall, humid | Rough, many services closed | Not recommended for most visitors |
February and March offer the ideal combination: calm seas, excellent underwater visibility, manageable crowds (the Christmas–January peak has passed), and slightly lower prices on ferries and resorts. If you can only go once, go in February.
Island Guide
Quick Island-by-Island Guide for First-Time Visitors
Each island in Andaman has a distinct character. Understanding what each one is best for prevents over-packed itineraries and under-appreciated visits.
Port Blair · Your Gateway
Port Blair Sightseeing
- Cellular Jail & light-and-sound show
- Ross Island (deer, ruins, colonial history)
- North Bay Island (water sports)
- Marina Park & Aberdeen Bazaar
- Corbyn's Cove Beach (city beach)
Havelock Island · The Highlight
Havelock Sightseeing
- Radhanagar Beach (Asia's best beach)
- Elephant Beach (snorkelling & diving)
- Kalapathar Beach (sunrise photography)
- Vijay Nagar Beach (long, quiet stretch)
Neil Island · Peaceful & Unhurried
Neil Island Guide
- Laxmanpur Beach (best sunsets)
- Bharatpur Beach (calm water, snorkelling)
- Natural Bridge (geological wonder)
- Sitapur Beach (sunrise spot)
Baratang & Beyond · For the Adventurous
Baratang Island
- Limestone caves & mud volcanoes
- Parrot Island (bird watching, dawn)
- Diglipur (Saddle Peak trek)
- Barren Island (India's only active volcano)
Mistakes to Avoid
Common Mistakes First-Time Andaman Tourists Make
Knowing what not to do is as important as knowing what to do. These are the errors that show up most consistently in first-timer reviews.
- Booking flights but not ferries — the most common and most expensive mistake. See Tip 2.
- Underestimating travel time between islands — a ferry crossing plus terminal time plus transfers can eat 4–5 hours of your day.
- Packing for a city trip — heavy bags, formal shoes, and synthetic fabrics are misery in Andaman's heat and humidity.
- Scheduling the return flight on the same day as the last ferry — any delay makes you miss the flight. See Tip 13.
- Not carrying enough cash — outer island ATMs are unreliable and some are out of service for days at a time.
- Ignoring the weather forecast — a rough sea day with no backup plan means a wasted trip day.
- Trying to do too many islands in too few days — rushing between Wandoor, Havelock, Neil, and Baratang in 5 nights leaves you exhausted and under-impressed with each.
- Leaving water sports to the last day — if weather cancels them, you've lost your only chance. Book early in the trip, with a backup day available.
Common Questions
Frequently Asked Questions: Andaman Travel Tips for Beginners
How do I plan an Andaman trip for the first time?
Start with your dates and work backwards: book flights first, then ferry slots for each island crossing, then hotels. Build at least one buffer day into the itinerary. Five to six nights is the minimum to see Port Blair, Havelock, and Neil comfortably. Use a local operator like Andaman Travel Care for the logistics — the time saved is worth the cost.
What should I pack for an Andaman trip?
Light cotton clothes, reef-safe sunscreen (SPF 50+), a dry bag, waterproof sandals, one pair of closed-toe shoes, mosquito repellent, motion-sickness tablets, power bank, prescription medications, and cash. Download offline maps before leaving the mainland. See the full Andaman travel checklist below.
Is Andaman safe for solo travellers?
Yes — Port Blair, Havelock, and Neil Island are safe, well-policed destinations. Solo female travellers regularly visit with no safety concerns on the main islands. Standard precautions apply: don't swim alone at unpatrolled beaches, use hotel-recommended transport after dark, and stay on marked trails during forest walks.
Do I need a permit to visit Andaman?
Indian nationals need no permit for the main islands. Foreign nationals need a Restricted Area Permit (RAP), issued free on arrival at Port Blair airport. Some outer islands require an additional Protected Area Permit — check specific island requirements before planning visits to remote locations.
How much cash should I carry for Andaman?
Budget ₹15,000–₹25,000 per person in cash for a 5-night trip, for daily meals, local transport, tips, and shopping on outer islands. Pay hotels, water sports, and ferries by card or bank transfer in advance. Withdraw your full cash allocation in Port Blair before travelling to outer islands.
Can I use UPI or cards in Andaman?
UPI (PhonePe, Google Pay) works well in Port Blair and at most Havelock resorts. Neil Island has limited UPI acceptance outside larger guesthouses. Outer islands are effectively cash-only. Don't rely on digital payments as your only payment method beyond the main towns.
Printable Checklist
Andaman Travel Checklist: Before You Leave
Use this Andaman travel checklist to confirm everything is in place before departure day.
6–8 Weeks Before
Booking Phase
- Flights booked (both ways)
- Ferry seats reserved for all crossings
- Hotels confirmed on each island
- Water sports pre-booked
- Travel insurance purchased
- ID/passport valid & accessible
1 Week Before
Prep Phase
- Reef-safe sunscreen packed
- Dry bags and waterproof case ready
- Offline maps downloaded per island
- Motion-sickness tablets in hand luggage
- Power banks fully charged
- Cash withdrawn from city ATM
Day of Travel
Departure Day
- All confirmation QR codes screenshotted
- Ferry terminal arrival: 45 mins early
- Weather forecast checked
- Dry bag with essentials ready
- ID originals in accessible pocket
Throughout the Trip
On-Ground Rules
- Drink 3L+ water daily on beach days
- Don't touch coral or feed fish
- Carry cloth bag for rubbish on beaches
- Stay within flagged swim zones
- Reapply sunscreen every 90 minutes
Final Word
The Andaman Islands Reward the Prepared Traveller
Every tip in this Andaman travel guide exists because some traveller before you learned it the hard way — missed ferry, wrong clothes, no cash, sunburned on a boat with no shade. The good news is that avoiding these mistakes requires nothing more than a bit of advance planning. The islands themselves are extraordinary; the only thing that can get in the way is avoidable friction.
Book early. Pack light. Reserve ferries. Respect the reef. Leave buffer time. Do those five things and Andaman will give you some of the best travel days of your life.
Ready to Plan Your Andaman Trip?
Let Andaman Travel Care handle the ferries, hotels, and water sports — so you arrive knowing every detail is taken care of.
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