
Perhentian & Redang Islands
The Perhentian and Redang Islands, off Malaysia's northeast coast, have the country's clearest water and healthiest reefs — genuinely excellent snorkeling and diving, with regular turtle sightings. The catch: the northeast monsoon shuts the islands down almost entirely from roughly November through February, when many resorts close and boats stop running. The reliable window is March/April through October, with June-August the driest and busiest.
If Langkawi is Malaysia's easy island, the Perhentians and Redang are the reward for travelers willing to plan around a real seasonal shutdown — turquoise water clear enough to see coral from the boat, a healthy population of green and hawksbill turtles, and noticeably less development than the west coast's resort islands.
The monsoon season is not optional to plan around
This is the single most important thing to know before booking: the northeast monsoon brings rough seas and heavy rain to Malaysia's east coast roughly November through February. Many Perhentian and Redang resorts physically close for this period — some remove their own jetties from the water — and boat services stop running entirely. Booking outside the reliable March/April-to-October window is a genuine planning mistake, not just a minor inconvenience.
Perhentian or Redang?
| Perhentian Islands | Redang | |
|---|---|---|
| Vibe | Slightly more backpacker/budget, two main islands (Besar & Kecil) | More upscale, resort-package-driven |
| Best for | Snorkeling straight off the beach, a livelier social scene | Diving, quieter, marine-park-protected reefs |
| Getting there | Speedboat from Kuala Besut jetty (~30-45 min) | Speedboat from Shahbandar jetty near Kuala Terengganu (~45-60 min) |
| Turtles | Regular sightings while snorkeling near the shore | A dedicated marine park with strong turtle conservation |
What to do
- Snorkeling straight off the beach — unlike a lot of destinations where you need a boat trip, several beaches here have healthy coral within swimming distance of the shore.
- PADI diving courses — both island groups have dive centers; visibility and coral health are among the best in Malaysia.
- Turtle-spotting — both green and hawksbill turtles are commonly seen while snorkeling; Redang's marine park protections make sightings especially reliable.
Getting there from the mainland
Both island groups require first reaching Malaysia's northeast coast — fly into Kota Bharu (for the Perhentians, via Kuala Besut jetty) or Kuala Terengganu (for Redang), then a short speedboat transfer. There's no direct flight to either island; budget a half-day for the full journey from KL.
Where to stay in Perhentian & Redang Islands — hotels
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