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FRENCH POLYNESIA: OVERWATER, UNDERSTATED, AND WORTH THE FLIGHT

Moorea's peaks, Bora Bora's lagoon, and the Tuamotus for divers. French Polynesia is the trip people fantasize about — and it delivers, if you choose the right island order and don't overpay for the wrong overwater bungalow. The key decision isn't which island to go to. It's sequencing them so the trip builds rather than plateaus.

Moorea

3-4 days

Twenty minutes by fast ferry from Tahiti, Moorea is the island that actually rewards exploration. Twin bays — Cook's and Opunohu — frame a volcanic interior of pineapple farms, hiking trails, and viewpoints that put Bora Bora's scenery to shame. The snorkeling is excellent. The overwater options are more affordable than Bora Bora and the energy is less performative. For most itineraries, Moorea is where the trip finds its rhythm.

Best for:
Honeymooners and couples who want the overwater experience alongside a genuinely interesting island to explore

Planner’s edge:
Most travellers rush Moorea to get to Bora Bora — we reverse the instinct and give it the nights it deserves

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Bora Bora

3-4 days

The lagoon spectacle. The turquoise water against the black peak of Mount Otemanu is one of the most photographed views in the world, and it earns it. The overwater bungalows here set the category's standard. This is where French Polynesia does luxury with full commitment — but the quality of the bungalow and resort matters enormously. A wrong booking in Bora Bora is an expensive disappointment.

Best for:
Milestone anniversaries and honeymoons where the visual payoff is the point

Planner’s edge:
Overwater bungalows vary wildly — we know which ones justify the price, which ones photograph better than they live, and how to read the resort map for the best lagoon position

The Tuamotus & Beyond

3–5 days

Rangiroa and Fakarava are the atolls for divers — passes that funnel thousands of fish, shark aggregations, and dolphin pods into channels of clear blue water. Non-divers find them striking but minimal; snorkelers can still access the passes. Taha'a offers quiet luxury and vanilla plantations — the island produces most of the world's Tahitian vanilla, and a private motu lunch on the lagoon here is one of French Polynesia's more understated pleasures. These islands are the extension that separates a good French Polynesia trip from an exceptional one.

Best for:
Serious divers (Tuamotus), and travellers wanting quiet luxury away from Bora Bora's main circuit (Taha'a)

Planner’s edge:
The inter-island air network runs on Air Tahiti's schedule, which is less flexible than it looks — we sequence the islands around flight availability, not the other way around

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START WITH A CONSULT

A focused conversation to align on goals, style, and priorities. You leave with direction, not vague inspiration.

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