
Honduras Liveaboard Diving
Compare and book your favourite Papua New Guinea dive liveaboard
Honduras Liveaboards
-
Roatan Aggressor
Vendor:Liveaboard.comRegular price £218.00 GBPRegular priceUnit price / per
Note: The above “Price Per Day” was correct at the time of producing this article, as was the exchange rate used to convert the GBP cost to US Dollars and Euros. For an up-to-date cost for your chosen liveaboard, please visit the booking page.
Honduras Liveaboard Discounted Deals
Liveaboard Diving in Honduras, Bay Islands walls, canyons and whale sharks
Roatán, Utila and Guanaja by liveaboard, year-round warm water, quiet sites and big-animal moments for all experience levels
Why choose Honduras for a liveaboard
- Wall and canyon diving. The underwater mountain range of Roatán, Utila and Guanaja gives you dramatic walls, cracks and crevices from 5 m to 60 m.
- Cayman Trench scenery. Off Roatán the trench has carved canyons, trenches and reefs that are perfect for exploration.
- Big animals and rare coral. Whale sharks, dolphins and occasional manta rays, plus stands of rare black coral.
- Fewer boats. Only a limited number of liveaboards operate here, so sites feel unhurried and special.
- Warm, clear water. Easy conditions most of the year with very good visibility.
Where you will dive
- Roatán. Mary’s Place is a signature site. A deep volcanic crack with coral overhangs, large sea fans and sponges. Look for seahorses, lobster, octopus and schools of colourful reef fish. Around the island, the Cayman Trench adds dramatic walls and swim-throughs.
- Utila. North side, sheer walls and drop-offs. South side, healthy, vibrant fringing reefs. Black Hills is a lively seamount at about 10 to 50 m with barracuda, horse-eyed jacks and streams of Creole wrasse, all over bright coral.
- Guanaja. The most remote of the Bay Islands. Shallow reefs, wrecks, volcanic outcrops and wall dives. Mestizo Reef mixes two life-size head-and-shoulder statues of Christopher Columbus and Lempira with a shipwreck, Spanish cannons and a 16th-century bell. It is a brilliant underwater photography stop.
New to liveaboards
- Simple routine. Briefing, buddy checks, dive. Then eat, rest and repeat, often three or four dives when conditions allow.
- Less faff. Your kit stays set up on the dive deck. Crew handle fills and logistics so you focus on the water.
- Guided for comfort. Leaders match sites to the day’s conditions and to your experience, from easy shallow reefs to deeper walls.
Who this suits
- Beginners and newly certified divers. Plenty of shallow, calm sites with gentle entries to build confidence.
- Intermediate and experienced divers. Steeper walls, seamounts and canyons add depth and adventure.
- Underwater photographers. Sponges, black coral, statues and wreck artefacts, plus big-animal chances and schooling fish.
Conditions and best time to go
- Year-round diving. Air averages about 29.4 °C.
- Water temperature. Around 27 to 31 °C.
- Visibility. Often 24 to 45 m, a little lower in the rainy season.
- Rainy season. October to January can bring reduced visibility.
- Humidity. Highest from May to September.
Why a Honduras liveaboard is worth it
- You dive more and travel less. Sleep close to walls, canyons and seamounts, then roll in at the best times.
- You tick off signature sites. Mary’s Place, Black Hills and Mestizo Reef in one itinerary.
- You get warm water and fewer crowds. A unique Bay Islands circuit with whale shark potential and rare black coral.
If you want warm Caribbean walls, colourful reefs and a real mix of canyons, seamounts and wreck artefacts, Honduras liveaboards deliver. You will see more, surface from each dive smiling and come home with a full logbook.