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Solomon Islands Liveaboards Review

Solomon Islands Liveaboards Review - Bilikiki Liveaboard
Bilikiki Liveaboard – Image courtesy of Liveaboard.com

If you are looking to scuba dive on a Solomon Island liveaboard and if you want to dive, dive, dive, you can’t go too far wrong by booking yourself on a Solomon Islands diving liveaboard.

Solomon Islands liveaboards diving reviews: Liveaboard diving in the Solomon Islands offers excellent scuba diving, and a Solomon Islands liveaboard is the best way to experience the pristine and colourful reefs and reef fish, plus wildlife such as whale sharks, blacktip and whitetip sharks, tiger sharks, manta rays, turtles and whales.

The best way to dive the Solomon Islands is by a scuba diving liveaboard. You can check the latest and best deals on Solomon Islands liveaboards using Liveaboard.com below, which opens in a new window:

Liveaboard.com search Solomon Islands scroll

Table of Solomon Islands liveaboards

This list of Solomon Islands liveaboards is in descending customer rating order, followed by Scuba Diving Luxury Rating (SDE Lux Rating, see below), so the liveaboards with the highest customer rating and the best SDE lux rating will be at the top of the list. If you want to change the list order, use the “Sort by” dropdown below.

Search
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Total Records Found: 3, showing 10 per page
Discover LiveaboardCustomer RatingSDE Lux Rating %Flexible BookingDive CoursesDietary RequirementsNitroxGear Rental
Review: MV Bilikiki; Book: MV Bilikiki 9.6 75% YES YES YES YES YES
Review: Solomons PNG Master (Taka); Book: Solomons PNG Master (Taka) 9.2 54% YES YES YES YES YES
Review: Solomons Master; Book: Solomons Master 0 65% NO NO YES YES YES

The column headed “SDE Lux Rating %” is my own Liveaboard Luxury Rating which I’ve assigned to all liveaboards. To discover how the rating is calculated for your chosen Solomon Islands liveaboard, click the liveaboard name link in the “Discover Liveaboard” column above (also this is explained in more detail below).

To help you to choose the right diving liveaboard for you, the “Scuba Diving Earth Liveaboard Luxury Rating” (SDE Lux Rating) means you can compare each liveaboard with other liveaboards on a like-for-like basis. This makes choosing the right liveaboard much easier.

The maximum rating for any liveaboard is 100%, and this rating is split between the 6 features listed below:

  1. Diver benefits: A higher ‘diver benefits‘ score means there are more features specifically for scuba divers. These include onboard nitrox, dive courses, gear rental etc.
  2. Liveaboard design features: The higher the ‘liveaboard design features‘ score, the more the dive boat has been designed with scuba divers in mind. This includes whether the dive boat was custom built for divers, if it has charging stations, outside showers etc.
  3. Cabin luxury: A high score in ‘cabin luxury‘ means the cabins on the liveaboard offer better features. These might include ensuite cabins, air-conditioning, daily housekeeping, seaviews, TVs etc.
  4. Onboard comfort: A high score in ‘onboard comfort‘ means there are more onboard features to make your dive trip feel more luxurious. These include what towels are provided on the liveaboard (always important for travelling light), complimentary toiletries, crew ratios etc.
  5. Food luxury: If you are a foodie then ‘food luxury‘ will be important to you, as a high score on this rating will mean there’s more on offer. These might include the type of food served onboard, the dietary requirements catered for, vegan food, vegetarian food, buffet style, fine dining etc.
  6. Drink luxury: If you like a drink in the evenings you may look for a higher score in ‘drink luxury‘ score, but this score also includes drinking water and soft drinks too.

The “SDE Luxury Rating Total” is calculated by adding the totals from each of the above features and benefits. The higher the SDE Luxury Rating, the more features and benefits the liveaboard has, which leads on nicely to how to use the SDE Luxury Rating.

How to use the SDE Luxury Rating score

When choosing the Solomon Islands liveaboard for you, your decision is helped by customer scores, which is how the liveaboards in the above table are chosen and sorted in descending order.

If you are stuck choosing between two or three of these Solomon Island liveaboards, where each one has a high customer score out of 10 and that have itineraries you like, use the SDE Luxury Rating score to help narrow down your choice.

Think about it like using Booking.com when searching for the best hotel to stay at. Booking.com also use a customer score where each customer rates hotels out of 10. This is similar to the liveaboard customer rating, which is also rated out of 10.

But let’s say you only like to stay in hotels rated 9 and above on Booking.com, but you also want the hotel to have WIFI or parking, or to have a swimming pool etc. The features each hotel has is secondary to the score out of 10.

In the case of liveaboards, the SDE Lux Rating system can also be used as a secondary tool in the same way to help you determine which liveaboard offers the best features to suit you.

Each of the Solomon Island liveaboards linked-to from the above table will be individually scored. Which means that if cabin luxury is important to you, focus on this score to help you choose your liveaboard. But if diver benefits are your top priority, use this score first, and so on.

Other Solomon Islands liveaboard considerations

In addition to the luxury rating explained above, there are other factors you may want to consider too. These are, as follows:

  1. Advanced diver benefits: A higher ‘advanced diver benefits‘ score means the liveaboard caters better for advanced divers. These include rebreather support, sidemount diving, and tech diver support.
  2. Underwater photographer benefits: A high score for ‘underwater photographer benefits‘ means the liveaboard caters well for underwater photography enthusiasts. These might include a camera room, a camera station and separate rinse for underwater cameras.
  3. Non-diving activities: If ‘non-diving activities‘ are important to you, a high score in this rating will be important. Non-diving activities include fishing, jacuzzi/hot tubs, kayaks, massage, naturalist activities, stand up paddle boards, jet skis etc.
  4. Onboard entertainment: There will be down-time between dives and in the evenings too, which means you may want to check the ‘onboard entertainment‘ score for each liveaboard too. These include audio and entertainment and a library.
  5. Travel benefits: If you’re looking for transfers from the airport or hotel, or for a budget friendly liveaboard the ‘travel benefits‘ score is the one to check.

When you review your chosen Solomon Islands liveaboard, scroll to the bottom of the review for these five additional features the dive boat may or may not have.

Here’s a taste of what to expect when you dive the Solomon Islands

Solomon Islands Serenade ~ an underwater journey

Some of the amazing creatures you may be lucky enough to spot when you scuba dive the Solomon Islands include manta rays, turtles, clownfish, garden eels, Mobula Rays, cuttlefish, octopus, nudibranchs, grouper spotted eagle rays, and even crocodiles.

But in the above video, did you notice how clear the visibility of the water is?

If it’s sea turtles you love to dive with, you may like to read this article as it explains the best places in the world to dive with turtles.

How to scuba dive the Solomon Islands

A liveaboard trip often works out cheaper than an island resort, although eating in the Solomon Islands is cheap. Dive packages at Solomon Islands resorts can be expensive, whereas the cost of the diving is included in the price of the liveaboard trip.

Please also take a read of this article about the pros vs the cons of liveaboard diving vs resort diving. You’ll get to read the pros and cons of both, so you can decide.

Whilst the food and drink is relatively cheap in the Solomon Islands, the great thing about a liveaboard trip is the food and some drinks are included in the cost of your liveaboard trip.

In addition to saving you money, a liveaboard trip is a far better way to dive the Solomon Islands. You’ll cover more distance and dive up to 3-4 times per day, including night dives.

The best liveaboard company with the lowest rates I’ve found so far is this website for: Liveaboards in the Solomon Islands. You’ll need to book flights to Honiara International Airport in addition to the cost of the liveaboard trip.

Pro tip: Book your Solomon Islands liveaboard scuba diving trip well in advance as liveaboards are popular and fill up quickly.

If you’re not familiar with liveaboard diving and need a few pro tips, you may like to read this article about what to expect on your first liveaboard trip. What you’ll realise when you read this article is how much more diving you get to do on a Liveaboard, which is perfect for beginner divers (who get their experience levels up) to advanced divers (who simply love scuba diving).

I hope you enjoyed this page about Solomon Islands liveaboards review

If you have more questions either about snorkelling or scuba diving (or specifically about Solomon Islands liveaboards review), please comment below with your questions.

Please share your experiences, plus dive sites, resorts and liveaboards you recommend. Share the time of year of your trip together with what you saw, the visibility, currents and dive operator, as this will help others who read this page.

There will also be many more pages and articles about scuba and scuba diving safety tips (and on snorkelling too) for you to read and learn about this fabulous sport.

Have fun and be safe!

Solomon Islands Liveaboards Review

Article written by Russell Bowyer who has been a scuba diver since diving on the Great Barrier Reef in Australia in 1989. After his first dive he trained as a BSAC diver in the UK. He attained his Diver Leader certification with BSAC. He then went on to become a scuba diving instructor, teaching others how to dive and was voted as Diving Officer and Treasurer for the Saffron Walden BSAC club too. Russell has dived all over the world, including the UK, on liveaboards in the Red Sea, the Caribbean, South Africa and the USA. Russell is experienced in all dive types, including drift diving, deep dives that involved decompression stops and recreational dives too.

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