Moko Alor Dive Resort, Alor

Discover Moko Alor Dive Resort’s thriving house reef, luxurious accommodation, pristine beach and world-class diving and snorkeling.

from$200 /night

per person, full board

Overview

  • Beachfront resort with 2-room bungalows built along the shoreline
  • Exciting house reef, and easy access Alor's exceptional dive sites
  • Relax in the resort infinity pool, or each room has its own plunge pool

Discover a slice of scuba diving heaven at Moko Alor Dive Resort, located along the pristine shores of Alor in Indonesia. This stunning beachfront resort is perfect for diving and snorkeling enthusiasts with its exceptional house reef and abundant marine life, extensive facilities including a swimming pool, plunge pool, and camera room, and an experienced dive team waiting to reveal the secrets of Alor’s world-class scuba diving. And it is the only resort in the area with its own stretch of beach and pool - perfect for relaxing at the end of the day.

Rooms

  • Beachfront seaview villa

    1 x King bed, 2 x twin beds, sleeps 2

    Air conditioning, Ensuite bathroom, Private pool...
    View room details
    from $200 /night

Resort checklist

Number of rooms:3
Restaurants and bars:1

Meal plans:

  • Full Board
Official dive center rating:PADI
House reef:Yes
Nitrox:Yes

Your stay at Moko Alor Dive Resort

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Diving in Alor

  • Hammerhead shark
    Hammerhead shark
    Not frequently
  • Schooling reef fish
    Schooling reef fish
    From March to December
  • Cryptic Scorpionfish
    Cryptic Scorpionfish
    Not frequently
  • Clown frogfish
    Clown frogfish
    From March to December
  • Pygmy seahorse
    Pygmy seahorse
    From March to December
  • Unique crabs & shrimps
    Unique crabs & shrimps
    From March to December
  • Healthy corals
    Healthy corals
    From March to December
  • Walls & pinnacles
    Walls & pinnacles
    From March to December
  • Plentiful reef life
    Plentiful reef life
    From March to December

Alor’s scuba diving is characterised by clear waters and currents, near-pristine reefs and fields of beautiful corals, sponges and anemones. Unusually, visitors can explore an entire spectrum of different dive sites - from colourful reefs packed with marine life and current swept pinnacles with big pelagic species, to sheltered bays with amazing muck diving - all in a single day. Throw in the occasional eagle ray, reef sharks and sea snakes, the possibility of encountering hammerhead sharks, thresher sharks and even mola mola and whales, and you can understand why Alor and the sites of the Pantar Strait are considered to be amongst the best in Indonesia.

Some of the classic reef sites include the Great Wall of Pantar, Cathedral, Max’s Point, Current Alley and Apuri, or Clown Valley. These sites offer beautiful drift dives along dramatic walls or over fields of colourful corals and anemones, as well schools of fish and even plenty of smaller species such as pygmy seahorses, leaf scorpionfish and frogfish. At sites exposed to the strong currents, divers can expect schools of jackfish and barracuda, tuna and rainbow runners, and - if the conditions are right  - hammerheads, thresher sharks and even mola mola. In fact, along with sites in the Banda Sea, Alor is one of the few places left in Indonesia where visitors have a reasonable chance of sighting hammerheads during the cold water periods.

Muck diving in Alor

As well as its spectacular reefs, Alor is building a reputation as a world-class muck diving destination - particularly amongst divers that would like to get away from the crowds. Most of the reef sites have a fantastic diversity of life, but it is the proper ‘muck’ sites in Kalabahi Bay on Alor, and Beangabang Bay on Pantar, that attract those divers in search of unusual ‘critters’.  The currents that run through the strait push nutrient-rich, cold water into these bays, creating perfect conditions for critters. Rhinopias are the star of the show, but seahorses, frogfish, ghost pipefish, Ambon scorpionfish, Coleman shrimps, mandarinfish, weird and wonderful nudibranchs and plenty of unusual crustaceans and cephalopods are all on the cards as well.