# Seychelles Honeymoon Guide: Mahe, Praslin & La Digue

> The Seychelles' granite-boulder beaches are the most distinctive in the Indian Ocean. Here is how couples should split time across Mahe, Praslin, and La Digue — plus the private-island splurge at North Island.

*Published 2026-07-03 · By Marco Alvarez*

If Bora Bora is defined by its volcanic peak and the Maldives by its overwater villas, the Seychelles is defined by rock — the enormous, smooth, rose-and-grey granite boulders that frame its beaches like sculpture. These are the only granitic mid-ocean islands on earth, remnants of an ancient microcontinent, and they give the Seychelles a scenery no coral atoll can replicate. For honeymooners, the archipelago's genius is that its three most-visited inner islands — Mahe, Praslin, and La Digue — sit within short ferry hops of one another, each playing a distinct role. This guide shows how to combine them, where the private-island splurge lives, and when to go.

## Mahe: the gateway island

**Mahe** is the largest and most developed island, home to the international airport, the capital Victoria, and roughly 90 percent of the country's population. It is the natural first stop and the one with the widest choice of hotels, restaurants, and beaches. Beau Vallon, on the northwest coast, is the main resort beach — broad, calm in season, and lined with dining. But Mahe's finest coves are quieter: Anse Intendance and Anse Takamaka on the south coast are dramatic, boulder-framed, and often near-empty. Victoria itself, one of the world's smallest capitals, is worth a morning for its Creole architecture, colorful market, and botanical gardens. The [official Seychelles tourism portal](https://www.seychelles.com/) is a reliable starting point for planning. Give Mahe three or four nights as your arrival buffer and your base for exploring beyond the resort strip.

## Praslin: the coco de mer island

An hour by fast ferry from Mahe, **Praslin** is the Seychelles' second island and its natural heart. Its headline attraction is the **Vallee de Mai**, a UNESCO World Heritage Site preserving a near-primeval palm forest that is one of only two places on earth where the coco de mer — the largest seed in the plant kingdom — grows naturally. UNESCO's [Vallee de Mai listing](https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/261/) notes the reserve shelters six endemic palm species and the endangered black parrot found nowhere else. Praslin's beaches are equally celebrated: **Anse Lazio**, a wide, palm-backed crescent, is consistently ranked among the world's most beautiful and, crucially, is excellent for actual swimming, while Anse Georgette (accessed through a resort) is a quieter jewel. Praslin balances nature and comfort better than any other Seychelles island; three or four nights lets you cover the forest, the beaches, and a day trip to nearby islets.

## La Digue: the postcard island

Just 15 minutes by ferry from Praslin, tiny **La Digue** is the Seychelles at its most timeless. With almost no cars, visitors move by bicycle or ox-cart, and the pace slows immediately. Its crown jewel is **Anse Source d'Argent**, reached on foot or by bike through the historic L'Union Estate — a series of intimate coves divided by towering pink granite boulders, arguably the most photographed beach on the planet, as Lonely Planet's [attraction page](https://www.lonelyplanet.com/seychelles/la-digue/attractions/anse-source-d-argent/a/poi-sig/1402802/355594) describes. The water here is shallow and sheltered rather than ideal for swimming, so treat it as a scenery-and-photography destination; for a proper swim, cycle on to Grand Anse or Petite Anse on the wilder east coast (calmer outside the trade-wind months). Two or three nights on La Digue is the right dose of stillness to close a Seychelles honeymoon.

## North Island: the private-island apex

For couples with the budget for a once-in-a-lifetime splurge, **North Island** is the Seychelles' most storied private-island resort — a barefoot-luxury sanctuary of a handful of enormous hand-crafted villas on a rewilded island, reached by helicopter or boat from Mahe. It gained global fame as the honeymoon choice of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge. The all-inclusive villa rates sit far above the mainstream islands, but the experience — total privacy, personal butlers, and a genuine conservation mission restoring native flora and fauna — is unmatched in the region; details are on the [North Island site](https://www.north-island.com/). Fregate Island is a comparable private-island alternative. These properties suit couples who want to disappear entirely, with the honest caveat that the price and the single-island confinement are significant considerations.

## How the islands compare
IslandCharacterSignature drawBest forMaheLargest, most developed, arrival hubAnse Intendance, Victoria, diningArrival buffer, variety, beachesPraslinNature and comfort in balanceVallee de Mai, Anse LazioCoco de mer forest, swimming beachesLa DigueCar-free, slow, timelessAnse Source d'ArgentScenery, cycling, stillnessNorth IslandUltra-private resort islandBarefoot luxury, conservationTotal seclusion, apex splurge
**Bottom line:** Combine all three inner islands — Mahe for variety and arrival, Praslin for the coco de mer forest and swimmable Anse Lazio, and La Digue for its otherworldly boulder beaches. Add a private-island night at North Island only if the budget allows a genuine splurge.

## A sample 10-night route

Nights 1–4: Mahe, settling in with south-coast beaches (Anse Intendance, Anse Takamaka), a Victoria morning, and a hike in Morne Seychellois National Park. Night 5: Ferry to Praslin. Nights 5–8: Praslin, for the Vallee de Mai, Anse Lazio, and a boat day to Curieuse Island to see giant Aldabra tortoises. Night 8: Short ferry to La Digue. Nights 9–10: La Digue by bicycle — Anse Source d'Argent at golden hour, a swim at Grand Anse, and a slow Creole dinner before returning to Mahe for departure.

Practical honeymoon notes: book ferries in advance and align crossings with your flight times; carry Seychellois rupees for L'Union Estate and Vallee de Mai entry fees, which are cash-only at the gate; and travel in the April-May or October-November calm windows for the clearest seas. Respect the coco de mer's protected status — genuine nuts require a government certificate. Handled with a little planning, the Seychelles delivers a honeymoon of extraordinary, one-of-a-kind beauty that feels both wild and effortlessly romantic.

## Sources

1. [Vallee de Mai Nature Reserve](https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/261/)
2. [Official Seychelles Tourism Portal](https://www.seychelles.com/)
3. [North Island Seychelles](https://www.north-island.com/)
4. [Seychelles Inter-Island Ferries and Cruises](https://www.silhouettecruises.com/)
5. [Anse Source d'Argent, La Digue](https://www.lonelyplanet.com/seychelles/la-digue/attractions/anse-source-d-argent/a/poi-sig/1402802/355594)

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Source: https://eraaway.com/destinations/seychelles-honeymoon-guide-mahe-praslin-la-digue
Index: https://eraaway.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://eraaway.com/llms-full.txt
