Manta Point is the central-park manta cleaning station — a shallow reef plateau where reef and oceanic manta rays gather year-round to be cleaned of parasites by small reef fish. Visible from the boat, snorkellable in 5–8 metres of water, and one of the headline experiences of any Komodo charter.
The reef at Manta Point hosts a colony of small “cleaner fish” — mostly wrasse and butterflyfish — that eat parasites off the bodies of larger marine animals. Manta rays return to the same cleaning stations again and again, hovering motionless above the reef while the cleaner fish work over their skin and gills. From the surface, snorkellers can watch this entire interaction from about 4–5 metres above — the mantas barely register the human audience.
Komodo has two famous manta sites. Manta Point is the central-park site, beginner-friendly, snorkel-accessible, on every 2D1N+ itinerary. Manta Alley in south Komodo is the dive-only site — deeper, more current, with the highest year-round manta count in the park. Manta Point is on every charter; Manta Alley is reached only on 5D4N+ trips that push south.
The cardinal rules: do not touch, do not chase, do not block their movement path. Approach from the side, never from above. Keep 3 metres’ distance. No flash photography within one metre. Snorkellers stay at the surface; divers descend slowly along the side of the reef. Our guides brief these rules before every drop — following them is what keeps the site populated year after year.
Mantas are present all 12 months — one of the most reliable manta sites in Indonesia.
Highest concentration in July, August, September — up to 10–15 mantas per visit.
Best in dry season (15–25 m). Wet season can drop to 8–12 m but mantas still visible from surface.
Slack tides give calmest water for snorkellers. Captain plans drop time to match.
Mid-morning to early afternoon (09:00–14:00) for best surface light and warmest water.
Excellent snorkel site — mantas come up to 1–2 m of the surface, in full view from above.
No. Manta rays have no stingers and are filter-feeders. They are gentle, curious, and entirely safe to be near — just respect the no-touch rule.
Very high probability year-round. Off days happen (1 in 20 visits) but most charter guests report 3–8 mantas per snorkel.
Absolutely — Manta Point is the famous snorkel-mantas site. The cleaning station sits in 5–8 m of water, fully visible from the surface.
Yes — underwater video at Manta Point gives the best wildlife footage of any Komodo stop. GoPro rental also available on our boats.