Table of Contents
- Introduction β The Four Days That Rewired My Travel Standards
- Where Is Andaman Located?
- How To Get To Andaman
- Getting Around the Islands
- Where To Stay in Andaman
- Top Things To Do β Beaches, Diving, History & More
- Practical Travel Tips
- Best Time To Visit Andaman
- The Perfect 4-Day Andaman Itinerary
- Budget Breakdown
- Final Verdict
- SEO Tags
- Pinterest & Image Strategy
- π΄ Introduction β The Four Days That Rewired My Travel Standards {#intro}
The boat pulled away from Havelock jetty at 7 AM on my last morning and I sat on the upper deck watching the island shrink β the green tree line first, then the white sand edge, then the turquoise water lightening to pale aquamarine at the shallows before deepening to the indigo of the open ocean. I had four days. I had spent them doing things that cost almost nothing and seeing things I’ll spend years trying to describe properly.
Four days is the minimum for Andaman. Not because there isn’t enough to do in less β there’s too much β but because the islands punish haste. The best moments here don’t happen on schedule. They happen when you show up at Radhanagar Beach at 6 AM because you couldn’t sleep, or when your boat slows in a mangrove creek at dusk and the bioluminescence turns the water into something from a dream, or when you find a beach-shack restaurant with three plastic tables and a grilled tuna that costs βΉ280 and tastes like everything you imagined a tropical island meal would taste like.
This is the four-day itinerary I wish I’d had before I went. Use it as a framework. Let Andaman fill in the rest.
- π Where Is Andaman Located? {#location}

The Andaman Islands are an archipelago of over 572 islands in the Bay of Bengal, approximately 1,400 km southeast of the Indian mainland and around 150 km from Myanmar’s Irrawaddy Delta coast. Port Blair on South Andaman is the administrative capital and the gateway through which all travellers enter. The island chain sits on the same geological ridge as the Indonesian archipelago, which is why the coral reefs, tropical forests, and marine biodiversity feel closer to Southeast Asia than to anything on the Indian subcontinent β and why the islands deliver an experience that genuinely competes with destinations like Bali and the Maldives at a fraction of the price, as the Tripyverse Andaman 2026 review details at length.
- βοΈ How To Get To Andaman {#howtoget}
By Air: The only practical route for most travellers. Veer Savarkar International Airport in Port Blair is served by IndiGo, Air India, SpiceJet, and GoFirst from Chennai (1h 20min), Kolkata (2h), Delhi (3h 30min), Mumbai (3h 30min), Bengaluru (2h 30min), and Hyderabad. Fares swing dramatically with season β off-peak return tickets from Chennai start around βΉ4,000ββΉ6,000; peak season (DecemberβFebruary) regularly runs βΉ10,000ββΉ18,000 from major metros.
Budget flight strategy: Set a Google Flights fare alert 6β8 weeks out. Tuesday and Wednesday departures are consistently cheaper than weekends. Booking the earliest morning flight from your home city often gives you the cheapest option and lets you reach Port Blair in time for the same-day afternoon ferry to Havelock β crucial when you only have four days.
By Ship: The Shipping Corporation of India runs vessels from Chennai, Kolkata, and Visakhapatnam to Port Blair (50β72 hours). Fares are cheap (βΉ1,200ββΉ4,000 for bunk class) but the journey burns 2β3 days each way β not compatible with a four-day trip. Skip this unless you have a full week and a romantic attachment to sea voyages.
Passport/Permit: Indian nationals need no permit for Port Blair, Havelock, or Neil Island. Foreign nationals receive a free Restricted Area Permit (RAP) on arrival at Port Blair airport.
- π Getting Around the Islands {#gettingaround}

Andaman inter-island transport is the part that requires the most advance planning and causes the most first-timer frustration when ignored.
Port Blair:
- Autos: βΉ100ββΉ200 for in-town rides. No meters β agree price before getting in.
- Cabs: βΉ300ββΉ500 from airport to town. Ola operates within Port Blair.
- Rental scooters: βΉ300ββΉ500/day for exploring Port Blair surrounds (Corbyn’s Cove, Chidiya Tapu).
Port Blair to Havelock (Swaraj Dweep):
- Government ferries: βΉ400ββΉ550 per head, 1.5β2 hours. Depart twice daily.
- Private speed ferries (Makruzz, Nautika, Green Ocean): βΉ1,000ββΉ1,600 per head, 60β90 minutes.
- Critical: Book inter-island ferries online in advance. In peak season (DecemberβFebruary), boats sell out 2β3 weeks ahead. A missed ferry means a wasted day and a βΉ3,000ββΉ5,000 emergency alternative.
Havelock Island:
- Rental scooters: βΉ350ββΉ450/day β the correct vehicle for this island. Roads are manageable.
- Taxis: Available at the jetty but charge βΉ300ββΉ600 per trip. Only use for beach transfers with luggage.
- Shared jeeps: Run between the numbered villages at βΉ20ββΉ40 per seat.
Neil Island (Shaheed Dweep):
- Bicycles: βΉ100ββΉ150/day. The entire island is coverable by cycle. Everything is within 6 km.
- Autos: βΉ100ββΉ150 for cross-island trips.
For a four-day trip: Fly in early, transfer immediately to Havelock by afternoon ferry, spend Days 1β3 on Havelock, optionally swap to Neil Island for Day 4 morning, return to Port Blair for evening flight.
- π¨ Where To Stay in Andaman {#wheretostay}
Budget (βΉ900ββΉ2,500/night):
On Havelock, the Village No. 3 cluster near Vijaynagar Beach (Beach No. 5) has the best concentration of budget guesthouses. GoSlow Eco Cottages is the backpacker institution β solar-powered bamboo cottages from βΉ1,400, an excellent restaurant, and a genuinely good atmosphere for solo travellers. Symphony Palms Beach Resort offers clean rooms with garden outlook from βΉ1,800. In Port Blair, Hotel Sentinel near Aberdeen Bazaar is the reliable budget fallback (βΉ900ββΉ1,500).
Mid-Range (βΉ3,000ββΉ8,000/night):
Wild Orchid Resort on Havelock is the consistent mid-range benchmark β beachside location, clean well-maintained rooms, an on-site dive centre (convenient for Day 2 diving), and a restaurant that handles both seafood and vegetarian meals competently. Barefoot at Havelock has larger rooms, slightly more resort-feel, and a good pool. Both work well for couples or families who want comfort without luxury pricing.
Luxury (βΉ10,000ββΉ35,000+/night):
Taj Coral Reef Resort on Havelock is the Andamans’ closest match to Maldives-style resort luxury β beachfront villa rooms, a gorgeous pool, fine-dining restaurant, and the kind of service that makes four days feel like they cost more than they did. SeaShell Resort on Neil Island is the other top-tier pick for those who want quiet luxury away from Havelock’s relative bustle.
For travellers who want the logistics handled end-to-end, Tripyverse has structured options across all budgets: the Andaman Escape package for budget travellers, the Andaman Explorer for a fuller mid-range island circuit, and the Andaman Grand Journey for those who want the complete experience without the ferry-booking anxiety that ruins many first-timer trips.
- π Top Things To Do in Andaman {#todo}
ποΈ 1. Radhanagar Beach β The One That Sets the Standard

Beach No. 7 on Havelock Island. Two kilometres of white sand so fine it makes a sound when you walk on it. Turquoise water that transitions from knee-deep clarity to deep cobalt in a way that looks digitally enhanced but isn’t. Dense jungle pressing right to the beach edge, so there’s no resort sprawl visible in any direction β just sand, water, and forest.
I went at 6 AM on Day 2 and had the entire beach to myself for ninety minutes. The light at that hour on Radhanagar is something I don’t have adequate language for β horizontal, golden, making every grain of sand individually visible. By 8 AM, two other people had appeared. By 10 AM, it was busy. By 2 PM, it was crowded. The lesson is obvious.
Honest warning: The sea at Radhanagar has genuine undertow power. Swim only in the flagged zones. The beach is patrolled and the flags are meaningful β respect them.
π€Ώ 2. Snorkelling at Elephant Beach β The Reef Without a Certification
Accessible by a 30-minute boat from Havelock jetty (βΉ500ββΉ800 per head) or a 45-minute forest trek, Elephant Beach delivers Andaman’s most accessible reef snorkelling β coral gardens at 1β3 metres depth, visible to complete beginners, with parrotfish, surgeonfish, and occasional reef sharks. The coral health varies (some bleaching from previous warming events) but the density of fish life is extraordinary even now.
The beach itself is remote in feel β no permanent structures, jungle right to the waterline, the sense that you’ve arrived somewhere beyond the tourist circuit even though technically you haven’t.
Budget tip: The forest trek is free except a βΉ50 Forest Department fee. Pack your own snorkel mask (rental gear on the beach is mediocre). Arrive before 10 AM to beat the day-trip boats that clog the bay by midmorning.
π’ 3. Scuba Diving β At Least Once

Even if you’ve never dived before, a beginner’s dive in Andaman β locally called a “resort dive” or “try dive” β is worth every one of the βΉ2,500ββΉ3,500 it costs. The dive operators on Havelock (Dive India, Barefoot Scuba, Ocean Tribe) run proper instruction, good equipment, and know the sites intimately.
The sites within easy reach of Havelock β Lighthouse, Aquarium, Nemo Reef, The Wall β have hawksbill turtles, manta rays in season, ghost pipefish, moray eels, and coral structures that go deep in ways that snorkelling simply cannot show you. I did my first ever dive on Havelock. I came back up unable to speak for about five minutes.
Insider tip: Morning dives (7β10 AM) consistently have 20β30% better visibility than afternoon dives. Book your dive slot the moment you arrive on Havelock β operators fill up fast in peak season.
ποΈ 4. Neil Island (Shaheed Dweep) β For Half a Day or a Full Night

Neil Island, 37 km from Havelock, is what Havelock was ten years ago β quieter, less developed, more genuinely village-like. Three beaches worth seeing: Bharatpur (calm water, good for swimming), Laxmanpur (best sunset in the Andamans, full stop), and Natural Bridge (a coral rock arch accessible at low tide, completely photogenic, completely free).
The Laxmanpur sunset deserves its own paragraph. The rock formations in the shallows catch the last horizontal light and go gold-orange. The water behind them goes molten. The sky cycles through colours it usually saves for special occasions. People arrive early and stay until it’s completely dark, which tells you everything about how good it is.
How to fit it in four days: Take the morning ferry from Havelock to Neil (βΉ350ββΉ800) on Day 3, spend the day and night, then return to Port Blair via NeilβPort Blair ferry on Day 4 afternoon. It adds one ferry booking to manage but the experience is worth it.
πΏ 5. Chidiya Tapu β The Bird’s Eye View Nobody Crowds

“Chidiya Tapu” means Bird Island in Hindi, and the southernmost tip of South Andaman justifies the name. A 25-km drive from Port Blair through mangrove forest and fishing villages, Chidiya Tapu has a sunset viewpoint that puts you above the tree canopy looking west over the ocean, watching the sun go down over multiple forested islands layered on the horizon.
The birding here is serious β Andaman serpent eagles, red-necked falcons, Andaman woodpeckers β but even for non-birders the forest walk and the viewpoint are worth the βΉ400ββΉ500 cab fare from Port Blair. Plan it for Day 1 afternoon before your Havelock departure the following morning.
πΆ 6. Kayaking Through North Bay β Coral Without the Crowd
North Bay Island, accessible by a 15-minute boat from Port Blair harbour (βΉ100ββΉ150 per head on government boats), is the day-tripping spot most Port Blair tourists visit for glass-bottom boat rides. Skip the glass-bottom boat and hire a kayak instead (βΉ500ββΉ700/hour from the water sports operators at the jetty).
Kayaking lets you navigate the reef edge at your own pace, look straight down into 2β3 metres of clear water, and stop wherever the coral or fish justify it. The experience is quieter, more controlled, and significantly more rewarding than the glass-bottom boat that shows you the same reef through a scratched acrylic panel with twenty other people crammed in alongside.
π½οΈ 7. Andaman Seafood β The Meals You’ll Talk About

The fish here is the freshest I’ve eaten in India. Tuna steaks, barracuda, red snapper, lobster, and prawn β caught that morning and cooked by early afternoon. The beach shack restaurants on Havelock (Full Meal Restaurant near Beach No. 5, the unnamed stalls near the Radhanagar road junction) serve grilled fish with rice and local vegetables for βΉ200ββΉ350 per plate.
In Port Blair, Annapurna Restaurant near Aberdeen Bazaar has been cooking prawn curry and fish thali since before most current travel bloggers were born. Icy Spicy on the Aberdeen Bazaar main road does the best breakfast in Port Blair β fish curry and rice at 8 AM for βΉ120, and it is absolutely the correct way to start a morning before catching a ferry.
For vegetarians: Andaman caters adequately but not brilliantly. Dal, sabzi, and rice are available everywhere. The coconut-based curries on Neil Island are genuinely good. Just don’t come primarily for the vegetarian food β come for the fish and let the vegetarian options be the backup.
- π‘ Practical Travel Tips {#tips}
Cash is essential: Outside Port Blair’s main hotels and restaurants, the Andamans run on cash. Havelock has ATMs in Village No. 3 but they run dry regularly during peak season. Carry βΉ6,000ββΉ8,000 in cash when you leave Port Blair for the islands. Don’t rely on finding working ATMs on Neil Island β there’s one and it fails frequently.
Book ferries before you book anything else: This is the most common first-timer mistake. Ferry slots on private speed boats fill 2β3 weeks ahead in DecemberβFebruary. Book your inter-island connections on makruzz.com, andamans.gov.in, or through your accommodation before confirming your flights. A missed ferry connection can collapse an entire four-day itinerary.
Internet: BSNL is the most reliable carrier across all islands. Airtel works in Port Blair and Havelock town. Jio is inconsistent beyond Port Blair. Download offline maps of Havelock and Neil Island before you leave the mainland β you’ll need them when you’re trying to find Beach No. 7 on a scooter in the dark.
Sun protection: The Andaman sun at this latitude is genuinely intense. SPF 50+ minimum, reapply every 90 minutes in the water, and pack a rashguard for snorkelling. A sunburn on Day 1 that keeps you out of the water for Days 2β4 is the most preventable travel catastrophe.
Safety: The Andamans are very safe for all traveller types including solo women. The main physical dangers are ocean currents (respect the beach flags), sea urchins on reef walks (wear sandals in shallow coral areas), and scooter riding on sandy roads (brake earlier than you think you need to).
- π Best Time To Visit Andaman {#besttime}
| Month | Weather | Diving Visibility | Crowds | Budget Rating |
| October | Post-monsoon, warm | GoodβVery Good | Low | βββββ |
| November | Clear, 24β30Β°C | Excellent | LowβMedium | βββββ |
| December | Clear, 22β28Β°C | Excellent | High | βββ |
| January | Clear, 22β28Β°C | Excellent | Very High | ββ |
| February | Clear, 24β30Β°C | Excellent | High | βββ |
| March | Warm, some wind | Good | Medium | ββββ |
| April | Hot, 28β34Β°C | Good | Low | ββββ |
| MayβSeptember | Monsoon | Poor | Very Low | Not recommended |
The four-day trip sweet spot: November for the best combination of excellent weather, good diving, manageable crowds, and pre-peak prices. October works for budget-priority travellers who don’t mind slightly choppier seas. MarchβApril for travellers who have schedule flexibility β weather is still very good, prices drop, and the beach crowds thin noticeably.
Peak season reality check: DecemberβFebruary means the best weather but also the most expensive flights, the most crowded ferries, and Radhanagar Beach having genuine crowds by 10 AM. Book everything 4β6 weeks ahead and accept the premium pricing as the cost of perfect conditions.
- β³ The Perfect 4-Day Andaman Itinerary {#itinerary}

Pre-trip essentials: Book all inter-island ferries before departure. Pack cash (βΉ8,000 minimum). Confirm dive slot on Havelock in advance.
Day 1 β Port Blair: Cellular Jail + Chidiya Tapu + Night Ferry
- 7 AM: Land at Port Blair. Quick breakfast at Icy Spicy (fish curry + chai, βΉ120).
- 9 AM: Cellular Jail β 2 hours minimum. Don’t rush this.
- 12 PM: Lunch at Annapurna (βΉ200ββΉ300).
- 2 PM: Cab to Chidiya Tapu for sunset viewpoint (βΉ400ββΉ500 return cab).
- 6 PM: Return Port Blair, collect bags.
- Evening: Take the late afternoon or early morning ferry to Havelock (book this slot β the Makruzz 2 PM departure from Port Blair puts you on Havelock before sunset if timed right).
- Estimated spend: βΉ2,000ββΉ3,500
Day 2 β Havelock: Radhanagar at Dawn + Scuba Dive + Elephant Beach
- 6 AM: Radhanagar Beach at dawn β rent a scooter the evening before and ride there in the dark. It’s worth it.
- 8 AM: Breakfast at guesthouse.
- 9:30 AM: Scuba dive or Elephant Beach snorkelling trip (book in advance; βΉ800ββΉ3,500 depending on option)
- 1 PM: Lunch at Full Meal Restaurant near Beach No. 5 (grilled fish + rice, βΉ280).
- 3 PM: Explore Beach No. 5 β swim, read, decompress.
- Sunset: Radhanagar again β different light entirely, worth the return trip.
- Estimated spend: βΉ2,000ββΉ5,000 (depending on scuba vs. snorkelling)
Day 3 β Havelock to Neil Island + Natural Bridge + Laxmanpur Sunset
- 9 AM: Ferry Havelock to Neil Island (βΉ350ββΉ800, 45 minutes).
- 10 AM: Rent a bicycle on Neil Island (βΉ100ββΉ150).
- 11 AM: Bharatpur Beach β swim in the calm, shallow water.
- 1 PM: Lunch at a Neil Island restaurant (simpler options than Havelock, still good).
- 3 PM: Natural Bridge at low tide β check tide times before going.
- 5 PM: Laxmanpur Beach for sunset β arrive early for the best rock position.
- Estimated spend: βΉ1,500ββΉ2,500
Day 4 β Neil Island Morning + Return to Port Blair + Departure
- 7 AM: Early morning cycle around Neil Island β the paddy fields and coconut groves in morning light.
- 9 AM: Breakfast at guesthouse.
- 11 AM: Ferry Neil Island to Port Blair (βΉ350ββΉ800, 1.5 hours).
- 1 PM: Arrive Port Blair. Light lunch at Aberdeen Bazaar.
- 2 PM: North Bay Island kayaking if flight allows (2-hour activity, βΉ600ββΉ900 total).
- 4 PM: Head to airport for evening departure.
- Estimated spend: βΉ1,500ββΉ2,500
- π° Budget Breakdown {#budget}
| Category | Budget | Mid-Range | Luxury |
| Flights return (from Chennai) | βΉ5,000ββΉ8,000 | βΉ8,000ββΉ12,000 | βΉ12,000ββΉ18,000 |
| Accommodation (3 nights) | βΉ3,600ββΉ7,500 | βΉ9,000ββΉ24,000 | βΉ30,000ββΉ1,05,000 |
| Inter-island ferries | βΉ1,500ββΉ2,500 | βΉ2,500ββΉ4,000 | βΉ4,000ββΉ6,000 |
| Food (4 days) | βΉ1,600ββΉ2,800 | βΉ3,200ββΉ6,000 | βΉ6,000ββΉ12,000 |
| Activities (snorkel/dive/kayak) | βΉ1,500ββΉ3,000 | βΉ4,000ββΉ8,000 | βΉ8,000ββΉ15,000 |
| Local transport (scooter/auto) | βΉ1,200ββΉ2,000 | βΉ2,000ββΉ3,500 | βΉ3,500ββΉ6,000 |
| 4-day total | βΉ14,400ββΉ25,800 | βΉ28,700ββΉ57,500 | βΉ63,500ββΉ1,62,000 |
Where to save: Government ferries over private speed boats (saves βΉ600ββΉ1,000 per crossing). GoSlow or Village No. 3 guesthouses over beachfront resorts. Elephant Beach snorkelling over scuba. Local beach shack meals over resort dining.
Where to splurge: At least one scuba dive (the reef experience is categorically different from snorkelling). A scooter on Havelock β worth every rupee of the βΉ400/day for the freedom. One meal at a quality beachside restaurant with a sea view. And ferry timing β pay the extra for the private speed boat at least once to save the 30β40 minutes that a government ferry adds to each crossing when your days are limited.
For travellers wanting a group experience that brings the per-head cost down sharply, the Andaman Holiday Circle group tour is worth looking at β group pricing on a 5N6D circuit makes this one of the most cost-effective Andaman formats available.

- π€ Final Verdict {#verdict}
Four days in Andaman gave me more genuinely distinct experiences than a week in destinations I’d spent triple the money visiting. The reef at Elephant Beach. The Cellular Jail in the quiet before it opens to tourists. Radhanagar at 6 AM with the whole beach to myself. The Natural Bridge at low tide with the afternoon light doing things to the coral rock that made me stop moving entirely. The tuna steak at a plastic table with the ocean 4 metres away for βΉ280.
The honest drawback: Four days is the minimum but the logistics make it feel tighter than it should. Every day involves at least one boat connection. Missed ferry bookings cascade badly. Travellers who struggle with itinerary complexity or who want to simply arrive and wander will find the Andamans more logistically demanding than, say, a Goa trip or a Kerala backwater cruise. The Kerala travel guide on Tripyverse is a genuine alternative for travellers who want tropical beauty without the inter-island ferry logistics.
Perfect for: Couples on their first proper tropical island trip who can’t justify Maldives prices. Divers and snorkellers for whom the reef is the primary motivation. Solo travellers who want genuine adventure with genuine safety. Anyone who’s been told that Indian island travel can’t compete with Southeast Asia β it can, and Andaman is the proof.
Might want to reconsider: Travellers who need overwater villa luxury (the Andamans don’t have this). Anyone visiting JuneβAugust expecting Maldives-calm water β the monsoon here is serious and affects everything from ferry schedules to beach safety. And families with very young children who need a beach holiday with no ferry logistics and guaranteed calm water β Goa works better for that specific brief.
Four days. That’s all it takes. Book the ferry before you book anything else. Go early. Go soon.













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