
Swim with mantas & reef sharks
Drop the dinghy on a cleaning station and slide in.








Eight of you, two crew, one brand-new sailboat — and a whole month of waking up somewhere with no address.
No fixed itinerary — we move when the wind’s good and anchor where the reef is better, so every single day looks different from the last.
You’re crew, not a passenger. You’ll trim a sail, cook a curry, spot a manta and lose a card game, all before sundowners on the bow.




A loose menu — the crew reads the weather and picks the day’s adventure with you.

Drop the dinghy on a cleaning station and slide in.

Anchor off a strip of sand that isn’t on any map.

Troll a line on passage, land a wahoo at dusk, grill it on the back deck.

No light for fifty miles. Phone in a drawer.

Boards, fins and masks aboard — just add water.

Fresh tuna, sweet tea, and a genuinely warm island welcome.
One example week — yours will be different. That’s the whole point.

Land in Malé, shake off the long flight, and wade into the warm shallows. The boat quietly becomes home.

Meet your eight, claim a bunk, and fall into the rhythm over the first big meal cooked together.

Slip into the lagoon — reef sharks and rays cruise the shallows while you float.

Short sails island to island, the water turning every shade of blue.

Anchor off a bare strip of sand. Swim, paddle, and do gloriously little.

Land a catch on the passage, then cook it together as a crew.

No village, no signal — just the boat, the stars, and a toast on the bow as the sun drops.

Four-week voyages aim for a full lap of the Maldives — top to bottom, as far as the weather lets us. Two-week voyages explore one half at its calm, clear best: the south from May to September, the north from October to April.
Above is an example four-week southern run. Two-week voyages cover the half that’s in season — and every route bends to the wind and weather on the day.
A brand-new Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 490 — three double cabins, a bunk cabin, and a saloon you’ll actually hang out in.







Beach cricket, borrowed bikes, a village stroll, dinner cooked on the sand — the days the anchor stays down.






“Exciting and full of once-in-a-lifetime experiences. More than a holiday — an authentic ocean adventure in the beautiful Maldives.”
Leonora“Our time on Infinitea with Joris and Olivia was pure magic — fishing, wakeboarding and snorkelling in the clearest water, surrounded by rays, turtles and sharks.”
Beate“An authentic Maldives sailing experience hosted by Joris and Olivia. We caught our own dinner and cooked it on the beach at sunset. Really special.”
ChristianPer person, for the whole voyage. Solo travellers are the norm — book a single berth and meet your crew, or take a private cabin for two.
July 18 – August 15, 2026
All of the Maldives — north to the deep south
September 7–21, 2026
The southern atolls
September 26 – October 24, 2026
All of the Maldives — north to the deep south
January 16–30, 2027
The northern atolls
Explorer season (Jul–Oct 2026), per person — bunk · aft double · forward double: €1,386 / €1,638 / €1,834 (2 weeks) · €2,464 / €2,912 / €3,248 (4 weeks).
Peak season (Jan 2027), per person — bunk · aft double · forward double: €2,030 / €2,400 / €2,690 (2 weeks).
Every route is indicative — the day’s wind and weather can always reshape the plan.
Plus the Maldivian Green Tax — a government fee of $12 per person per night (about $168 for 2 weeks, $336 for 4).
Maldives Sailing is our sister operation — a premium private charter for one group, one crew, seven polished days.

Tell us your dates and who’s coming. We’ll reply with availability and the exact numbers — no deposit to ask.
Prefer email? Write to ahoy@teatimeadventures.com
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