Maldives currently has a capacity of 1,216 tourist facilities


168 resorts are currently operational across Maldives
Five more guesthouses have reopened doors and resumed services across the Maldives.
This was revealed by the latest weekly statistics publicized by the Ministry of Tourism on Friday.
As such, the ministry revealed that the number of operational tourist accommodation establishments across the Maldives has risen to 1,212 with the resuming of services for tourists in five guesthouses over the past week.
As such, a total of 1,212 tourist accommodation facilities are currently operational across Maldives, with a total of 59,734 tourist beds.
This means that over the past week, three guesthouses began operations in Kaafu atoll, one guesthouse resumed services in Haa Dhaal atoll and one reopened their door in an island of Shaviyani atoll.
Operational facilities include 168 resorts, 874 guesthouses, 13 hotels and 157 live-aboard vessels. The guesthouses span across 115 islands of 20 atolls, with hotels operational in seven islands of eight atolls.
As of January 18, 69 percent of the bed capacity is occupied by resorts, followed by 23 percent occupied by guesthouses, five percent by safari vessels and three percent by hotels.
The total number of operational beds span across resorts, hotels, guesthouses, and live-aboard vessels including 41,049 in resorts, 1,640 in hotels, 14,144 in guesthouses and 2,901 in live-aboard vessels.
Maldives currently has a capacity of 1,216 tourist facilities which include 157 safari vessels, 874 guesthouses, 13 hotels and 172 resorts. This means that of the total facility capacity, four resorts are yet to resume operations.
The ministry introduced Homestay in the Maldives in January 2022, since then a few more homestay facilities have been opened. This comes under President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih’s tourism development vision and policy to make tourism and its benefits accessible to the island communities as well.
After the Covid 19 pandemic Maldives re-opened borders on 15 July 2020 nearly four months since borders were closed, and at first, resorts and live-aboard vessels were given the green light to begin operations. Guesthouses outside of the Greater Malé Region were permitted to resume operations on 15 October 2020. Authorities allowed the reopening of guesthouses in the capital region on 14 December 2020.