Will you get seasick on a Komodo boat trip? Most guests don’t
— the route is largely sheltered island-hopping with crossings of 1–3
hours, not open-ocean passages — but two specific legs can get rough in
the July–August wind season, and the fix is a combination of route
timing, boat choice, and taking your tablets before the
crossing, not after you feel ill. I’ve run 300+ departures of
the 5-day Komodo trip since 2016, and I plan every
season’s schedule around exactly this question. Here’s the honest
picture.
Why Komodo Is Kinder Than
You Fear
Komodo National Park is an archipelago. Most of your five days is
spent threading between islands — Padar, Komodo, Rinca, Kelor, Kanawa —
where land masses break the swell. Typical hops between anchorages run
30 minutes to 2 hours. This is not a Drake Passage situation; it’s
closer to lake sailing with occasional attitude.
The flip side: the same geography that shelters you also funnels
current. The park sits where the Pacific effectively drains into the
Indian Ocean through narrow straits, producing some of the strongest
tidal currents in the world. Currents make chop, especially where they
meet wind. A good captain reads the tide tables and times the crossings;
a cheap operator just goes. This is one of the least-visible things
you’re paying for on our 5-day / 4-night liveaboard
route.
The Two Legs That Matter
Across eleven seasons, guest seasickness on our departures clusters
on exactly two legs:
- Labuan Bajo → Padar (Day 1 afternoon, ~2.5–3
hours). The longest continuous steaming of the trip, crossing
the more exposed water south of Rinca. In calm months it’s a nap; in
windy months it rolls. - The northern loop toward Gili Lawa / Manta Point (Day
3). Shorter, but the north side catches wind-driven chop in the
dry season.
Everything else — the dawn repositioning runs, the short hops to Pink
Beach and Taka Makassar — happens in protected water or before the wind
picks up. We deliberately schedule long legs for early morning, when the
sea is at its flattest, and keep afternoons for anchored swimming. That
single scheduling habit has cut seasickness complaints on our boats to a
handful per season.
Season Calendar for
Sensitive Stomachs
- April–June: the sweet spot. Post-rainy-season calm,
hills still green, seas mostly gentle. My first recommendation for
anyone who fears seasickness. - July–August: windiest. The southeast trade winds
(locally musim timur) peak. Crossings are lively; the two legs
above can genuinely roll. Still very doable — this is also peak
visibility for diving — but take the prevention seriously and choose a
bigger boat. - September–November: calmest overall. Light winds,
glassy mornings. The best months purely for flat water. - December–March: rainy season. Wind is generally
lighter than July–August but squalls pass through; seas are variable.
January–February is when we occasionally reshuffle a day for
weather.
Indonesia’s meteorological agency BMKG publishes daily maritime
forecasts for the Flores waters, and our captains check them each
evening (source: BMKG Maritime
Weather Service). If BMKG flags a rough window, we resequence the
route — one of the advantages of a 5-day plan over a day-trip, where
operators must pound through whatever the day serves.
Boat Choice: The
Variable Nobody Prices In
Hull size and shape matter more than cabin photos:
- Larger phinisi (30 m+, wide beam): noticeably more
stable; the traditional two-masted hulls were built for these waters.
Best choice for worriers. - Mid-size phinisi (20–30 m): the fleet standard;
fine in most conditions. - Small speedboats / open day boats: fastest, but
slam into chop rather than riding it. If you’re seasickness-prone, a
5-day liveaboard is ironically more comfortable than a
speedboat day trip covering the same sights at 25 knots.
Cabin position matters too: midship, lower deck
cabins move least. Tell us you’re sensitive when you book and we’ll
assign accordingly — this costs nothing and helps enormously.
The Fixes, Ranked by
What Actually Works
- Antihistamine tablets (dimenhydrinate/meclizine), taken
30–60 minutes BEFORE departure. The single most effective
intervention. Once you’re already nauseous, tablets struggle. We remind
guests the night before the Day 1 crossing. - Scopolamine patches (prescription in many
countries): excellent for the whole trip; apply the evening before
boarding. - Horizon + airflow. Stay on deck, midship, eyes on
the islands. Cabins during crossings are where queasiness becomes
misery. - Ginger — tea, candies, tablets. Modest but real
effect, zero downsides; our boats stock ginger tea. - Eat light, skip the hangover. A greasy breakfast
plus last night’s Bintang is the classic Day 1 mistake. - Acupressure bands. Evidence is mixed, but they’re
weightless and some guests swear by them.
Full boat-bag details are in our packing list article — tablets and
ginger candies are on the “always forgotten” list.
If the Worst Happens Anyway
Crew on our contracted boats have seen it all: they’ll get you to the
shaded lee rail, bring water and ginger tea, and the captain can often
adjust heading a few degrees to soften the motion. Crossings end — the
longest is under three hours, and you recover at anchor in flat,
turquoise water within minutes. Nobody’s trip has ever been ruined by
Day 1; several have been ruined by skipping the tablet out of pride.
Route-First
Prevention Is the Real Answer
Tablets treat symptoms. The deeper fix is a route designed around
tide tables, wind season, and morning crossings — which is the entire
philosophy of our five days. Compare the day-by-day sequencing on the liveaboard route page,
and if you’re deciding between months, tell me your dates and
sensitivity level on the inquiry page — I’ll
tell you honestly which weeks I’d pick and which boat.
Prefer to just ask? WhatsApp me at wa.me/6281139414563. “Will I get
seasick in the second week of August?” is a question I answer several
times a week, with a real answer.
Yohanes “Jo” Rangga has designed the 5-day Komodo route since
2016 — 300+ departures. He still gets queasy on speedboats, which is
partly why the route has so few of them.