
The Padar Island hike is a 30–45 minute climb up roughly 800
steps and stone path to the most famous viewpoint in Komodo National
Park — the three-bay panorama — and the single decision that most
changes it is the hour: start at 05:00 for sunrise and you share the
ridge with a few dozen people; start at 09:00 off a day boat and you
share it with several hundred, in punishing heat. On our 5-day
route, Padar is Day 2 at dawn, and this article is the exact playbook we
use.
I am Jo Rangga. I have climbed Padar on more than 300 departures
since 2016, in every season and every light. Here is everything a
first-timer needs, from wake-up call to the descent.
How Day 2 morning runs on
our route
The whole reason the sunrise version is possible is where you sleep:
our boats anchor in the bay off Padar on the evening of Day 1. Then:
| Time | What happens |
|---|---|
| 04:30 | Wake-up knock; coffee and biscuits on deck |
| 04:50 | Tender to the jetty (5 minutes); ranger post check-in |
| 05:00 | Start climbing in the dark — headlamps on |
| 05:35–05:45 | Reach the upper viewpoint; the sky is already turning |
| 05:50–06:10 | Sunrise over the three bays |
| 06:45 | Descend with the light behind you |
| 07:15 | Back aboard: full breakfast underway to Pink Beach |
Day boats from Labuan Bajo, by contrast, physically cannot arrive
before roughly 08:30 — 90–120 minutes of sea lie between town and Padar.
The crowd curve is a wall: on my counts, the viewpoint holds 20–60
people at 05:50 and several hundred by 09:30 in high season. Same hill,
different planet.
The hike itself:
difficulty, honestly rated
- Distance and climb: about 1.6 km round trip,
roughly 130–150 m of ascent. The lower two-thirds is a built staircase
(the oft-quoted figure is around 800 steps); the top third is uneven
rock and dirt path. - Time: fit hikers summit in 25 minutes; a
comfortable pace is 35–45. We have taken guests from age 6 to 74 up —
the 74-year-old took 55 minutes and got the same sunrise. - Difficulty: moderate. It is short but unrelentingly
uphill, and there is zero shade — which at 05:00 is irrelevant and at
10:00 is brutal. This is the other argument for dawn: you do the work in
24°C, not 33°C. - Footwear: trainers or sport sandals with grip.
Flip-flops fail on the upper gravel section every single week; I watch
it happen. - Bring: headlamp (we lend them), 500 ml water
minimum, camera. Leave drones on the boat unless a park permit has been
arranged — casual drone use inside the park requires special permission
from the park office and rangers do enforce it.
Safety note: stay on the marked path and inside the rope lines at the
top. The famous “step-out” photo ledges are eroding, and the park has
closed several informal spurs. Rangers patrol the route; Padar has no
resident dragon population to worry about on the trail, but this remains
a national park — treat wildlife and terrain with respect.
Fees and rules at Padar
(2027)
Padar sits inside Komodo National Park, so your day’s park entrance
ticket applies, plus the small trekking fee collected at the site (per
the PNBP tariff framework administered by the Balai Taman Nasional
Komodo — the park office in Labuan Bajo). On our trips these are handled
by the crew and itemised in your quote, so you climb with nothing but
water and a camera. Visitor caps at peak times have been trialled in
recent seasons; dawn arrivals are effectively never affected, which is
one more quiet advantage of the early slot.
Why the three-bay
view looks the way it does
The panorama that made Padar famous — three crescent bays, each with
different-coloured sand (white, grey-black, and the pink of
foraminifera-tinted fragments), ridgelines folding away toward Komodo
and Rinca — is volcanic topography draped in savanna. Its colour changes
with the calendar: emerald green from January to April after the rains,
fading to the iconic golden-brown from June to November. Neither is
“better.” April-green Padar and October-gold Padar are both on our wall
at the office; pick your month by the palette you prefer, or check our
month-by-month season guide for the full trade-offs.
Sunrise vs sunset vs midday
Guests occasionally ask for Padar at sunset instead. It can be
beautiful, but: the light falls behind the western ridge (flatter for
photos of the classic view), day-boat stragglers linger into late
afternoon, and it forces the boat’s overnight positioning away from the
Day-3 manta plan. Midday, meanwhile, is heat plus maximum crowd — the
version I plan our entire route to avoid. Dawn wins on light,
temperature, crowd, and how it chains into the rest of the day: by 08:00
you are at breakfast with the trip’s hardest climb already banked, and
Pink Beach — Day 2’s second act — is 45 minutes away.
That chaining is the point. Padar is not a stand-alone excursion on
our plan; it is the opening move of the busiest, best day of the 5 day Komodo
itinerary, sequenced so that every site that day happens at its best
hour.
Climb it the right way
If Padar at dawn is on your list — and if you are reading this, it is
— the way to get it is simply to sleep in the bay the night before,
which is exactly how the 5-day route is built. See the full plan on the
5 Day Komodo Trip homepage,
then send your dates through the inquiry page or WhatsApp
me at wa.me/6281139414563 and
I will confirm sunrise times and moon phase for your specific week — a
dark-moon dawn on Padar, stars still out as you climb, is worth planning
around.
Sources: trekking-fee and drone-permit rules per the Komodo
National Park Office (Balai Taman Nasional Komodo); step counts, timings
and crowd counts from 5 Day Komodo Trip departure logs,
2016–2026.