Kempinski Seychelles, Mahe, Silhouette and North Island
Elegant five-star resort on Mahe with outstanding amenities and a breathtaking beachfront location
per room, breakfast only
Overview
- Fantastic views over the resort’s gardens, lagoon and stunning Baie Lazare
- Access to scuba diving, snorkelling, and surfing on Mahe’s southwest coast
- Facilities include wellness offerings, sports, and all-day kid’s club
- Opulent guest rooms, contemporary decor, and manicured grounds
Cradled between ‘Mount Kempinski’ and Baie Lazare bay on Mahe's southwest coast, Kempinski Seychelles is an unmatched paradise offering chic style, refined luxuries, and adventurous activities for all. Inspired by a safari lodge, this property’s aesthetic is nothing short of spectacular, with guest rooms and common areas offering spacious luxury in the heart of nature. Explore uncrowded and pristine dive sites, try your hand at surfing, and enjoy a variety of self-guided adventures - with access to mountains, lagoons, jungles, and kilometres of white sand steps from your front door. Then, gather around the table for delicious fine dining, unwind with a massage, or just relax in your own private oasis.
Rooms
Superior hill view room
1 x King bed or 2 x twin beds, sleeps 2
Air conditioning, Ensuite bathroom, TV...from $636 /nightDeluxe ocean view room
1 x King bed or 2 x twin beds, sleeps 2
Air conditioning, Ensuite bathroom, TV...from $749 /nightDeluxe ocean view garden room
1 x King bed or 2 x twin beds, sleeps 2
Air conditioning, Ensuite bathroom, TV...from $785 /nightThe plantation suite
1 x King bed, sleeps 2
Air conditioning, Ensuite bathroom, TV...from $1,593 /nightThe picault suite
1 x King bed, sleeps 2
Air conditioning, Ensuite bathroom, TV...from $2,212 /night
Resort checklist
Meal plans:
- Breakfast
- Half Board
- Full Board
Diving in Mahe, Silhouette and North Island
- SharksYear round
- Eagle rayYear round
- TurtlesYear round
- Schooling reef fishYear round
- Walls & pinnaclesYear round
- WrecksYear round
The shallow reefs around Mahe, Silhouette Island and North Island are home to colourful fish of all kinds, as well as sharks, sea turtles, and migratory pelagics, including the occasional manta rays and whale shark. Further afield, divers can explore steep drop-offs, submerged boulder fields, caverns, and swim-throughs. Larger wildlife is sometimes seen in these more remote diving areas, with lucky groups encountering sharks, turtles and more.
Diving Mahe
Mahe offers plenty of diving suitable for all experience levels. Inshore sites like Lighthouse and Aquarium boast unique granite boulder fields and expansive hard coral reefs, and the island is also home to numerous shipwrecks - both accidentally and intentionally sunk. The Ennerdale, a former British Royal Navy tanker, now has a lovely, light-filled wheelhouse and intact propeller that are worth exploring. Smaller vessels, like the Aldebaran and Dredger wrecks, are now thriving artificial reefs with a thick blanket of coral and are visited by marine wildlife in all shapes and sizes.
Willy’s Rocks dive site, on the western tip of Mahe’s North West Bay, is known for whale shark sightings during the season between September and November - although encounters are less frequent than in the past. Nearby Cap Ternay has a hard coral reef that drops steeply to a sandy bottom with massive boulder outcrops. This site’s strong currents attract turtles, sharks and rays, and schooling fish like tuna and jacks. Headed due west, a number of offshore banks boast deeper drop-offs and submerged granite formations patrolled by reef sharks.
To the northeast lies Brissare Rock, a dramatic granite block that emerges from the ocean. Below the surface, this massive slab and its surrounding outcrops are adorned with soft coral and sea fans, and clouded by reef fish. Keep an eye out for morays, stingrays, and colourful macro creatures hidden in the reef.
Silhouette Island diving
Silhouette Island is ringed by half a dozen dive sites, with a mix of submerged boulder fields and fringing coral reefs. The most popular site, Shark Bank, actually lies halfway between Mahe and Silhouette Island. Known for strong currents, this collection of granite boulders and gullies often attracts eagle rays, tuna, barracuda, and rare whale shark encounters in the season. You may also spot schools of snapper and batfish out in the blue.
North Island diving
Known for its fantastic fringing reefs, this seldom-visited island is home to some of the best diving in the Seychelles Inner Islands. Sites here boast towering coral-carpeted pinnacles extending all the way to the surface from a sandy bottom. Nearly every fish species known in the Seychelles can be seen, in addition to whitetip reef sharks, stingrays and nurse sharks.