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Map of Malaysia

Malaysia FlagQuick Facts

The country consists of Peninsular Malaysia and the East Malaysian provinces of Sabah and Sarawak in North Borneo. The two regions are 403mi apart, separated by the South China Sea.Several mountain ranges run along the spine of the peninsula, Mt Kinabalu in Sabah being one of the highest peaks in South-East Asia.There is a wide, fertile plain on the west coast, and a narrow coastal plain on the east. Sabah and Sarawak are covered by dense jungles and have large river systems.

 
Icon Scuba Dive CompassMalaysia is fast becoming one of the leading dive destinations of the world with one of the richest marine environments in the Indo-Pacific Basin. The incredible bio-diversity of marine life, coupled with beautiful islands, white sandy beaches and clear warm waters, keeps divers coming back for more.

From schooling Hammerhead Sharks, to huge schools of barracudas and various species of turtles to the bizarre Frogfish and Ghost Pipefish, there is always something to fascinate the diver.

In Malaysia, the coral reef eco-system supports more that 50 generas of coral and more that 200 species of fish. It is not an exaggeration to say that almost every time a marine bio-diversity survey is conducted in Malaysia’s tropical seas, the species list increases!

Dive centers in Malaysia are well equipped and are certified by all the internationally recognized dive agencies like PADI, SSI and SSAC for maintaining their standards of safety and professionalism. Naturally, all scuba diving courses in Malaysian waters are also endorsed by these certifying agencies.

Some of the courses available include the ‘Open Water Course’ for beginners, all the way through to ‘Diving Instructor Course’ and ‘Re-breather Course’. After completing your scuba course, get outfitted with the latest scuba equipment as all international brands are available from dive centers in Malaysia.

Almost all the islands in Malaysia cater to divers of all levels of experience - be it easy, shallow drift-diving, to advanced wreck-diving or technical diving. Operators that offer technical diving are well equipped with portable emergency oxygen kits, special tank refilling equipment and other necessary facilities.

Top dive sites around Malaysia include diverse underwater geography such as sloping reefs, coral blocks, wall dives, deep dives, drift dives and wreck dives.

Dive operators, like any others around the world, will insist on seeing your certification for the type of diving you wish to do and to undergo a checkout dive. To advance your skills in scuba diving, dive centers offer further scuba courses at competitive and affordable rates.

The Still Unexplored Sea
Malaysia’s tropical forests and seas are the ancient homes to a staggering diversity of animal and plant life that has evolved over countless millions of years. A dip below the warm sea’s surface guarantees you an astounding experience with a concentration of vibrant and exotic marine life rarely rivalled anywhere else.

Malaysia’s spectacular tropical reefs boast an additional attraction – it is one of the few places on earth where macro organisms and large pelagics overlap so broadly in the same waters. Only a handful of diving sites in the world can offer both these sights in one diving holiday.

Comprising Peninsular Malaysia in the west and the states of Sabah and Sarawak in East Malaysia, Malaysia rests on the continental shelf of South-east Asia, the two halves separated by the South China Sea.

The west coast of Peninsula Malaysia is separated from Indonesia’s island of Sumatra by the Straits of Malacca. Along the west coast of Peninsular Malaysia, the diversity of marine life around the waters of Pulau Pangkor and Pulau Payar are quite different from those off the eastern coast of the Peninsular Malaysia, in the South China Sea. Pulau Perhentian, Pulau Lang Tengah, Pulau Redang, Pulau Kapas, Pulau Tenggol and Pulau Tioman all lie a short boat ride off the Peninsula’s coast in the South China Sea and feature good coral growth and abundant fish life.

Surrounded by the nutrient-rich South China Sea and the Sulawesi Sea, the state of Sabah plums to true oceanic depths of 600m–1000m, different from the shallower waters of Peninsular Malaysia’s islands.

Located some 300km from Kota Kinabalu, Sabah’s capital, Layang-Layang Island is blessed with the best water visibility, from 20m–50m.

The Tunku Abdul Rahman Park Islands, just off Sabah’s capital of Kota Kinabalu, are popular for training and easy dives. On the other end of the spectrum, you should be an advanced diver to fully savor Sipadan Island. Lankayan, Mabul and Kapalai are famous for their ‘muck dives’ (diving in the coral rubble and sandy patches looking for macro animals).

Pulau Talang and Turtle Rock off Sarawak feature reef diving, and further away from the mainland, divers can do some very good wreck diving on the Katori Maru (a World War II Japanese troop carrier).

Malaysia is located in the heart of the Indo-Pacific basin, which is the heart of the worlds’ richest marine biodiversity area, where scientists believe the marine life of the Pacific Ocean evolved.

 

Icon Scuba Dive Compass25°C to 29°C

A light skin or a 1.5-3mm suit in the cooler months.

 

Icon Scuba Dive CompassVoltage is 220 – 240 volts AC at 50 cycles per second.

Standard 3-pin square plugs and sockets.

 
Icon Scuba Dive CompassTypes of Diving : Boat, Wreck, Live-aboard, shore
Average Visibility : 20 metres to 30 metres
Best Time to Dive : Feb-July
 
Icon Scuba Dive CompassGMT/UTC plus eight hours
 
Icon Scuba Dive CompassLanguage Spoken : Bahasa Malaysia, English, Chinese dialects, Tamil, indigenous dialects
Tipping : Tipping is not customary in Malaysia. Some hotels and restaurants add a 10% service charge to the bill.
2) About Scuba Diving in Pulau Sipadan

Map Perhentian Island

Great for

  • Great for macro photography, parrotfishes, nudibranches

Not so great for

  • Sharks spotting

Currents

  • Can be strong at a few dive sites

Experience Level

  • All levels

Recommended length of stay

  • 5 days.

About Sipadan Diving
The Sipadan diving legend has passed through the world's diving community to the extent that all divers with an interest in diving the best scuba diving sites in the world, have this small island at the top of their wish list.

Sipadan Island is indisputably the most famous dive destination in Malaysia, with diving legends like Jacques Cousteau raving about the diversity of its marine life. The island is located off the east coast of Sabah. Sabah is Malaysia's eastern most state and lies on the north-eastern corner of the world's third largest island - Borneo Island.

Sipadan was at the top of Rodale's Scuba Diving Magazine Gold List for The Top Dive Destination of the World. In fact the island shared its top spot with two other diving destinations known for the amazing diversity of their marine life - the Galapagos Islands and Truk in Micronesia.

Sipadan is well known for its unusually large numbers of green and hawksbill turtles which gather there to mate and nest and it is not unusual for a diver to see more than 20 turtles on each dive. Another unique feature is the “Turtle Tomb”, and underwater limestone cave with a labyrinth of tunnels and chambers that contain many skeletal remains of turtles that became disoriented and then drowned.

Barracuda Point is where a diver may experience the thrill of swimming amidst schooling barracuda and big-eye trevally, which gather in thousands forming spectacular tornado-like formations. With the possibility of seeing pelagic such as mantas, eagle rays and hammerhead sharks, each dive at Sipadan is a highly anticipated event.

The macro life is equally mesmerizing; garden eels, leaf scorpion fish, mantis shrimps, fire gobies and various pipefish are guaranteed at various dive sites. Sipadan also boasts a rich variety of corals; both soft and hard, among these Dendronephyta in delicate pastel colors and feather stars of all shades and hues. The most popular dive spot to view these is the Coral Gardens.

The diversity of the abundance of marine life found at Sipadan gives it the reputation of being one of the best dive locations in the world.

Related Readings

www.divesipadan.com

Please download our brochure for the latest prices.


3) Travel Information

Getting There

This is generally the route to take when thinking of travelling to Sipadan, Mabul or Kapalai. Catch a flight to Sabah, normally point of entry is Kota Kinabalu or Tawau. For those arriving at Kota Kinabalu airport, you are possibly flying in from Singapore, Taipei, Hong Kong or any other country of origin apart from Malaysia. For those flying from Kuala Lumpur, then you will have a choice of either to fly direct to Tawau or to fly via Kota Kinabalu and catch a connecting flight.

Before doing all this, best for you to do a little homework on which resort you wish to stay at whilst visiting Sipadan, Mabul or Kapalai. Then resort operators will make arrangements to meet you at the Tawau airport and who will then whisk you off to Semporna by private van which takes about 1hr or so. The roads connecting Tawau and Semporna are good. Not much can be said for the scenery though. Miles and miles, as far as the eye can see of ...palm oil plantations.

It's always best to book your trip in advance as the busy diving months can mean full occupancy at the resorts. The last thing you'd want to be is disappointed.

Always book the earliest flights out to Tawau as some of the resorts have scheduled boat transfer times and if they have to transfer divers at an unscheduled hour, it'll cost.

From Kuala Lumpur

Air Asia flies direct to Tawau daily ; www.airasia.com

Malaysia Airlines flies to Kota Kinabalu with connecting flights to Tawau daily ; www.malaysia-airlines.com

From Kota Kinabalu

Malaysia Airlines flies from KK to Tawau daily ; www.malaysia-airlines.com

From Singapore

Malaysia Airlines flies to Kota Kinabalu on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday ; www.malaysia-airlines.com

SilkAir flies to Kota Kinabalu on Monday and Friday ; www.silkair.com

Air Asia flight from JB to Tawau, prepare for flight delays.

Flights coming in from Singapore to Tawau normally arrive late evening.

As the last ferry transfer to most resorts end at 3pm, divers will be required to stay one night in Tawau.

If transportation is required from Singapore to Johor Bahru, Senai Airport, transfers can be arrange at SGD$80 per way for a maximum of 5 divers

Visa requirements

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Via Phone

Contact Us through our scuba diving hotline at +65 6292 0096. Our Course Consultants will be waiting for your call and offer you any assistance if needed.

Upon confirmation on the availability of your selected classes, there are two options for you.

Option 1 :
Make an appointment to visit us at our dive centre to make a non-refundable deposit of SGD$ 150.00. At this time you may also pick up your personal copy of the training manual and a loaner copy of the Open Water Diver DVD.

Option 2 :
You can request for an online deposit with our course consultant. The manual can be arranged to be hand delivered to you withing 24 hours an additional handling fee of SGD$ 10.00.

Please note, your space in class is only confirmed with a non-refundable deposit of SGD$ 150.00.

 

Via Email

You can use the form and send us your booking. Upon receiving your booking enquiry, our Course Consultants will call you at the stated time and date and advise you of your options.
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