

โHow do we choose the dive sites at Sipadan?โ
It is one of the most common questions we hear on the boat, usually right after the briefing and just before everyone starts quietly hoping for Barracuda Point.
This blog is here to explain how site selection actually works at Sipadan Island, why we sometimes go to famous sites and sometimes do not, and why that is a good thing for both divers and the reef.
The short answer is this.
There is no fixed schedule, no rotation chart, and no guaranteed sites. Sipadan is alive, and we plan our dives around that.
Choosing dive sites at Sipadan is not about ticking boxes. It is about reading the day, the divers, and the ocean.
Every morning, the guides look at several key factors before deciding where the boat will go.
The experience level, comfort, and expectations of the group matter.
Some dives have strong currents, blue water entries, or deeper profiles. If the group is mixed or newly advanced, we choose sites that are safer and more enjoyable for everyone.
A relaxed diver sees more than a stressed diver. Always.
We know people dream about certain names. Barracuda Point, South Point, Hanging Gardens. We get it.
When conditions and group level allow, we absolutely aim to include the well-known dive sites. They are famous for a reason.
But Sipadan does not revolve around just a few locations.
One of the main goals when choosing dive sites at Sipadan is to give divers the best chance to see the residents.
That means areas where we regularly encounter:
These animals move. They feed, rest, and travel depending on currents, time of day, and conditions. Yesterdayโs hotspot might be quiet today, while a lesser-known site suddenly comes alive.
This is why flexibility matters.
Sipadan has many dive sites that never make it onto bucket lists or social media posts, yet they deliver incredible dives.
Strong walls, healthy coral, turtle traffic, schooling fish.
Different name, same Sipadan magic.
Some of the most memorable dives happen at sites people had never heard of before stepping on the boat.
This is something we really want divers to understand.
Marine life is not permanent. Schools move. Sharks patrol different areas. Currents shift throughout the day.
That is why we avoid promising specific sites or specific animals. We choose locations that give the best chances on that particular day, not the best stories from last week.
And honestly, this is why Sipadan stays exciting even after many dives.
This blog is not about lowering expectations.
It is about adjusting them.
If divers focus only on famous site names, they might miss what is happening right in front of them. When expectations open up, dives become more relaxed, more enjoyable, and often more surprising.
Sipadan does not need pressure. It delivers on its own terms.
Choosing dive sites this way helps:
It also makes Sipadan easier to navigate as a team. Guides can focus on reading the ocean instead of chasing expectations.
Because conditions, currents, and group experience change daily. A great dive depends on timing, not repetition.
Absolutely. Many offer the same marine life with fewer divers and calmer conditions.
You can always ask, but final decisions depend on safety, conditions, and permits.
Guides know patterns, not guarantees. Marine life moves, and that is part of what makes Sipadan special.
Yes. Bumpheads, turtles, sharks, and schools appear all around Sipadan.
Yes. Even at the same site, no two dives are ever the same.
So, how do we choose the dive sites at Sipadan?
We choose them based on the people, the conditions, and the life in the water. Not on hype, not on pressure, and not on yesterdayโs dive.
Sipadan always brings surprises.
The best ones usually come when you least expect them.

