
The three Gili Islands look similar from a boat: white sand, clear water, no cars. But each has a distinct personality, and choosing the right one shapes your whole trip. Gili Trawangan is the largest and liveliest. "Gili T" has the broadest range of accommodation, the most restaurants and dive shops, and by far the busiest nightlife, including the islands' famous full-moon parties. The east coast is where the action is; the quieter west side has the sunset swings and the calmest snorkelling. Choose Trawangan if you want options, a social scene, and somewhere that still has a pulse after dark. Gili Meno is the opposite: the smallest and quietest of the three, with only a handful of bars and a slow, unhurried feel. It is the honeymoon island. Couples come here for privacy, and snorkellers come for the turtles and the underwater statues just offshore. Choose Meno if your idea of a good day is a book, a hammock and very little else. Gili Air sits in the middle, both geographically and in spirit. It is the closest island to Lombok, with calm, swimmable lagoons, a friendly dive scene and beach bars that stay relaxed rather than raucous. It has enough going on that you will not be bored, but never feels crowded. Choose Air if you cannot decide; it is the balanced pick, and the one most people end up recommending. A few practical notes. All three are walkable in an hour or two, and you can island-hop between them on the public shuttle boat. Trawangan has the most ATMs and the best-stocked shops; Meno has the fewest, so bring cash. Prices are broadly similar, though Trawangan has both the cheapest backpacker beds and the priciest boutique stays. If you have time, you do not have to choose. Many travellers split a week, with a few lively nights on Trawangan and a quiet stretch on Meno or Air, and get the best of all three.
This summary was generated from a story originally published by Visit Gilis.

There are no airports on the Gili Islands, so every visitor arrives the same way: by boat. The Gilis sit off the northwest coast of Lombok, and you can reach them from either Bali or the Lombok mainland. From Bali, fast boats are the usual choice. Most leave from Padangbai or Serangan near Sanur, with a few from Amed in the northeast. The crossing takes roughly two to three hours depending on the operator, the sea, and how many stops the boat makes. In high season and rough weather, schedules slip, so build in a buffer day before any onward flight out of Bali. From Lombok, the trip is shorter and cheaper. Public boats run from Bangsal harbour in the north, just a 10 to 15 minute hop to Gili Air or Gili Trawangan. If you fly into Lombok International Airport in the south, it is a 1.5 to 2 hour drive up to Bangsal, then the short crossing. A few things worth knowing before you book. Fast-boat safety varies between operators, so choose an established company rather than the cheapest ticket. Boats land on the beach, not at a pier, so you wade the last few metres; pack a dry bag and shoes you do not mind getting wet. A small harbour or eco tax is collected on arrival on each island. Once you are on an island, getting around is simple because there are no cars or motorbikes. You walk, hire a bicycle, or take a cidomo, the small pony-drawn cart that serves as the local taxi. Island-hopping between Trawangan, Meno and Air is done on the public shuttle boat, which runs a couple of times a day on a fixed loop. Plan your return the same way you arrive: book the boat back at least a day ahead in busy periods, and never cut it fine with a same-day connection to an international flight.

The Gili Islands are a year-round destination, but the experience changes with the seasons. Like the rest of Lombok and Bali, the Gilis have two: a dry season from roughly April to October, and a wetter season from November to March. The dry season is the most popular time to visit. Days are sunny, the sea is calm and clear, and visibility for diving and snorkelling is at its best. The trade-off is crowds and higher prices, which peak in July and August and again around Christmas and New Year. If you want dry-season weather without the crush, aim for the shoulder months of May, June and September, which tend to offer the best balance of good conditions and smaller crowds. The wet season is not a write-off. Rain usually comes in short, heavy bursts rather than all-day downpours, and there is still plenty of sunshine between them. Prices drop, the islands feel calmer, and the diving can still be excellent on clear days. The main downsides are the occasional rough crossing, as fast boats from Bali are more likely to be delayed, and slightly reduced underwater visibility after heavy rain. Water temperature stays warm all year, generally around 28 to 29 degrees, so a thin wetsuit or none at all is fine for most divers. Sea turtles are present year-round, which is one of the Gilis' biggest draws regardless of season. If your trip is built around a specific event, such as a Gili Trawangan full-moon party, check the lunar calendar and book accommodation well ahead, as those dates fill fast in any season. Otherwise, for most travellers the sweet spot is the dry-season shoulder: reliable weather, calmer seas, and the islands at their relaxed best.

The Gili Islands are one of Southeast Asia's most popular places to learn to dive, and for good reason: warm, clear water, gentle conditions, an easy pace of life, and a ring of dive sites within a short boat ride of all three islands. The marine-life headline is turtles. Green and hawksbill turtles are common on the reefs around the Gilis, and a snorkel or dive where you share the water with several of them is an ordinary day here, not a lucky one. Beyond turtles you will see reef fish in abundance, rays, the occasional reef shark, healthy coral in the better-protected areas, and some artificial reef and underwater sculpture installations. For divers, the Gilis are a major training hub. The islands operate a shared standard among dive centres, with consistent pricing and a rotation of the main sites so the reefs are not overcrowded. It is a good place to take an Open Water course, as conditions are forgiving, or to log relaxed fun dives if you are already certified. Popular sites include shallow reefs ideal for beginners and a few deeper walls and drift dives for the more experienced. Snorkellers are well served too. You can snorkel straight off the beach in several spots, particularly on the calmer west and north coasts, and most shops and many hotels run snorkelling boat trips that loop the three islands and stop at the best turtle spots and the underwater statues. A few responsible-travel notes. Do not touch or stand on the coral, keep a respectful distance from turtles, and never chase them for a photo. Reef-safe sunscreen helps protect the same reefs you came to see. Currents between the islands can be stronger than they look, so snorkel within your limits and ask locally about conditions before swimming out far. Whether you are nervously breathing underwater for the first time or quietly clocking your hundredth dive, the Gilis make it easy, which is exactly why so many people come for two days and leave a week later.