Royal Davui Island Resort - Adults Only
When you book Royal Davui Island Resort - Adults Only in Fiji through our Fora Rates partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a hotel credit.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Daily breakfast for two
- Room upgrade at check-in (subject to availability)
- Early check-in / late check-out (subject to availability)
- 60-minute couples tropical massage, valued at $260 USD
Location
Royal Davui sits alone on a sixteen-acre volcanic island off the southern coast of Viti Levu, Fiji's largest landmass. This is an adults-only property where the South Pacific ocean surrounds every vantage point, where waves break over distant reefs and the air smells of salt and frangipani. The island is small enough to walk in twenty minutes yet feels entirely removed from the archipelago's busier resort corridors.
Fiji's human story stretches back three millennia, layered through Austronesian navigators, Melanesian settlements, and Polynesian exchange before European contact in the 1600s. The country gained independence in 1970, and today its 330-some islands scatter across 18,000 square kilometres of ocean. Most Fijians live on Viti Levu's coasts, clustered in Suva or the tourism hub of Nadi, while the interior remains rugged and sparsely inhabited. Royal Davui occupies a quieter stretch far from those centres.
Reaching the property requires a flight into Nadi International Airport, about 100 kilometres northwest, followed by a combination of road and boat transfer. The journey is part of the arrival, trading the mainland's rhythms for the slower pulse of an island where the guest count is deliberately low.
The island itself is the main attraction. Snorkel the house reef directly from shore, where coral gardens slope into deeper water and parrotfish graze in the shallows. Kayak around the island's perimeter at dawn when the light is still soft. The property arranges diving excursions; Shark Reef Marine Reserve, fifteen kilometres away, offers a feeding site where bull sharks, reef sharks, and rays gather in numbers that justify the early departure. Back on the island, the kitchen sources local fish and tropical fruit, though no formal restaurant names appear in the data.
Off the water, days turn quiet. Walk the island's interior trails through scrub and palms, or simply occupy a hammock and let the afternoon stretch. Book a couples massage under a bure if you haven't already used the complimentary treatment. There are no Michelin-starred tables within reach, no markets to explore on foot. This is a place for shedding itinerary, for letting the reef and the horizon set the schedule.
The warmest, wettest months run from December through March, when afternoon rains arrive heavy and brief and temperatures hold near 29°C. The ocean is bath-warm, the air thick with humidity. April begins the drier season, rainfall dropping sharply as the southern hemisphere autumn settles in.
May through September brings the coolest, clearest weather. Daytime highs ease to the mid-twenties, nights dip into the low twenties, and rainfall becomes occasional rather than daily. This is the peak window for diving and outdoor activity, when visibility underwater sharpens and the relentless heat lifts.
October and November mark the transition back toward the rainy season. Temperatures climb again, showers return with frequency, but the water remains warm and inviting year-round. For those seeking solitude and calm seas, the dry months deliver the most reliable conditions.
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