Getting Here & Getting Around
Peipei Airport on Siberut serves scheduled connections from Padang and Medan. The MTA seaplane fleet provides direct water connections from the mainland district and from Padang's waterfront, landing at the island marina in under forty minutes. Ferry services operate on regular schedules from Padang for those carrying significant luggage or surf equipment. Once on the island, the pedestrian core is car-free. An electric micro-transit network - small autonomous vehicles, e-bikes, and covered walkways - connects all precincts, accommodation zones, beaches, and the CBD. Every culinary district, surf access point, and cultural venue is within the island's 15-minute walkable framework.


An Island-Wide Culinary Network
A network of culinary districts gives every visitor a different relationship to food on the island. Driftwood City hosts grassroots Indonesian warungs and the Warung Crawl. The Moonlight Market is a global hawker-style street food village with the Midnight Tasting Trail. The Marketplace offers artisanal food and craft beer from morning to night. The Pavilion District offers elevated international dining and the Moho @ Mentawai flagship. The Prestige Quarter provides Michelin-calibre fine dining with classical and opera programming. The Crescent Bazaar delivers a dedicated halal culinary journey through Indonesian, Arabic, Turkish, and Persian traditions. The island also hosts Meet the Chef Dinners - monthly events consistently oversubscribed.
Surfing: From Beginners to the WSL Pro
The Mentawai Islands are among the world's premier surf destinations. The waters surrounding Siberut host some of the most consistent and varied breaks in Asia-Pacific - suitable for beginners and competitive professionals seeking world-class barrel conditions. The Mentawai Surfing Institute, operating in partnership with WSL, Surfing Australia, and the ISA, provides structured surf training from introductory group lessons to elite performance camps. The annual WSL-sanctioned Mentawai Pro brings the world's top professional surfers to the island and creates a natural anchor for high-demand accommodation periods.


Indigenous Cultural Exchange
The Mentawai people have inhabited Siberut continuously for thousands of years. Cultural exchange programmes - designed and led by indigenous Mentawai community members - offer visitors structured access to traditional practices, ceremonial culture, forest knowledge, and artisanal craft traditions. These programmes are not performances for tourist consumption: they are genuine exchanges on the community's own terms. The Greeters Guild - the island's cultural ambassador programme - trains local community members as the island's primary visitor interface, paid living wages and operating as equity participants in the island's hospitality economy.
Precincts & Stay: A Unified Foundation
Siberut caters to a broad global demographic across multiple integrated precincts. Whether you seek the grassroots beach life of Driftwood City or the high-end refinement of the Prestige Quarter, every accommodation option is bound together by the exact same safety-first infrastructure, first-class foundational utilities, and strict ecological covenants. There are no isolated enclaves or tier restrictions; visitors move freely across the entire walkable island, enjoying equal access to world-class public spaces and environmental protections. The Quiet Zone—a 500-metre beachfront sanctuary—operates under strict noise rules, offering a serene counterpoint to the island's livelier hubs.

Surfing
WSL-sanctioned competition, the Mentawai Surfing Institute, and world-class breaks for every level.
Culinary Precincts
A layered food and drink network, from grassroots warungs to Michelin-calibre fine dining.
Indigenous Culture
Cultural exchange programmes designed and led by Mentawai community members.
Plan Your Visit
Whether you arrive with a board bag or a fine dining reservation, Siberut Island meets you where you are. Get in touch to plan your stay.



