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What to Do with 3 Hours in Malé

Written by Ibrahim Faarih · · 5 min read
The white and blue Munnaaru minaret in Malé with motorbikes passing on the street, the roof of Hukuru Miskiy beside it and the gold dome of the Islamic Centre in the distance
Munnaaru, the old minaret of Hukuru Miskiy, with the Friday Mosque beside it and the Islamic Centre's gold dome a short walk away
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This is a self-guided walking tour of Malé's historic core: the old mosques, the palace quarter, the souvenir street and the markets, in one continuous walk with no backtracking. If you are already in the city, the walk takes about two hours at an easy pace, and less if you keep moving. Plan for three hours if you are coming from Velana International Airport, which covers the taxi or ferry crossing there and back.

Before you start

Start at 9 AM or 2 PM. Those windows avoid the midday heat and most of the traffic. 5 PM or 6 PM works too, but expect busier streets at those hours. Skip Friday late morning: the city closes for prayers from around 11 AM to 2 PM. Carry rufiyaa if you want to eat at the hotaas or have a kurumba at the end.

The route at a glance

  • Start in front of Majeedhiyya School, close to the main city hotels
  • Straight down Medhu Ziyaaraiy Magu: the People's Majlis, Hukuru Miskiy, the Munnaaru and Muliaage
  • The end of the street: Sultan Park, the Islamic Centre and Kalhuvakaru Miskiy
  • Right onto Chandhanee Magu: souvenir shops, then Republic Square and the Presidential Jetty
  • Left along the harbour to the Fish Market and Local Market
  • Optional stops along the way: City Gelato, Seagull Cafe, the Market Hotaa and a fresh kurumba

Start at Majeedhiyya School

The tour starts in front of Majeedhiyya School. The school is not one of the sights; it is simply the best starting point, a short walk from the main city hotels, including Hotel Jen, Barceló Nasandhura, Marukab Plaza and Maagiri Hotel. The route starts from its gate.

The red and white gate of Majeedhiyya School in Malé, with its 99 Years of Nation Building banner and the school crest
The gate of Majeedhiyya School, where the walk starts

Two optional stops share this corner. Oevaali Art Shop sells the more premium Maldivian souvenirs, the kind you will not find in the magnet shops. City Gelato, directly in front of the school, does gelato, coffee and light snacks, now or at the end of the walk.

The People's Majlis

Walk down Medhu Ziyaaraiy Magu (Medhu Ziyaaraiy Road) and the first building of note is the People's Majlis, the parliament of the Maldives. It is not a must-see, but it is one of the better-designed government buildings in the city. Looking costs nothing as you pass.

Entrance of the People's Majlis in Malé, with a geometric metal gate, patterned cream walls and the secretariat plaque
The People's Majlis, the parliament of the Maldives

Hukuru Miskiy and the Munnaaru

Further along the same street stands Hukuru Miskiy, the Old Friday Mosque, built in 1658 from carved coral stone and on UNESCO's tentative list. Beside it rises the Munnaaru, the round white minaret that is old Malé's most recognisable landmark.

White and blue cylindrical minaret of Hukuru Miskiy, with a sign reading Hukuru Miskiy on the wall beside it
Hukuru Miskiy and the Munnaaru, its old minaret

You do not need to go inside to appreciate it: the carved coral stone walls are easy to see from outside the building, and outside prayer times you can take your time over them from the street. If you are Muslim and going in to pray, dress modestly: shoulders and knees covered, no shorts.

Muliaage and Medhu Ziyaaraiy

Directly opposite the mosque stands Muliaage, the century-old presidential residence with its blue and white gatehouse. You cannot go inside; it is viewed from the street. The small gilded shrine of Medhu Ziyaaraiy, which gives the street its name, sits on the same corner.

Blue-and-white tiled gatehouse with a studded dark door on a brick-paved street at Muliaage
The gatehouse of Muliaage on Medhu Ziyaaraiy Magu

Sultan Park and the Islamic Centre

At the end of Medhu Ziyaaraiy Magu the sights bunch up. Sultan Park, the gardens of the former royal palace, is the shadiest spot on the route. Stop by and walk into the park for a few photos if you have the time.

The National Museum on the park grounds takes about 45 minutes. It is worth it with spare time and skippable on a tight clock.

Beside the park rises the gold dome of the Islamic Centre. Non-Muslim visitors can go inside outside prayer times, with shoes off and shoulders and knees covered.

Broad white steps leading up to the arched entrance of the Islamic Centre, with gold Arabic script on the facade
The steps of the Islamic Centre

Directly opposite the Islamic Centre stands Kalhuvakaru Miskiy, a small relocated coral stone mosque. Right across from the mosque, on Chandhanee Magu, Seagull Cafe is an optional stop.

If you turn left on Chandhanee Magu here instead of right, a few steps away is the Bongo Truck, a colourful snack van and another optional stop.

The Bongo Truck, a colourfully painted snack van with a striped awning, under string lights and flag bunting in Malé
The Bongo Truck, a few steps left on Chandhanee Magu

Chandhanee Magu and Republic Square

Turn right onto Chandhanee Magu and you are in souvenir territory: wooden dhonis, printed sarongs and lacquerwork, shop after shop. Follow the street to the waterfront and you reach Republic Square, the open plaza of flag, pigeons and harbour views (closed for renovation as of 5 July 2026).

Directly in front of the square sits the Presidential Jetty, the ceremonial arrival point with its carved timber pavilion.

The Fish Market and the Local Market

From the square take a left along the harbour front to the Local Market. Bananas hang from the ceiling in more varieties than most visitors knew existed, and jars of rihaakuru make the most Maldivian souvenir there is.

The Fish Market next door is the finale: skipjack and yellowfin coming off the dhonis and cutters working at astonishing speed. It is busiest early morning and late afternoon. The floor is wet, so closed shoes are the right call.

The Fish Market has a trick most visitors miss. Pick whichever fish you like, take it to the Market Hotaa in the same building, and they will cook it for you fresh.

Market Hotaa 24/7 lightbox sign on the wall of the Malé Fish Market building
The Market Hotaa sign at the Fish Market

A few steps past the Fish Market is the Dhathuruveringe Market, where a vendor opens a fresh kurumba, a young coconut, in front of you. The kurumba is a must try.

A vendor slicing open a fresh kurumba, a young coconut, at a market stall in Malé
A fresh kurumba at the Dhathuruveringe Market

Getting back

If you are heading to the airport, the ferry (MVR 15, cash) and the flat-fare taxi (MVR 70, over the bridge) both take about fifteen minutes. Follow this route and the only sights you miss are the Tsunami Monument on the southeast seafront and the places on the other islands.

If you are short on time

Skip the interiors and keep walking. The route from Majeedhiyya School down Medhu Ziyaaraiy Magu, right on Chandhanee Magu to Republic Square and along to the markets covers everything on this route without a single detour. At a steady pace it fits inside an hour.

How long does this actually take? +

About two hours at an easy pace if you are already in Malé, reading the signs at the attractions, stopping for photos and eating at a spot or two along the way. Skip the eating and it comes in under two hours. Three hours accounts for the taxi to and from the airport.

Ferry or taxi from the airport? +

The ferry (MVR 15, cash) lands you a short walk from Majeedhiyya School, where this route begins. The taxi is a flat MVR 70 over the Sinamalé Bridge.

What about my luggage? +

Use the airport's left-luggage service (roughly MVR 100 per standard bag per 24 hours, photo ID required) rather than dragging bags through narrow streets. The counter is in Terminal 2, near the restrooms and prayer rooms.

Timings above are estimates from map distances and normal walking pace, checked in July 2026. Prayer times shift daily, so glance at a prayer timetable when you land and plan mosque stops around it. For SIM cards, cash and everything else worth knowing before you land, see our Practical Information for Visiting Malé City guide.

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