Mention Fiji to most adults and they picture honeymoon hammocks and silent sunsets. Bring kids, and the picture changes — but not in the way you'd fear. Fiji might be the easiest "big trip" you ever take with children, because Fijians genuinely adore them.
Walk through any village or resort lobby and you'll see it within minutes: staff crouching to chat with your toddler, a chorus of "Bula!" following your family down the path, your shy seven-year-old suddenly holding hands with three new friends. The warmth here isn't a service standard — it's the culture. That alone takes a lot of the stress out of travelling with little ones.
This guide covers the things families actually ask us: when to come, where to base yourselves, what to do, how to visit a village respectfully, and the small practical stuff that makes a long-haul trip with kids go smoothly.
When to visit Fiji with kids
Fiji is warm all year, but the dry season from May to October is the sweet spot for families — think blue skies, lower humidity, calm seas for snorkelling, and far less chance of a tropical downpour eating your afternoon. Daytime temperatures sit comfortably in the high twenties (Celsius), and the water stays warm enough that the kids won't want to get out.
The catch is that the best weather overlaps with school holidays. July and August are peak season — they line up with the Australian and New Zealand winter break, so resorts, family rooms and flights are busiest and most expensive. If your dates are flexible, June and October are our favourite months: you still get gorgeous dry-season weather, but with thinner crowds and friendlier prices.
Where to base yourselves
Most families fly into Nadi on the main island, Viti Levu. From there, three areas suit families best, and plenty of people split their stay across two of them.
Denarau Island — easiest landing
A purpose-built resort strip about 20 minutes from the airport, connected to the mainland by a bridge. It isn't the "real Fiji," but it's wonderfully convenient for a first or last night, or for families who want zero hassle: big-brand resorts, calm pools, supermarkets and pharmacies nearby, and the hop-on-hop-off Bula Bus that kids love. The Denarau marina is also the launch point for nearly every island day trip and ferry, so it's a practical hub even if you're heading elsewhere.
The Coral Coast — the family all-rounder
Stretching along Viti Levu's southern shore, the Coral Coast is, in our opinion, the best home base for families. You're within easy reach of the best day trips (more on those below), the snorkelling is often right off the beach, and the resorts here have a relaxed, kid-friendly rhythm. It was one of the first parts of Fiji developed for tourism, so the infrastructure for families is excellent.
The Mamanuca & Yasawa islands — barefoot island time
For that classic Fiji postcard — white sand, a reef a few steps from your bure, and nothing to do but swim — head out to the islands. They range from a 25-minute boat ride to a couple of hours from Denarau. Many island resorts run wonderful kids' clubs, and day-trip operators will whisk you to spots like the famous floating pontoon at Cloud 9 for a swim and a wood-fired pizza.
The best things to do in Fiji with kids
There is so much more to Fiji than lazing on the sand (though we wholeheartedly recommend plenty of that too). Here are the outings families come home raving about.
Kula Wild Adventure Park
Fiji's only wildlife park, tucked into the forest on the Coral Coast near Sigatoka. Raised boardwalks wind through enclosures where kids can meet brilliantly coloured native lories (parrots), endangered Fijian crested iguanas, and sea turtles at the reef pool. There's also a jungle water slide and a little splash area to cool off — a genuinely educational morning that doesn't feel like school.
Sigatoka River Safari
One of Fiji's most-awarded day trips, and a brilliant mix of thrills and culture. A purpose-built jet boat zips you up the Sigatoka River — Fiji's fertile "salad bowl" — spinning 360s along the way (bring a towel), before a warm welcome at a genuine Fijian village where you'll meet locals and learn a little about everyday life.
Sabeto mud pools & hot springs
Near Nadi, this is messy, gigglesome fun that kids never forget — slathering on warm mineral mud, letting it dry, then rinsing off in the hot spring pools. Bring swimmers you don't mind staining and a sense of humour.
Beaches, snorkelling & the reef
For many children, Fiji is their first window into a living underwater world. Calm, shallow lagoons make it an ideal place to learn to snorkel, and reef life is often just metres from shore. Natadola Beach, near Nadi, is one of Fiji's most beautiful — wide, white and gentle, with horse rides along the sand for older kids.
Let the resort do the heavy lifting
Fiji's family resorts are pros at entertaining children. Kids' clubs run full daily programmes — coconut races, fish feeding, weaving, treasure hunts, Fijian language lessons — and many offer affordable meimei (nanny) services so parents can grab a quiet meal. Some resorts even let children plant coral or mangroves as part of the club, which kids find genuinely meaningful.
Turn the whole trip into a treasure hunt
Our Fiji Spotting Adventure is a printable family activity pack made right here in Nadi. Kids tick off the turtles, geckos, tanoa bowls and coconut palms they spot in real life, learn to say the Fijian words out loud, and earn a Little Explorer certificate at the end. It keeps them happily busy on the plane and turns every beach walk into a game.
See the Fiji Spotting Adventure →Visiting a village the right way
A village visit can be the most memorable part of a family's trip — but it comes with real cultural protocol, and teaching it to your kids is part of the magic. Traditionally, you don't simply wander in: you present a small gift of kava (yaqona) to the chief in a welcome ceremony called sevusevu, asking permission to enter. If you go with a reputable tour, your guide arranges all of this for you.
A few simple courtesies go a long way:
- Dress modestly — shoulders and knees covered. A sulu (sarong) is perfect and easy to slip on over swimmers.
- Hats and sunglasses off inside the village as a sign of respect.
- Don't touch anyone's head — in Fijian culture the head is sacred, including children's.
- Sit when you're asked to sit, cross-legged, and follow your host's lead during the ceremony.
- Sundays are quiet — many villages rest and attend church, so keep visits and noise gentle.
Brief the kids in the car beforehand so it feels like a special game of "respect" rather than a list of rules. Fijian hosts are endlessly patient and kind with children who are trying their best.
Teach the kids a little Fijian
If there's one thing that will light up your family's trip, it's the kids attempting a few Fijian words. Locals beam when a small visitor gives it a go — it opens doors no guidebook can. Start with these:
Turning new words into a game is exactly why we built our printable Fiji Spotting Adventure pack — each animal and object comes with its Fijian name and a phonetic spelling, so kids can hunt for it and say it out loud as they go.
Practical tips from locals
Getting here
Fiji is wonderfully close for our neighbours — roughly 4–5 hours from Brisbane, Sydney or Auckland. From Los Angeles it's about 11 hours, and from the UK around 24 hours with a stopover. Almost everyone lands at Nadi. Pre-book your airport transfer and, if you need one, request the right child car seat in advance.
Jet lag
Good news for Aussie and Kiwi families: there's little to no time difference, so jet lag is rarely an issue. Coming from further afield, children usually adjust faster than adults — get everyone into sunlight and the local meal rhythm on day one and you'll settle quickly.
Packing for little ones
- Sun protection above all — the island sun is strong. Pack high-SPF sunscreen, wide-brim hats and rash vests (sun shirts) for swimming.
- Reef shoes for little feet — coral and rocky shallows are no fun barefoot.
- A sulu or two — endlessly useful as a cover-up, a beach mat or modest village wear.
- A small first-aid kit — children's pain/fever relief, antiseptic, plasters, and anything for bites and itches. Declare any prescription medicine on arrival.
- Snacks for travel days — outside resorts, shops can be few and far between, so pack favourites for the plane and transfers.
Water, sun & the reef
Stick to bottled or resort-filtered water for drinking and mixing formula. Reapply sunscreen far more often than you think you need to, especially after swimming, and teach kids to look-but-not-touch the coral — it protects both them and a fragile, beautiful ecosystem.
Surviving the flight & the in-between moments
Even a "short" Fiji flight has a way of feeling long with a restless five-year-old, and every holiday has its in-between moments — the wait for dinner, the rainy hour, the slow afternoon. A little prep goes a long way: a few new small toys, a download or two, and an activity that connects to where they're going.
That last one is our favourite, and frankly why we made it. Our Fiji Spotting Adventure pack gives kids a scavenger hunt, Fijian words, counting games, colouring and a travel journal — all themed to the very things they're about to see. Print it before you fly and it does double duty: quiet entertainment on the plane, then a real-world treasure hunt once you land.
Make their first Fiji trip one they'll remember
A 15-page activity pack built by a Fijian-owned team — the spotting hunt, Fijian words with pronunciations, colouring, a journal, and a Little Explorer certificate to finish. Grab it before you fly.
Get the Fiji Spotting Adventure →Quick FAQ
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Bula, and welcome — we can't wait to share our islands with your family. Whatever you do, learn a little Fijian, say yes to the mud pools, and let the kids lead at least one adventure.
— The Local Pass Fiji team, Nadi