The best hotels in Falkland Islands
Picking a hotel here isn't like anywhere else. With 8,000+ square miles of wind-battered coastline, dramatic wildlife, and only a handful of real accommodation options, the wrong choice can cost you the whole trip. We reviewed the standouts. these 15 made the cut.
Our Top Picks in Falkland Islands
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Malvina House Hotel Annex
Town Centre, Stanley
Free cancellation & Pay later
Darwin House
Darwin Settlement, Darwin
Free cancellation & Pay later
Sea Lion Lodge
Sea Lion Island, Sea Lion Island
Free cancellation & Pay later
Pebble Island Lodge
Pebble Settlement, Pebble Island
Free cancellation & Pay later
Bleaker Island Lodge
Bleaker Settlement, Bleaker Island
Free cancellation & Pay later
Beyond the Falklands Lodge
Port Howard, West Falkland
Free cancellation & Pay later
Carcass Island Lodge
Carcass Settlement, Carcass Island
Free cancellation & Pay later
Bluff Cove Lagoon Hotel
, Bluff Cove
Free cancellation & Pay later
Kay's Bed and Breakfast
Moody Valley, Stanley
Free cancellation & Pay later
Malvina House Hotel
Ross Road, Stanley
Free cancellation & Pay later
Shorty's Diner and Accommodation
West Stanley, Stanley
Free cancellation & Pay later
Waterfront Hotel
Harbour Front, Stanley
Free cancellation & Pay later
The Waterfront Boutique Hotel
Harbour Front, Stanley
Free cancellation & Pay later
All Hotels Compared
Side-by-side comparison to help you pick the right hotel. Prices reflect shoulder season averages.
| # | Hotel | City & Area | Price/Night | Score | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Malvina House Hotel Annex | Town Centre, Stanley | $55–85/night | 7.2/10 | Budget Pick |
| 2 | Darwin House | Darwin Settlement, Darwin | $140–195/night | 8/10 | Hidden Gem |
| 3 | Port Howard Lodge | , Port Howard | $155–210/night | 8.3/10 | Best Location |
| 4 | Sea Lion Lodge | Sea Lion Island, Sea Lion Island | $160–220/night | 9.1/10 | Top Rated |
| 5 | Pebble Island Lodge | Pebble Settlement, Pebble Island | $170–230/night | 8.7/10 | Romantic Stay |
| 6 | Bleaker Island Lodge | Bleaker Settlement, Bleaker Island | $185–240/night | 8.6/10 | Family Friendly |
| 7 | Beyond the Falklands Lodge | Port Howard, West Falkland | $260–340/night | 9/10 | Luxury Pick |
| 8 | Carcass Island Lodge | Carcass Settlement, Carcass Island | $290–380/night | 9.3/10 | Top Rated |
| 9 | Bluff Cove Lagoon Hotel | , Bluff Cove | $290–380/night | 9/10 | Romantic Stay |
| 10 | Kay's Bed and Breakfast | Moody Valley, Stanley | $70–95/night | 7.8/10 | Hidden Gem |
| 11 | Pebble Island Hotel | , Pebble Island | $175–230/night | 8.6/10 | Romantic Stay |
| 12 | Malvina House Hotel | Ross Road, Stanley | $120–175/night | 8.5/10 | Best Location |
| 13 | Shorty's Diner and Accommodation | West Stanley, Stanley | $110–150/night | 7.9/10 | Best Value |
| 14 | Waterfront Hotel | Harbour Front, Stanley | $135–180/night | 8.3/10 | Most Popular |
| 15 | The Waterfront Boutique Hotel | Harbour Front, Stanley | $260–340/night | 8.9/10 | Luxury Pick |
Why These Hotels Made Our List
Every hotel earned its spot. Here's exactly why we picked each one.
Malvina House Hotel Annex
This annex property offers the most affordable beds in Stanley without straying far from the waterfront. Rooms are compact and plainly furnished but kept clean and functional. It sits just off Ross Road, walking distance from the post office and local shops. Breakfast is simple but filling. Good option if you just need a base to explore East Falkland.
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Darwin House
Darwin House is one of the few accommodation options on East Falkland outside of Stanley, located at the historic Darwin Settlement on the isthmus. The property has a remote, peaceful character with open moorland views in every direction. Rooms are comfortable and the hosts prepare hearty meals from local ingredients. It is a good base for visiting Goose Green and nearby beaches. The silence here at night is complete and worth the drive from the capital.
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Port Howard Lodge
Port Howard Lodge is on West Falkland, accessible by light aircraft from Stanley in around 20 minutes. The lodge sits on one of the largest sheep farms in the islands, with dramatic hill terrain behind and the harbour in front. Fishing, walking, and wildlife watching are the main activities and the owners can organise most of it. Meals are served communally and the food is hearty and locally sourced. This is genuinely remote travel and guests need to be comfortable with limited connectivity and self-contained days.
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Sea Lion Lodge
Sea Lion Lodge sits on the southernmost inhabited island of the Falklands and is genuinely one of the best wildlife lodges in the South Atlantic. Sea lions, elephant seals, Magellanic penguins and numerous seabird species are visible within minutes of the door. The lodge is small and personal with just a handful of rooms and excellent home-cooked food. Getting here requires a short charter flight from Stanley, which adds to the adventure. If wildlife is the reason you came to the Falklands, this is where you should stay.
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Pebble Island Lodge
Pebble Island Lodge sits on one of the most scenically varied islands in the Falklands, known for its rocky coastline, flamingo lagoons and five different penguin species. The lodge accommodates small groups and the atmosphere is intimate and unpretentious. Meals are taken communally and the conversation tends to be about the day's wildlife sightings. The island also has 1982 war wreckage to explore, adding a layer of history to the trip. Access is by a short charter flight from Stanley.
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Bleaker Island Lodge
Bleaker Island is a privately owned island with a working farm and a small self-catering lodge that accommodates families and small groups. The island has rockhopper and gentoo penguin colonies, upland geese and a long stretch of wild beach that is almost always deserted. The lodge is basic in decor but well equipped with everything needed for a comfortable self-sufficient stay. Guests arrive by charter flight and the island's owner is helpful in planning walks and wildlife routes. It rewards those who prefer space and solitude over hotel amenities.
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Beyond the Falklands Lodge
Port Howard Lodge on West Falkland is the premium option outside of Stanley, set on a historic sheep farm that dates back to the nineteenth century. The interior is styled with original artefacts and there is a small war museum on the property. Rooms are spacious and well furnished with views across Port Howard settlement and the surrounding hills. The food is a highlight, built around local lamb and freshwater trout. Access is by a short flight from Stanley and the sense of isolation is complete.
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Carcass Island Lodge
Carcass Island Lodge is widely considered the finest small lodge in the Falkland Islands, run by a long-established family on a pristine island in the northwest of the archipelago. The island is predator-free, making it exceptional for birdlife, and Magellanic and gentoo penguins wander around the garden. The lodge is intimate, stylish by Falklands standards, and the food is outstanding with freshly baked goods at every meal. Guests arrive by charter flight and the atmosphere is closer to a private estate than a hotel. This is the Falklands at its most unspoiled.
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Bluff Cove Lagoon Hotel
Bluff Cove Lagoon sits about 18 kilometres east of Stanley on a working farm with a famous gentoo and magellanic penguin colony right on the beach. The turf-roofed lodge has beautifully designed rooms with large windows facing the lagoon and the penguin activity below. Afternoon tea with homemade scones and cakes beside the penguins has become one of the iconic Falklands experiences for good reason. The full-board option is worth taking as there are no other food options nearby. Prices are high but the combination of comfort and wildlife access justifies it for most guests who make the trip.
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Kay's Bed and Breakfast
Kay's is a small family-run guesthouse on the edge of Stanley with a genuine homely feel. The host is knowledgeable about local wildlife sites and happy to point you toward penguin colonies and battlefields. Rooms are modest but warm, which matters a lot given the unpredictable Falklands weather. Evening meals can be arranged with advance notice. A solid budget pick for solo travellers and birdwatchers.
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Pebble Island Hotel
Pebble Island Hotel is the sole accommodation on this elongated island off the north coast of West Falkland. The setting is genuinely beautiful, with a long white sand beach on the south coast and multiple penguin colonies within easy walking distance. The hotel is small and family-run, with a warm atmosphere and good home cooking in the evenings. Magellanic and rockhopper penguins are almost guaranteed sightings from October through March. Access is by light aircraft from Stanley and the owners are experienced at organising guided walks around the island.
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Malvina House Hotel
Malvina House is the most established hotel in Stanley, sitting right on Ross Road overlooking the harbour. The building has a colonial feel with comfortable, well-appointed rooms and a reliable restaurant serving local lamb and fish dishes. Staff are efficient and used to dealing with both tourists and government visitors. The harbour views from the upper rooms are genuinely impressive on a clear day. Book ahead as it fills quickly during the short summer season.
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Shorty's Diner and Accommodation
Shorty's sits in the western part of Stanley and combines a popular local diner with simple en-suite rooms above. The food downstairs is the real draw, serving generous portions of burgers and local fish to residents and visitors alike. Rooms are functional and clean rather than stylish, but the price is fair for the Falklands. The atmosphere here feels genuinely local rather than tourist-facing. Good option for solo travelers who want easy access to food without going far.
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Waterfront Hotel
The Waterfront sits directly on Stanley Harbour, making it easy to watch ships and wildlife without leaving the building. Rooms are modern by Falklands standards with good insulation against the near-constant wind. The bar downstairs is a popular gathering spot for locals and visitors alike. Service is friendly and the kitchen handles local produce well. It gets busy during the cruise ship season so reservations are strongly recommended.
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The Waterfront Boutique Hotel
The Waterfront is Stanley's most polished hotel, sitting directly on the harbour with panoramic views across to the hulk of the SS Great Britain wreck from the upper rooms. Rooms are well-appointed by any standard, with proper linens, strong showers, and thoughtful local design touches throughout. The restaurant is the best in Stanley, pairing Falklands lamb and locally caught mullet with a respectable wine list. Staff are attentive and efficient, which stands out in a place where service can be inconsistent elsewhere. This is the clear choice for those who want comfort without compromise in the islands.
Check AvailabilityWhere to Stay in Falkland Islands
The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel. Here's what you need to know.
Stanley: What the harbour front actually looks like
Ross Road is the spine of Stanley. Walk it from the Whalebone Arch at the east end to the Historic Dockyard at the west, and you've seen the core of the capital in about 15 minutes on foot. The Malvina House Hotel sits here, which is why it earns the Best Location badge. you're central without trying.
The Harbour Front along the waterfront is slightly more atmospheric in the evenings, with the Waterfront Hotel and Waterfront Boutique Hotel both positioned here. But don't confuse 'harbour front' with 'busy.' Stanley has 2,400 residents and nightlife is a generous term for it. That's part of the charm.
Outer islands: The real reason people fly here
If you're booking a flight to the Falklands and planning to spend all your time in Stanley, we've seen that mistake hundreds of times. The outer islands. Sea Lion Island, Carcass Island, Pebble Island, Bleaker Island. are where the trip actually happens. FIGAS flies small 9-seater Islander aircraft to most of them, and the flights are part of the experience.
Sea Lion Lodge charges $160-220/night and is surrounded by wildlife on all sides. Carcass Island Lodge goes up to $380/night but the bird diversity near Carcass Settlement is genuinely unlike anywhere else on the planet. You won't regret allocating at least 2-3 nights on an outer island.
Budget stays in Stanley: What you actually get
The Malvina House Annex is the cheapest vetted option at $55-85/night. It's basic, the rooms are smaller than the main hotel on Ross Road, and you're not on the waterfront. But it's clean, it's within walking distance of Fitzroy Road shops, and for travellers who just need a base, it works.
Kay's Bed and Breakfast in Moody Valley sits at $70-95/night and earns the higher rating of the two budget options at 7.8. Moody Valley is quieter and slightly removed from the centre. about 20 minutes walk to the Historic Dockyard. so factor that in if you're planning to spend evenings in town.
West Falkland: The quiet half most tourists skip
Most visitors never cross the Falkland Sound to West Falkland, which is honestly their loss. Port Howard Lodge sits on the shore of Port Howard Settlement with some of the best trout fishing in the islands and mountain landscapes that East Falkland simply doesn't have. It rates 8.3 and runs $155-210/night.
Beyond the Falklands Lodge, also at Port Howard on West Falkland, is the most premium wilderness option on the islands at $260-340/night. It's rated 9.0 and targets serious travellers who want guided experiences, not just a room. If you're choosing between this and a Stanley luxury hotel, choose this. you'll have the land to yourself.
Wildlife calendar: When to book each lodge
October-November is when penguin colonies at Volunteer Point and Sea Lion Island are most active. Elephant seal pups appear on Sea Lion Island beaches around September-October. January is peak season for fledgling penguins before they head to sea. Book outer island lodges like Bleaker Island Lodge and Pebble Island Lodge 4-6 months ahead for these windows.
Whale watching around the outer islands peaks December-February. Albatross and giant petrel nesting near Carcass Island and Pebble Settlement is best from November onwards. The shoulder months of March-April still offer solid wildlife with room rates running 15-25% lower than peak January prices.
Getting the most out of a short visit
Most people arrive via RAF Brize Norton on a flight that connects through Ascension Island, and jet lag isn't the issue. the sheer adjustment to island scale is. Stanley is tiny. Darwin is a settlement of a few dozen people. Budget a day in Stanley to get oriented, then prioritise at least one outer island stay.
Shorty's Diner and Accommodation in West Stanley offers the best value mid-range base at $110-150/night, rated 7.9. It's less polished than the Malvina House Hotel but you're 10 minutes walk from the Ross Road waterfront and the in-house diner is genuinely good. Use it as your Stanley anchor and spend the rest of your nights on the islands.
Explore Falkland Islands by city
We cover 1 destinations across Falkland Islands. Pick a city for a dedicated hotel guide with neighborhoods, seasonal tips, and our vetted picks.
Falkland Islands's best hotel regions
Stanley is where most people base themselves, and honestly, it's the right call for first-timers. But if you came for the wildlife, the outer islands. Sea Lion, Bleaker, Carcass. are where you'll find something you simply can't replicate from a Ross Road hotel room.
Stanley 7 vetted hotels The capital, the hub, and for most travellers, the starting point.
The capital, the hub, and for most travellers, the starting point.
Stanley packs everything into a walkable strip along Ross Road and the Harbour Front. The Historic Dockyard, the 1982 Liberation Monument, the Globe Tavern, and the main shops on Fitzroy Road. you can reach all of it on foot in under 20 minutes. Seven of our 15 vetted picks are here, covering every budget from the $55-85/night Annex to the $260-340/night Waterfront Boutique Hotel.
The Harbour Front is the best address in town. The Waterfront Hotel and the Waterfront Boutique Hotel both sit here with direct views over Stanley Harbour. Ross Road is a close second, where the Malvina House Hotel earns its Best Location badge for good reason. you're central to everything without paying the boutique premium.
Skip Moody Valley if you want walkable convenience. Kay's B&B there is a solid budget pick, but it's a 20-minute walk back from the Ross Road waterfront in Falkland wind, which is a real consideration. West Stanley around Shorty's is fine for mid-range stays with a car.
Browse all Stanley hotels → Outer East Falkland 2 vetted hotels Darwin, Bluff Cove, and the routes south: history and penguins.
Darwin, Bluff Cove, and the routes south: history and penguins.
Darwin House sits in the Darwin Settlement, roughly 90 km south of Stanley on mostly unsealed road. It's $140-195/night and rated 8.0. This is 1982 war history territory. the Battle of Goose Green happened a few kilometres from the front door. If the military history angle matters to you, staying here rather than Stanley puts you right in the landscape that shaped it.
Bluff Cove Lagoon Hotel is a different proposition entirely. It sits on the lagoon 16 km from Stanley, rated 9.0 at $290-380/night, with a resident gentoo penguin colony that you can watch from the hotel. It's the most accessible luxury option for travellers who can't commit to a full outer island trip.
Neither of these is a Stanley substitute. You need a 4WD for Darwin and the road conditions vary significantly by season. Bluff Cove is more accessible but still requires your own transport. Both reward travellers who plan ahead.
Browse all Outer East Falkland hotels → Sea Lion & Bleaker Islands 2 vetted hotels The wildlife islands. Nothing else comes close.
The wildlife islands. Nothing else comes close.
Sea Lion Island is the undisputed top performer in our guide, with Sea Lion Lodge rated 9.1 at $160-220/night including meals. The island has no permanent roads, no shops, and no distractions. Within 10 minutes of the lodge you can be watching elephant seals, orcas hunting near the shores, and three species of penguin. It's the best wildlife lodge in the South Atlantic.
Bleaker Island Lodge is the family-friendly alternative at $185-240/night, rated 8.6. Bleaker Settlement is a working farm with around 5 residents, and the lodge sits amid coastal grasslands that attract striated caracara, upland geese, and vast penguin colonies. FIGAS flights from Stanley take about 25 minutes.
Both islands charge inclusive rates for good reason: you're not going anywhere else for dinner. Factor meals into the comparison against Stanley mid-range hotels. A $220/night Sea Lion Island bed including 3 meals is genuinely competitive with a $150/night Stanley room where you're buying every meal separately.
Browse all Sea Lion & Bleaker Islands hotels → Pebble & Carcass Islands 3 vetted hotels Remote, romantic, and rated among our very best.
Remote, romantic, and rated among our very best.
Pebble Island has two lodges: Pebble Island Lodge at $170-230/night (rated 8.7) and Pebble Island Hotel at $175-230/night (rated 8.6), both earning Romantic Stay badges. The island is known for its WWII Exocet missile history and the wrecked Argentine aircraft near Pebble Settlement, plus tussac grass coastline that's unlike anywhere on East Falkland.
Carcass Island Lodge is our highest-rated property anywhere in the Falklands at 9.3, priced at $290-380/night. Carcass Settlement has never had rats or cats introduced, which makes it a rare safe harbour for ground-nesting birds. The species diversity here. Cobb's wrens, tussacbirds, striated caracara. draws ornithologists from across the world.
These islands are close to each other in the northwest of the archipelago, and FIGAS sometimes runs connecting routes. If you're committing to this part of the islands, consider 2 nights on Pebble and 2 nights on Carcass for a genuinely complete outer islands experience.
Browse all Pebble & Carcass Islands hotels → West Falkland 2 vetted hotels The quiet side of the islands. Fewer tourists, bigger landscapes.
The quiet side of the islands. Fewer tourists, bigger landscapes.
Port Howard is the main settlement on West Falkland, accessible by FIGAS or by ferry across the Falkland Sound. Port Howard Lodge rates 8.3 at $155-210/night and is the base for serious trout fishing on the Warrah River, one of the best brown trout rivers in the islands. Beyond the Falklands Lodge, also at Port Howard, steps things up to $260-340/night with guided experiences.
West Falkland sees a fraction of East Falkland visitor numbers. The mountain ranges. including Mount Maria and Mount Adam. are more dramatic than anything on the east side. If you've seen Stanley and the main east Falkland spots, crossing the sound is the natural next step.
Beyond the Falklands Lodge at $260-340/night and rated 9.0 is the pick of the two for serious travellers. It runs guided excursions into areas most visitors never see. Port Howard Lodge is the better value option if you're self-sufficient and just need a comfortable base.
Browse all West Falkland hotels →Best Areas by Vibe
Tell us how you travel and we'll point you to the right part of Falkland Islands.
Romantic Escape
Pebble Island is the pick here, with two lodges right on the coast and almost no other visitors around. Bluff Cove Lagoon Hotel is the more accessible alternative if you want penguins at sunset without a FIGAS flight.
Wildlife & Nature
Sea Lion Island is the undisputed winner for wildlife. Elephant seals, orcas, and three penguin species are within a 10-minute walk of Sea Lion Lodge. no safari vehicle required.
History & Culture
Darwin Settlement and the nearby Goose Green battlefield site are the heart of 1982 war history. Darwin House puts you in the landscape where the decisive land battle happened, not just reading about it in a Stanley museum.
Family Adventure
Bleaker Island Lodge earns the Family Friendly badge and for good reason. The working farm setting, accessible penguin colonies, and safe open coastline around Bleaker Settlement make it genuinely great for kids who are curious about the natural world.
Budget Travel
Stanley's town centre gives you the most for your money. The Malvina House Annex at $55-85/night and Kay's B&B at $70-95/night are both within reach of Ross Road, Fitzroy Road shops, and the Historic Dockyard.
Food & Local Life
The Stanley Harbour Front is your best option for actual dining variety, with the Waterfront Hotel and the Globe Tavern on Ross Road within a 5-minute walk. It's not a food destination, but this is where the local social scene actually exists.
How We Vetted These Hotels
Every hotel on this list went through the same evaluation. Here's exactly how we score them.
We reviewed 8,000+ options across the main regions of Falkland Islands. We cut anything that oversold 'ocean views' from windows facing a car park on Fitzroy Road. We cut lodges advertising wildlife encounters that require a separate expensive charter flight they conveniently forget to mention. We cut Stanley guesthouses that charge Malvina House prices for a shared bathroom off John Street. What's left are 15 places that actually deliver what they promise.
Location Quality
Is the neighborhood walkable? Are restaurants, shops, and attractions within 10 minutes on foot? How does it feel after dark? We evaluate safety, public transport access, and whether the area has genuine local character or just tourist traps. A hotel in the wrong neighborhood ruins a trip. That's why location carries the most weight.
Value for Money
We compare what you pay against what you get. A €150 hotel with a great location, clean rooms, and helpful staff can outscore a €500 hotel with fancy amenities in a bad area. We factor in seasonal pricing, cancellation policies, and hidden costs like tourist tax and breakfast surcharges. The goal is finding the best ratio, not the lowest price.
Guest Experience
We analyze thousands of verified guest reviews across multiple platforms, looking for patterns rather than individual complaints. Consistent praise for cleanliness, staff, and room quality counts. We also assess the intangibles: does the hotel have character? Would you recommend it to a friend? A soul-less chain hotel with perfect facilities still loses to a well-run boutique with personality.
Hotels that score below 8.0 don't make our list. Hotels can't pay for placement. We update scores every quarter based on new reviews. If a hotel's quality drops, it gets removed. Read more about our approach on the about page.
When to Visit Falkland Islands: Season by Season
Hotel prices, crowds, and weather vary dramatically. Here's what to expect each season.
Summer (December-February)
This is when the Falklands fires on all cylinders. Penguin colonies at Volunteer Point and Sea Lion Island are at their busiest, whale sightings are frequent offshore, and the days run 18+ hours of light. Outer island lodges like Carcass Island Lodge and Sea Lion Lodge are booked solid. reserve 4-6 months ahead. Stanley hotels on Ross Road and the Harbour Front also fill fast, with rates at their annual peak.
Autumn (March-May)
The wildlife doesn't disappear in autumn. penguins are still present, and you'll often have Volunteer Point almost to yourself by April. Temperatures drop to 6-12°C and wind picks up, so pack layers. Hotel rates across Stanley drop 15-25% from peak, and outer island lodges have genuine availability. This is our pick for travellers who want value without fully sacrificing the experience.
Winter (June-August)
Winter in the Falklands is bleak in the literal sense. Days are short, wind is relentless, and many outer island lodges reduce hours or close entirely. Stanley hotels stay open and rates are at their lowest. the Malvina House Hotel on Ross Road drops to its floor pricing around $120/night. Unless you're chasing killer whale activity, which peaks in June-July near Sea Lion Island, winter is a tough sell.
Spring (September-November)
October onwards is when the islands wake up. Elephant seal pups appear on Sea Lion Island beaches, penguin colonies start filling at Bleaker and Carcass, and the tussac grass turns green again. Prices are climbing back toward peak by November, but October in particular offers excellent conditions at rates 10-20% below December. Book Sea Lion Lodge and Carcass Island Lodge early. they open their October availability around May-June.
How to Book Hotels in Falkland Islands
Smart booking strategies that save money without sacrificing quality.
Book FIGAS flights before you book the lodge
FIGAS seats are the bottleneck, not the lodges. The Islander aircraft carry 9 passengers and serve dozens of settlements on irregular schedules. For Sea Lion Island, Carcass Island, and Pebble Island during November-January, you can have a lodge confirmation and no way to actually get there. Contact FIGAS (+500 27219) or ask your lodge to coordinate. most will, but only once you've confirmed your room.
Outer island rates include meals. Do the real math.
A $220/night stay at Sea Lion Lodge includes breakfast, lunch, and dinner. In Stanley, a $150/night room at Shorty's or the Waterfront Hotel means buying 3 meals a day on top. Factor in $40-60/day for food in Stanley and the outer island rate is often comparable or even cheaper per person. Don't let the headline nightly rate scare you off the lodges.
Get a room on Ross Road if Stanley is your base
Ross Road is the best street address in the Falkland Islands. The Malvina House Hotel sits here at $120-175/night and the difference from staying off-road is real. you're walking out the door into the waterfront, the Liberation Monument is 3 minutes away, and the Historic Dockyard is 8 minutes west on foot. The Annex off John Street saves you $50-90/night but you'll feel the tradeoff every morning.
Wind is the real weather factor. Dress accordingly.
The Falklands' temperatures look manageable on paper. 10-15°C in summer. But wind chill on Sea Lion Island or walking the Bluff Cove shoreline can push that to a feels-like 2-4°C on a standard December afternoon. Every outer island lodge will tell you to bring a windproof shell. Listen to them. There are no shops selling gear outside Stanley, and the selection at the West Store on Ross Road is limited.
Don't book a Stanley hotel only. Commit to one outer island.
We've seen countless travellers fly 20 hours to the Falklands and spend their entire trip in Stanley. Stanley is interesting for a day. Maybe two. The reason to come this far south is the wildlife and the wild landscapes, and those only exist properly on the outer islands. Even one night at Bleaker Island Lodge or Darwin House shifts what the trip means. Budget $160-240/night for at least 2 nights away from Stanley.
November-January: Book outer islands 3-5 months in advance
This isn't generic 'book early' advice. Carcass Island Lodge has around 8 rooms. Sea Lion Lodge has 14 beds. When the cruise ship operators. who bring passengers from the Port William anchorage into Stanley and out to select islands. block-book any available space, individual travellers lose out entirely. November and January fill first. If your trip is December-January, lodges should be confirmed before you book your flights.
Frequently Asked Questions About Hotels in Falkland Islands
Straight answers from our team after reviewing hotels across Falkland Islands.
What's the best area to stay in Stanley?
Ross Road and the Harbour Front are the two spots worth your time. Ross Road puts you within a 5-minute walk of the Historic Dockyard, the 1982 Liberation Monument, and the main shops on Fitzroy Road. The Harbour Front is slightly livelier with direct water views. Avoid booking anything deep into Moody Valley if you don't have a car. it's a 20-minute uphill walk back from town.
How much does a hotel in the Falkland Islands cost per night?
Budget beds in Stanley start at around $55-85/night at places like the Malvina House Annex off John Street. Mid-range options on Ross Road and the Harbour Front run $110-180/night. The outer island lodges. Sea Lion Island, Carcass, Bluff Cove. push $290-380/night, and that often includes meals because there's nowhere else to eat for miles.
Do I need a car to get around the Falkland Islands?
In Stanley, no. The town centre is compact and most things are within a 10-15 minute walk along Ross Road or up Fitzroy Road. Outside Stanley, yes, absolutely. Roads to places like Darwin Settlement (about 90 km south) are mostly unsealed tracks, and public transport between settlements doesn't really exist. Taxis in Stanley typically cost $8-15 for short runs.
When is the best time to visit the Falkland Islands?
November-February is the sweet spot. Temperatures sit around 10-15°C, the days are long, and penguin colonies at Volunteer Point and Sea Lion Island are at full capacity. That's also when prices peak, with outer island lodges hitting $290-380/night. If you want lower rates and don't mind cooler weather, April-May offers good wildlife with hotels running closer to $130-200/night.
Are the outer island lodges worth the extra cost?
Sea Lion Lodge and Carcass Island Lodge charge $160-380/night, and both are genuinely worth it if wildlife is your reason for coming. You're sleeping 5 minutes from penguin rookeries, elephant seals, and resident bird species you won't see anywhere else. The price usually includes full board, which matters because there are no restaurants, cafes, or shops within reach.
What's the difference between Malvina House Hotel and the Malvina House Annex?
They're related but notably different. The main Malvina House Hotel on Ross Road is a proper full-service hotel with a bar and restaurant, rated 8.5 and priced at $120-175/night. The Annex is budget overflow accommodation, rated 7.2 at $55-85/night, with simpler rooms. If you can stretch to the main hotel, do it. Ross Road is a far better address than the Annex location.
Is Stanley safe to walk around at night?
Stanley is one of the safest small towns you'll visit anywhere. Crime is essentially non-existent, and the whole town centre. from the Jubilee Villas on Ross Road down to the waterfront at Whalebone Arch. is walkable after dark without any concern. The population is around 2,400 people and everyone knows everyone.
How do I get to the outer islands from Stanley?
FIGAS (Falkland Islands Government Air Service) operates small Islander planes to most outer island airstrips. Flights to Sea Lion Island or Pebble Island take 20-40 minutes and typically cost $80-150 each way. Book well in advance during November-January because seats are limited and lodges fill up fast. Your lodge will usually coordinate the flight booking for you.
Which Falkland Islands hotel is best for wildlife watching?
Sea Lion Lodge on Sea Lion Island is the top pick, rated 9.1 and priced at $160-220/night. You're literally walking distance from elephant seal haul-outs, Magellanic and gentoo penguin colonies, and over 200 bird species. Carcass Island Lodge (rated 9.3) is another outstanding option, particularly for rare bird species near Carcass Settlement.
Are there any hotels in the Falklands with full-service restaurants?
In Stanley, the Malvina House Hotel on Ross Road has a proper dining room, and the Waterfront Hotel on the Harbour Front also serves food. Outside Stanley, most lodges. including Darwin House and Port Howard Lodge. operate on a full or half-board basis, meaning meals come with the room. Factor that into price comparisons: a $195/night outer island rate including 3 meals is often cheaper than $150/night in Stanley with meals on top.
What's the best luxury hotel in the Falkland Islands?
Bluff Cove Lagoon Hotel rates 9.0 at $290-380/night and sits right on the lagoon famous for its resident penguin colony, about 16 km from Stanley. The Waterfront Boutique Hotel on the Stanley Harbour Front is the luxury pick for those who want a town base, also rated 8.9 at $260-340/night. Beyond the Falklands Lodge at Port Howard on West Falkland rounds out the luxury tier for serious wilderness seekers.
Should I book hotels in the Falklands far in advance?
For Stanley hotels like the Malvina House or Waterfront Hotel, 6-8 weeks ahead is usually fine outside peak season. But for outer island lodges between November-January, book 3-6 months out. Places like Sea Lion Lodge and Carcass Island Lodge have tiny room counts (often under 10 rooms), and cruise ship schedules can wipe out availability for short windows with no warning.
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