SINGAPORE -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 20 April 2026 - Most Singaporeans have already ticked off Taipei's
night markets and Alishan's morning mists. But the real discovery is
happening 30 metres beneath the surface. At
ADEX (Asia Dive Expo) 2026 in Singapore, the Taiwan Tourism Administration (TTA) revealed a striking finding:
48% of surveyed Singaporean divers were unawared of Taiwan's diving offerings—and 50% have never dived its waters. (Survey conducted on-site at ADEX 2026, with over 1,000 respondents.)
Just over four hours from Changi Airport. Visa-free entry. And almost entirely unexplored by Singapore's diving community.
To close that gap, the Taiwan Pavilion returned for its second
consecutive year, transforming the Suntec Convention Centre into a
gateway to Taiwan's four major aquatic frontiers. This year's headline
act:
Green Island (Lyudao)—a volcanic gem rising from the Pacific that's still well under the radar for most Southeast Asian travellers.
Green Island: Taiwan's Most Underrated Dive Destination
Green Island is not just another dive site. Swept by the warm
Kuroshio Current, the island delivers visibility that regularly
exceeds 30 metres—a "liquid glass" effect that few dive sites in
Southeast Asia can match.
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- The Ancient Guardian: Divers can encounter the
"Big Mushroom," a living coral structure believed to be over
1,000 years old—a humbling reminder of what the ocean can sustain when
left in peace.
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- The World's Deepest Postbox: At the Shilang Diving Area, you
can mail waterproof postcards from the world's deepest underwater
mailbox (11 metres down). It's the kind of quirky detail that makes
travel worth talking about.
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- Dive by Day, Soak by Night: Green Island is home to the
Zhaori Saltwater Hot Springs—one of the rare seawater hot
springs globally. Trading your wetsuit for a poolside soak at sunset is
the kind of contrast that turns a trip into a story.
Xiaoliuqiu: Taiwan's Best Island Escape Off the Clock
Floating off the coast of Pingtung, this compact coral island is one of
the few places on Earth where wild sea turtles are so at home, they've
practically become locals—surfacing beside snorkelers with an ancient
calm.
- - The Locals Who Never Leave: Xiaoliuqiu hosts one of Taiwan's
densest populations of green sea turtles. With a professional dive guide
leading you beneath the surface, an underwater encounter with a
creature that has outlived the dinosaurs becomes less a lucky sighting
and more a near-certainty.
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- Dive by Day, Own the Night: When the sun drops, Xiaoliuqiu
doesn't go quiet—it shifts gear entirely. Night ecology tours reveal a
different cast of creatures, and the evening ends not at a hotel bar but
around a fire with fresh BBQ seafood under a sky with almost zero light
pollution. That's the kind of night that still feels real a week later.
Penghu: The Basalt Archipelago With a Coral Heart
Anchored in the Taiwan Strait and shaped by seasonal winds that have
carved its basalt coastline for millennia, Penghu delivers a version of
Taiwan that feels genuinely off-script—ancient, oceanic, and spectacular
on its own terms.
- - The Bridge That Crosses the Sea: At nearly 2.5 kilometres,
the Penghu Cross-Sea Bridge is the kind of infrastructure that earns its
own mythology. Drive it at golden hour, with open water stretching in
every direction, and a standard itinerary starts to feel like an
expedition.
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- Taiwan's Best-Kept Secret Island: Huching Islet—once named
one of the world's top ten secret islands—greets visitors with towering
basalt columns, cats that outnumber people, and a pace of life that has
no interest in catching up with the mainland. It's 20 minutes by boat
from Magong, and a different world entirely.
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- The Double Heart in the Sea: At the southern tip of the
archipelago, Qimei Island's twin stone fish traps curve into two
interlocking hearts—built centuries ago by fishermen, now one of
Taiwan's most iconic images. The rare landmark that earns its reputation
without trying.
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- The Coral That Grows Back: Penghu's coral restoration
programme lets travellers do something rarer than sightseeing—actively
participate in reef recovery, planting coral fragments on underwater
nurseries alongside marine biologists. The most meaningful souvenir you
can't bring home.
Sustainability: More Than a Trend
With 45.8% of surveyed divers aged 25–34 expressing strong interest in
eco-conscious travel, the Pavilion put sustainable diving front and
centre. World-renowned underwater photographer
Yorko Summer appeared alongside conservationists
Peggy (TurtleSpot Taiwan) and
NT (Penghu Reef Restoration) to demonstrate how Taiwan is going
beyond tourism rhetoric into genuine marine stewardship—3D-printed
eco-substrates, sea turtle nesting patrols, and active reef monitoring.
Singaporean divers aren't just being invited to visit—they're being
invited to contribute.
World-Class Gear, Made in Taiwan
The Pavilion also shone a light on Taiwan's homegrown dive industry. Brands including
ATMOS, 123 Underwater Lab, and
DIVEVERYDAY demonstrated that the "Made-in-Taiwan" (MIT) spirit
extends well beyond electronics and manufacturing—into world-class dive
technology ready for Singapore's most discerning enthusiasts.
"Taiwan offers abundant and diverse travel resources, enabling
visitors to experience mountains, ocean, cuisine, and culture within a
single short trip."
— Taiwan Tourism Administration, Singapore Office
As ADEX 2026 makes clear, Taiwan's dive scene represents one of the most
significant untapped opportunities in the Singaporean travel market.
For divers looking for somewhere extraordinary—somewhere most of their
friends haven't been yet, just a short flight away—the Pacific has been
keeping a secret.
It's time to dive in.