Noronha has 21 islands, 17 accessible beaches, and fees that double the cost of the trip. But it's Brazil's only Marine National Park with nurse sharks, hawksbill turtles, and transparent bays — without the trash you'll find at every other Brazilian destination. Here's the honest guide: what to see, what it costs, and when to go.
13 min de leitura
Fernando de Noronha is not a cliché paradise island. Travelers who show up expecting a hammock, a coconut drink, and nothing else leave annoyed at what they paid. Noronha is an ecological reserve with 35 years of strict protection, designated a Marine National Park in 1988 and declared a UNESCO Natural Heritage Site in 2001. You don't go there to lie down — you go there to get in the water and see what's left of the tropical Atlantic before mass tourism finishes off the rest.
The uncomfortable truth: the archipelago charges a lot because it has to. The TPA (Environmental Preservation Tax) and the Park entrance fee pay for enforcement, wildlife management, waste control, and the infrastructure that allows 700 people per day to enter without destroying what they came to see. People who complain about the price didn't understand the product. The price is the filter.
And the filter works. Sancho still has crystal water after 30 years of tourism. Hawksbill turtles still nest at Conceição. Nurse sharks still appear on guided dives without attacking anyone. That's not luck — that's management. Before buying the ticket, decide what you're going to do underwater. Without that decision, Noronha is too expensive for what it delivers on the surface.
The menu: what you actually get on the island
Accessible beaches (16 on the inner side + 5 boat-only). Praia do Sancho has been voted the world's best beach six times by TripAdvisor and the title is deserved. Access is via a stone staircase cut into a 70-meter vertical fissure, followed by a short walk on sand. Go before 9 a.m. or after 3 p.m. — between those hours, it fills up and the magic evaporates. Baía dos Porcos offers 200 meters of sand between rock formations and the iconic postcard shot with Morro Dois Irmãos in the background. Praia da Conceição switches function with the season: surf from November to February, turtle nesting from December to March. Cacimba do Padre gets waves up to five meters and hosts WSL events. Atalaia is accessible only with a credentialed guide and a 15-day-advance booking — it's the most protected natural pool on the island, with small fish and untouched fauna.
Scuba diving. Operators: Águas Claras Diving and Atlantis Divers. Price BRL 350 to 650 per two-hour dive. Classic sites: Cordilheiras, Pedras Secas, Buraco das Cabras. Expected marine life: nurse shark (Ginglymostoma cirratum), occasional tiger shark, manta ray, scorpionfish, sea turtle on nearly every dive. For advanced divers, the wreck of Corveta V17 sits at 60 meters and requires trimix or deep nitrox certification.
Snorkel. Sancho, Cacimba do Padre, and Praia do Atalaia deliver a 90% chance of turtle sightings and colorful schools. Gear rental BRL 40-60/day.
Free diving. Noronha Free Dive runs BRL 280 sessions with certified instructors. The calm waters between July and September make it ideal for beginners.
Surf. Hard window: November to February. Peaks: Cacimba do Padre (big wave, 3-5m), Conceição (intermediate), Boldró (advanced beginner). Get out of the water before 7:30 a.m. to dodge tourists. The WSL runs Brazilian circuit stops between December and January.
Wildlife watching. Spinner dolphins (Stenella longirostris) appear at Baía dos Golfinhos between 6 and 9 a.m. daily, in pods of 40 to 600. Hawksbill turtles nest from December to March and hatch from January to April — the TAMAR Project runs free guided visits to the visitor center at Boldró. Seabirds (frigatebird, brown booby, shearwater) are visible at Morro de Fora.
Trails. Atalaia (mandatory guide + ICMBio booking), Sancho Lookout (the 70-meter vertical staircase delivers a panoramic view worth the effort), Capim Açu (4-hour trek on the island's outer side, with rare geological formations).

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Curadoria Voyspark
2 anos no editorial Voyspark
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