Top 5 sunset cruises in Langkawi, ranked by our guides

We sell sunset cruises. That puts us in a slightly awkward position when someone asks which one is best — because the honest answer is: it depends on who you are and what you actually want from two and a half hours on the water.
This is our ranking. Not a marketing deck. If a product has a genuine weakness, we say so below.
How we ranked them
We ran all five of these ourselves. We looked at four things: the quality of the sunset position (west-facing, unobstructed), the food, the vibe on board, and the value relative to what you pay. Sunset timing in Langkawi runs roughly 19:00–19:30 depending on the season. A good cruise departs no later than 16:30 so you have time to clear the marina before the colour starts.
1. Sunset on Beras Basah — our most-booked pick
From RM 189 per adult. Duration: 2.5 hours.
This is the one we recommend first. The boat heads out past Pulau Beras Basah — a small island on the south-west edge of the archipelago — and anchors while the sun drops behind the Tarutao range. On a clear evening the sky goes through four distinct colours. You have about forty minutes of good light.
What to bring: a light layer (it gets cool once the engine cuts), reef-safe sunscreen, and your camera charged. The crew sets out drinks and snacks around 17:30. Halal options are standard; inform us at booking if your group needs a full halal-certified catering upgrade and we sort it.
What to skip: don't expect a sit-down dinner. This is a snacks-and-drinks cruise, not a meal boat.
2. Sunset Standard — the social one
From RM 149 per adult.
This runs on a slightly larger boat and tends to attract a mixed crowd — couples, small groups, the occasional family. The itinerary follows a similar route to Beras Basah but swings closer to the mangrove shoreline on the way back, which makes for a different kind of light.
The food spread here is more substantial than the basic option: there are usually three to four hot items alongside the usual cold drinks. Worth it if your group skipped lunch.
One thing to know: this boat fills up. If you book same-day in peak season (November to February), you may not get the port-side rail spots where the sunset is most direct. Book at least a day ahead.
3. Sunset Premium — for a quieter experience
From RM 250 per adult.
Smaller boat, fewer people, and a noticeably more relaxed atmosphere. The premium version runs on a catamaran with a swim platform at the back, so if the tide is right the guide will let you swim for fifteen minutes before the sun gets low.
The food is properly catered: a three-course cold spread with two hot mains. It doesn't try to be a restaurant — it tries to be a very good picnic on a boat, and it succeeds.
Who it's for: couples, anniversary trips, or anyone who finds the idea of 40 strangers watching the same sunset a bit much.
Who it's not for: large groups. The boat caps at 24 and it books out weeks ahead in peak season.
4. Andaman Sundowner on the Manta Blu
From RM 340 per adult (includes catering).
Manta Blu is a sleek private motor yacht — not a shared tour vessel. We sometimes run it as a semi-private sunset charter when demand lines up, but most bookings are private groups of 6 to 10 people.
The difference from the shared options above: you get a dedicated crew, the course adjusts to wherever the guide thinks the light will be best that evening (it changes with the weather), and the catering is cooked fresh on board rather than packed at the marina.
The price reflects all of that. If you're splitting it among 8 people, the per-head cost lands close to the premium option above. For 4 people, it's significantly more.
5. Eagle Magic party sunset — not for everyone, exactly right for some
From RM 178 per pax (shared).
Eagle Magic is a large catamaran with a DJ, a dance floor, and a buffet dinner. It holds up to 60 people. This is not a quiet sunset cruise. It is loud, crowded, good-humoured, and the food is genuinely decent.
We include it here because there are groups — hen parties, birthday trips, corporate team outings — for whom the vibe is exactly right. The sunset view is the same Andaman sky everyone else sees. The difference is that you're watching it with a Spritz in hand while someone plays something with a reasonable bass line.
If you're travelling solo or as a couple seeking a gentle evening, this is not your pick. If you're organising a group of 12 who want to have a proper night out on the water, Eagle Magic does the job well.
Practical notes that apply to all of them
Timing. All cruises depart between 16:00 and 17:00. Factor in 20 minutes to find parking and get to the marina. If your hotel is in Pantai Cenang, most of these depart from a jetty 10 minutes away. If you're staying in Kuah or on the east side of the island, build in extra transfer time.
Weather. Langkawi gets afternoon squalls from May through September. A dark cloud on the horizon does not necessarily ruin the sunset — it often makes it more interesting. We monitor weather on the morning of each departure and will advise rescheduling if the forecast looks genuinely bad.
Halal catering. All our shared sunset cruises include halal-friendly food by default. For fully certified halal catering, request this at booking and we confirm with the supplier before your trip.
What to wear. Deck shoes or no shoes. Thin long trousers or a light dress if you feel the cold. Flip-flops are fine but the deck can get slippery. Leave the heels on shore.
Any questions, message us on WhatsApp before you book. We'll tell you which one fits your group.
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