Palau, the remote Pacific archipelago long favoured by divers and in-the-know travellers, is fast becoming one of Australia’s hottest travel obsessions, with new figures showing a dramatic spike in Australian visitors to the island nation.
Australian visitation to Palau grew 87 per cent year-on-year between January and May 2026, making Australia the fastest-growing source market for Palau globally. May alone saw visitor numbers more than double compared to the same month last year.
While Australia remains a relatively small slice of Palau’s overall visitor mix, the market punches above its weight on visitor nights, reflecting the longer stays Australians tend to take and placing them among the destination’s higher-value visitors.
The surge follows the launch of the Palau Paradise Express, Qantas’s direct service linking Brisbane and Koror in under six hours, which has been credited with accelerating Palau’s post-pandemic recovery by delivering a steady stream of high-value, long-stay visitors who spend locally and support small businesses across the islands.
Kadoi Ruluked, director of the Palau Visitors Authority, said the figures pointed to sustained, long-term growth in the Australian market.
“This level of growth tells us the Australian market is maturing – it’s not just about getting more visitors here, it’s about the calibre of visitor we’re attracting,” Ruluked said. “Longer stays, deeper engagement with the destination, and stronger spend in our local economy – that’s exactly the kind of growth we want to see, and it gives us real confidence in where this market is headed.”
Beyond its reputation as a world-class diving destination, Palau is one of the last remaining matriarchal societies in the Pacific, where land, title and tradition are passed down through women. Visitors can kayak through the limestone Rock Islands, hike to hidden waterfalls, snorkel technicolour reefs, and spot some of the region’s rarest birdlife – proof the destination offers plenty beyond time spent underwater.
Palau’s pristine paradise just got a whole lot closer


