Yes, Labuan Bajo is generally safe. That is the short answer. The longer and more useful answer is that the main risks here are not town crime in the dramatic sense. They are practical travel risks: boats, currents, sun, scooters, wildlife, and the occasional decision made by someone who should probably not have rented that scooter in the first place.
Who This Is For
Anyone asking the sensible pre-trip question about safety, including solo travellers, families, and people new to eastern Indonesia.
General Town Safety
Labuan Bajo is a busy tourism town with a steady traveller presence, especially around the harbour area. Serious incidents involving visitors are uncommon. Standard petty-theft logic still applies, because standard petty-theft logic applies almost everywhere.
Keep valuables close, do not leave your whole life visible in a parked scooter basket, and use a hotel safe when there is one.
Komodo Dragon Safety
This is the famous risk, and fair enough.
Komodo dragons are wild apex predators. They are not there to entertain you and they are not operating on some secret internal promise not to do anything dramatic because tourists have cameras.
The rules are simple:
- go only with a licensed ranger
- stay with the group
- keep your distance
- do not run
- tell the ranger if you are menstruating or have an open wound
- do not do anything performatively stupid for a photo
Water and Boat Safety
This is the part more people should worry about before the dragon part.
Komodo waters can be brilliant and current-heavy at the same time. Listen to briefings. Wear a life jacket if you are not a strong swimmer. Do not act more confident in open water than you actually are. Good operators matter here. Bad ones also matter, just in the wrong direction.
If a boat looks poorly maintained, or the crew seems vague about safety, treat that as real information.
Health and Medical
Labuan Bajo has basic medical care in town. For anything serious, evacuation to Bali may be needed. Travel insurance that covers evacuation is not overkill here. It is just adult behaviour.
Mosquito-borne illness exists in the region, so repellent is worth taking seriously. Tap water is not for drinking. Sun exposure is harsher than people expect, especially on boat days, and dehydration sneaks up faster than good intentions.
Solo Travel
Solo travel in Labuan Bajo is generally straightforward. Solo female travellers usually find it manageable with the same level of awareness they would use in any unfamiliar place. The town is active enough in the main areas that it rarely feels isolated unless you deliberately wander into that situation.
Scooters
Scooters are common and can be fine around town in sensible hands. The problem is that not every road outside town is a casual holiday scooter road, and not every traveller is as competent as they believe themselves to be after 18 minutes of confidence.
If you rent one, wear a helmet, lock it, and know when not to push your luck.