Komodo National Park is too important a place to visit carelessly. The reefs are exceptional, the wildlife is sensitive, and Labuan Bajo is growing fast enough that pressure on the environment is no longer theoretical. None of that means you should not come. It means how you come matters.
Who This Is For
Anyone visiting Labuan Bajo who wants to make choices that protect the environment and support the local community rather than wearing down both.
On the Reef
Use reef-safe sunscreen. Do not touch coral. Do not stand on it. Do not take anything from the water, including shells or bits of coral that you decide are suddenly sentimental.
If you are snorkelling or diving, good buoyancy and basic self-control do a lot of the work.
With Wildlife
Watch wildlife without trying to turn it into a performance. That means no touching manta rays, turtles, or anything else you happen to feel emotionally excited about. It also means keeping your distance from Komodo dragons and doing exactly what the ranger says rather than trying to improve the encounter for your own content.
On Plastic
Carry a reusable water bottle. Refuse single-use plastic where you can. Bring a bag. Small habits are not fake virtue in a place that is still dealing with the very real burden of coastal waste.
Choosing Your Operator
The operator you choose determines a lot. Look for licensed boats, clear safety standards, manageable group sizes, and guides who actually enforce wildlife and reef rules rather than smiling vaguely while people do stupid things in fins.
Support Local Properly
Eat at local warungs. Buy local textiles and crafts when they are genuinely locally made. Tip crew and guides fairly. Tourism is better when the money stays closer to the people doing the real work.
The Honest Summary
Responsible travel here is not a performance. It is a series of very ordinary good decisions. Book better operators. Touch less. Take less. Waste less. Tip fairly. That is the version that matters.