Mauritius is the stuff of postcards. Turquoise lagoons, powder-soft beaches, that famous island warmth. And yet every single year, plenty of visitors fly home feeling slightly short-changed, sure they missed the "real" island. The culprit is rarely bad luck. It is a handful of tourist traps that nobody warned them about before they landed.
We live in Mauritius and run Moris Insider, the interactive map and guide built hand in hand with locals. Over the years we have watched the same avoidable mistakes catch out first-time and repeat visitors alike. So here are the 12 Mauritius tourist traps that quietly spoil a 2026 trip, each with the simple smart move that sidesteps it. Read them before you go and your holiday will thank you.
1. Arriving at Le Morne after 8am
Le Morne Brabant rewards the early riser. Roll up mid-morning and the car park is full, the heat is already punishing and the light has gone hard and flat for photos. The magic moments, that glassy lagoon, the cool air, the empty white sand, all happen before 8am. The same is true of Île aux Cerfs jetties and the climb up the peak itself.
2. Trusting "freelance guides" on public beaches
On busier public beaches such as Flic en Flac, Trou aux Biches and Mont Choisy, friendly strangers may introduce themselves as official guides, boat operators or watersports reps. Some are genuine. Others charge inflated rates for trips that are mediocre, or that never materialise once the cash has changed hands. The hard sell and the vague pricing are the giveaways.
3. Eating only at "international cuisine" restaurants
Stick to menus promising "international cuisine" and you pay more for safe, standardised food while missing the very best of Mauritius. The island's real flavour lives in family table d'hôte kitchens and at the street stalls: dholl puri, hot rotis, gateaux piments, octopus curry, boulettes by the roadside. This is some of the finest, friendliest eating in the Indian Ocean, and it costs a fraction of the resort dining room.

4. Changing your euros at the SSR airport bureau
The exchange counters at Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam International Airport are convenient, but their rates are among the least generous on the island. Converting a big wad of cash the moment you land means handing over money before your holiday has even started.
5. Booking every excursion through the hotel concierge
The concierge desk is easy and reassuring, which is exactly why it tends to carry a healthy markup. The same catamaran cruise, dolphin trip or south-coast day out can cost noticeably less booked directly with the operator who actually runs it.
6. Doing Île aux Cerfs on a Saturday in high season
Île aux Cerfs is genuinely gorgeous, but on a high-season weekend it is heaving. Boats stack up, the best stretches of sand fill early and the calm castaway feel that draws people there in the first place simply evaporates.
What if a map flagged these traps for you?
Moris Insider gathers spots verified on the ground, live marine weather and honest local tips, so you spend your days at the right places and skip the traps.
Try it for free →7. Shopping only in Grand Baie
Grand Baie is fun, but it is also the most touristy strip on the island, and prices climb to match. Browse only there and you will overpay for the same sarongs, models and spices you could find cheaper, and more authentically, at a proper market.
8. Buying rum at airport duty-free
Mauritius is a serious rum island, so it is a shame to grab a generic bottle at the airport on the way out. The choice in duty-free is narrow and the prices are rarely the best you will find.

9. Buying a SIM card at the airport
The "tourist" SIM packages on offer in the arrivals hall look handy but give you relatively little data for the money. Walk into any town and the same budget stretches a great deal further.
10. Hopping in a taxi without agreeing the fare first
Many Mauritian taxis run without meters, so the fare is something you settle before the wheels turn, not after. Climb in without a clear price and you are inviting an awkward surprise at the other end.
11. Visiting Chamarel without thinking about timing
The Seven Coloured Earths and the Chamarel waterfall are beautiful, but turn up in the middle of the day and you hit the tour-bus rush: queues, crowds and flat, washed-out light that drains the colours from your photos. With this one, when you go matters as much as where.
12. Being careless about tap water
Depending on the region and the plumbing, it pays to be cautious with tap water, especially away from the larger hotels and resorts. A dodgy stomach can quietly write off a day or two of an otherwise perfect trip.
The thread running through all twelve
Notice the pattern. Almost every trap on this list comes down to two things: timing and trusted information. Arrive at the right hour, go on the right day, ask the right person, agree the price up front, and the island opens up. That is exactly the gap Moris Insider is built to close, with spots verified on the ground, live sea and weather conditions, and a simple day planner so you always know where to be and when.
Plan a trip without the missteps
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