WorldOceaniaCOOK ISLANDSRarotonga
Get in

By Plane

Rarotonga International Airport (IATA: RAR) is the main gateway to the Cook Islands. There are daily services to Auckland, New Zealand and weekly services to Fiji. The only international airlines at present are Air New Zealand and twice-weekly Pacific Blue. Air New Zealand has code share arrangements with all other Star Alliance members including United Airlines and Rarotonga is a popular stopover on Round The World flights.

Get around


By car

The best way of getting around is to rent a open top car, which is reasonably affordable. There are a couple of car rental places close to the airport. Another good means of rental transport is a 100 cc motor scooter; one tank of gas will probably do you a week.

By bus

The best travel tip is to take "Cooks Island Bus" which circles the island clockwise and anticlockwise throughout the day and into the late evening. If you're going to use it regularly, you can buy a day pass or a book of 10 tickets. But be warned...there's no evening service on Sundays. The bus will pick up and drop off almost anywhere on the round island route. Oh, and one final tip: make sure you read the small print on your bus ticket: it says "please smile"!

Sleep


Buget
  • Backpackers International hostel. A family-run place with internet access (slow!), a bar, kitchen facilities and it's close to the beach. The hostel also offers pick-up service at the airport.


  • Mid-range

    Splurge

    Get out


    The uninhabited islands of Takutea and Suwarrow and also Palmerston can be visited with a research vessel stationed at Rarotonga


    Rarotonga is the most populous island in a group of islands known as the Cook Islands, with about 9,500 residents.

    Cook Islands' Parliament buildings, as well as the international airport, are located on Rarotonga. Because it is the most populous island, Cook Islanders may be referred to as Rarotongan, but they may in fact come from one of the other 15 islands in the group, such as Aitutaki or Mangaia. Rarotonga is also a very popular tourist destination with many resorts, hotels and motels.

    The chief town, Avarua, on the north coast, is also the capital of the Cook Islands. Rarotonga is divided into 12 districts, the first six of which constitute the capital, Avarua, and the others villages:

    #Pue - Matavera
    #Tupapa - Maraerenga
    #Takuvaine - Parekura
    #Tutakimoa - Teotue
    #Avatiu - Ruatonga
    #Nikao - Panama
    #Ruaau - Arorangi
    #Akaoa - Arorangi
    #Murienua - Arorangi
    #Titikaveka
    #Ngatangiia - Muri
    #Matavera
    Rarotonga Island stands 14750 feet (4500 meters) above the ocean floor. The island is 20 miles (32 km) in circumference and has an area of 26 square miles (67 km²). At a depth of 13000 feet (4000 meters), the volcano is nearly 31 miles (50 km) in diameter. The highest peak on the island above sea level is 2140 feet (658 meters).

    The island is surrounded by a lagoon, which extends several hundred yards (meters) to the reef, which then slopes steeply to deep water. The reef fronts the shore to the north of the island, making the lagoon there unsuitable for swimming and watersports, but to the south east, particularly around Muri, the lagoon is at its widest and deepest. This part of the island is the most popular with tourists because of the suitability of the lagoon for swimming, snorkelling and boating. Agricultural terraces, flats, and swamps surround the central mountain area.
    Trivia

  • Rarotonga only has two bus routes: Clockwise & Anti-Clockwise . Although they have bus stops, the bus drivers drive around picking up anyone they see and dropping them off when the passengers want them to.
  • Rarotonga has a 3-Dollar bill in circulation .
  • The central peak of the Island is known as Te Rua Manga, 'the needle'.
  • The 1995 album Finn by The Finn Brothers ends with the song "Kiss the Road of Rarotonga", which was inspired by a motorcycle accident that Tim Finn had during a visit there.
  • One of the "tribes" in the U.S. Television series was named for the Island
  • The Mexican rock band Café Tacuba has a song on their first album called Rarotonga, but the song title refers instead to a female jungle-dwelling character in a comic book by Antonio Gutierrez

  • External links
  • Rarotonga: An independent non-commercial guide
  • Main Cook Islands website
  • Official website of Cook Island tourism
  • Photographs of Rarotonga, Cook Islands
  • Rarotonga Photographs
  • Map of Rarotonga
  • Rarotonga Cook Islands include map