All about Socotra Island

The complete Guide to Earth’s Most Mysterious Place.

A place where trees look like they came from another planet, where one-third of all plant life exists nowhere else, and where an entire people speak an ancient language that was never written down.

Location

Indian Ocean, off the Horn of Africa

Country

Republic of Yemen

Population

~60,000 – 71,400

Language

Socotri (oral) & Arabic

Religion

Islam

Best Season

October – May

Where it is

Where is Socotra Island located?

Socotra sits in the northwestern Indian Ocean at the eastern end of the Gulf of Aden — about 240 km east of the Horn of Africa and 380 km south of the Arabian Peninsula. Closer to Africa on a map, but politically part of Yemen.

The Socotra Archipelago is four islands: Socotra (the largest), Abd al Kuri, Samhah and Darsa — together forming Yemen’s Socotra Governorate. The main island covers 3,625 km², making it the fourth largest in the Arab world.

The capital is HadiboH on the northern coast — where the airport, guesthouses and shops are. The second town is Qalansiyah in the west, near the stunning Detwah Lagoon.

The People

60,000 islanders. One unwritten language.

The native Socotri people — a South Arabian ethnic group — number around 60,000 to 71,400. About 8,000 more live and work in the UAE and Gulf, sending remittances home.

They speak Socotri, a Modern South Arabian language unrelated to Arabic. Remarkably, it has no written form — passed down by word of mouth for thousands of years. One of the most extraordinary living oral traditions on Earth.

The economy runs on fishing (shark, kingfish, tuna), goat and cattle herding, date cultivation — and increasingly, eco-tourism that supports local guides, drivers and cooks.

  • Population
    ~60,000 – 71,400 Socotri speakers
  • Diaspora
    ~8,000 working in UAE & Gulf states
  • Language family
    Modern South Arabian (Afroasiatic)
  • Second language
    Yemeni Arabic; some English in tourism
  • Religion
    Islam (Christian until the 17th c.)
  • Alcohol
    Officially prohibited — please respect

Climate

Two seasons. One window to visit.

Dry season · Oct–mid-May … Monsoon · late May–Sep

Clear skies, calm seas, comfortable temperatures. The only window tourism operates and flights run regularly. October, November, February and March are the very best months.

Monsoon · May–Sep

The southwest “khareef” brings powerful winds, rough seas and heavy cloud. Flights are disrupted, roads can flood and tourism closes. The island becomes largely inaccessible.

Flora

Plants that grow nowhere else on Earth.

Dracaena cinnabari

Dragon Blood Tree

Umbrella-shaped canopies bleed a crimson resin prized for 2,000 years across Greek, Roman, Egyptian and Chinese trade. Endangered today; the Dixam Plateau holds the largest forests.

Adenium obesum socotranum

Desert Rose

Bulbous bottle-shaped trunk storing water, bursting with pink flowers from bare branches. Grows directly out of limestone — found only on Socotra.

And the Socotra Cucumber Tree

Dendrosicyos socotranus — the only tree in the entire cucumber family in the world. Swollen barrel trunk, tiny crown of leaves, looks like it belongs on another planet. Add giant aloes, wild frankincense and myrrh, and a dozen endemic succulents and you have a living laboratory of evolution-in-isolation.

Wildlife

Reptiles, birds and reefs found nowhere else.

37% endemic plants

Over 825 plant species recorded — more than a third grow nowhere else on Earth.

192 bird species

Endemic Socotra starling, sunbird, grosbeak, sparrow and one of the world’s largest Socotra cormorant colonies.

90% endemic reptiles

Socotra chameleons, Hamadryas geckos and skinks that evolved in total isolation for millions of years.

Marine life

· 253 species of reef-building corals

· 730 species of coastal fish

· 300 species of crab, lobster & shrimp

· Sea turtles, whale sharks, dolphins, manta rays

· Reefs among the least degraded in the Indian Ocean

The Alien Island

Why Socotra doesn’t look like Earth.

It’s not marketing. Upside-down umbrella trees on limestone plateaus, bottle-shaped succulents from bare rock, white dunes beside turquoise lagoons, ridges shrouded in mist — the combination has no parallel anywhere on the planet.

Scientifically: Socotra broke from the supercontinent of Gondwana approximately 18–20 million years ago and drifted into isolation in the Indian Ocean. Cut off from everywhere else, its plants and animals followed their own evolutionary path. It is, in the literal sense, a world apart.

Some scholars even connect Socotra to the ancient Sumerian legend of Dilmun — a paradise island. The name itself likely comes from Sanskrit dvipa sukhadhara, “island abode of bliss.”

Honest Answers

Frequently asked questions

The real questions people ask on Reddit, Quora and Google — answered honestly.

Geographically Socotra sits between the two — closer to the Horn of Africa than to Arabia — but politically it belongs to Yemen, an Asian country. The archipelago lies on a continental shelf once connected to both landmasses before drifting free millions of years ago.

Completely real. Socotra was geologically isolated for 18–20 million years. Its plants and animals evolved on a separate evolutionary path — no outside influence, no mixing of species. The Dragon Blood Trees, Desert Roses and bottle-trunked succulents are the result.

Individual trees live up to 600 years and grow to 10 metres tall with trunks 3 metres wide. The species itself is ancient — it evolved long before humans arrived. Trees shed and regrow all their leaves every 3–4 years simultaneously.

Fish (dried, grilled, or with rice), goat meat for celebrations, dates, ghee and traditional Yemeni-Socotri rice and bean dishes. Guided tours include freshly cooked meals — almost every visitor is pleasantly surprised.

In Hadibo, yes — generator and solar. Outside the capital you rely on portable power and car USB. Bring a power bank. The reward: zero light pollution and some of the most spectacular night skies on Earth.

Whale sharks visit Socotra’s waters — gentle filter feeders, completely harmless and not technically sharks. Dangerous predators are rare in shallow swimming areas. On land there are no predators or dangerous animals. There are a few venomous snake and spider species on the island, but they are quite rare to see.

Practically, no. Yemeni visas must be arranged through a licensed operator. There is no public transport, no rental cars for foreigners, and roads need 4WD and local knowledge. A guided tour is the only realistic way.


Ready to go?

Ready to see Socotra for yourself?

Reading about it is one thing. Standing in a Dragon Blood Tree forest at sunset while a Socotra starling calls in the silence is something else entirely. We’re a local team — browse our packages and start planning.