
Fanning Island: One of the Last True Frontiers in Saltwater Fly Fishing
Some destinations are built around luxury. Others are built around the experience.
Fanning Island, known locally as Tabuaeran, is a part of the Republic of Kiribati and is one of those rare places where the fishing becomes the luxury. This is not about overbuilt resorts or crowded marinas. It is about endless white sand flats, untouched water, and the feeling of standing somewhere very few anglers on earth have ever had the chance to fish.
At BlackBone, we spend a lot of time searching for destinations that are truly worth the journey. Fanning Island stands apart because it offers something that is becoming harder and harder to find, real exploration. Limited access, almost no fishing pressure, and a fishery still in its early stages where every day feels like discovery.
This is the kind of place serious anglers dream about.
A Family-Owned Operation Built on Passion
One of the things that makes Fanning Island so special is the people behind it.
This is a family-owned and locally operated fishery, run by people who know these waters better than anyone. Their lives revolve around the tides, the seasons, and protecting the resource that makes the island so unique. The operation is intentionally small, keeping guest numbers limited so the fishery stays healthy and the experience remains personal.
This is not a high-volume destination built for tourism. It is a carefully run operation built by locals who genuinely care about the fishing, the island, and the anglers who make the journey there.
Because when you travel this far, you want the people hosting you to care just as much about the destination as you do.
Where the Fishing Is the Luxury
Fanning Island offers something many destinations have lost, simplicity and authenticity.
The accommodations are comfortable, clean, and designed around the experience rather than distractions. Fresh local meals, ocean air, island hospitality, and a slower pace of life remind you why you came in the first place.
You are here for giant bonefish tailing across white sand flats, aggressive GTs exploding on bait, triggerfish that test every ounce of patience, and miles of water where the fish still behave like they have never seen a fly.
This is the kind of place where the real luxury is waking up each morning knowing you are about to fish somewhere truly wild.
Limited Pressure, Unlimited Opportunity
Fanning Island has often been called one of the last true frontier fisheries in the Pacific.
Compared to more established destinations like Christmas Island, Fanning remains largely undiscovered. Very few anglers ever make the trip, and the fishing pressure reflects that. Many of the flats feel untouched, and many of the fish act exactly how you hope they would. Like you are stepping back in time these fish are wild, aggressive, and uneducated.
Before the crowds.
Before the heavy pressure.
Before destinations became destinations.
For anglers who value authentic exploration, that is everything.
The Logistics: Getting to the Edge of the Map
Part of what makes Fanning so special is the fact that it is not easy to get to.
The journey typically begins with a flight into Christmas Island (CXI), usually routed through Honolulu or Fiji. From there, guests connect on a domestic Air Kiribati flight into Fanning Island (TNV), followed by a short transfer to the lodge.
A standard trip usually looks like this:
Wednesday: Arrive Christmas Island and overnight
Thursday: Fly to Fanning Island, settle in, and often sneak in your first afternoon session
Friday through Monday: Full guided fishing days
Tuesday: Return to Christmas Island and overnight
Wednesday: Depart for home
The travel itself becomes part of the story. It slows you down, builds anticipation, and reminds you that some places are still earned.
What a Day on Fanning Looks Like
Days start early.
Coffee is simple, breakfast is quick, and everyone is ready because once the boats leave, the focus is entirely on the fishing.
By early morning, boats push out toward the flats. Most days are spent with two anglers per boat, guided by locals who know every tide change, every cut, and every section of hard white sand worth walking.
This is visual fishing at its best.
Long shots at tailing bonefish.
GTs appearing out of nowhere.
Triggerfish demanding perfect presentations.
Bumpheads cruising water so clear it hardly looks real.
Most of the day is spent wading, covering water, watching closely, and staying ready for the moment everything happens at once.
Lunch is simple and practical, usually right back on the water before heading into the second half of the day.
By evening, you return tired and anxious to fish again the next day, already replaying moments in your head of your accomplishments. Dinner is fresh local food, stories from the day, and planning for tomorrow.
Why BlackBone Loves Fanning Island
At BlackBone, we believe the best fishing trips are not always the easiest ones to reach.
Sometimes the greatest destinations ask for a little more effort. A longer flight. A little more patience. A willingness to chase something few people ever get to experience.
Fanning Island is exactly that. It is authentic, wild, and unforgettable
For the right angler, it is not just another fishing trip, it is the kind of place that reminds you why you started chasing fish in the first place.

