Scuba Diving Wrecks in Cyprus

Blessed with all the elements that make a diver’s paradise, Larnaca attracts visitors from all over the world for its favourable weather conditions, top-ranking scuba diving wrecks and diverse marine life. Warm waters that range from 16-27 degrees almost all-year-round, the island as a whole enjoys one of the longest diving seasons in the Mediterranean, further enhanced by fantastic visibility – thanks to an absence of plankton. Whether you are an experienced diver or trying the sport for the first time, Larnaca offers the ideal diving experience. These are scuba diving wrecks we often visit, depending on what wreck you decide to dive.

The Zenobia Wreck

Location: Larnaca Bay

Type of dive site: Wreck

Depth: 17 – 43 metres

Visibility: 30 metres

Access: By boat

Qualification Required: Open water (OW)

Features: An abundance of marine life can be found at the wreck, with schools of fish, including grouper, barracuda, kingfish, jacks and trigger fish, as well as moray eels, stingrays, turtles and octopus. Its ferry and much of the cargo are intact, making it fascinating to explore.

Interesting Facts: Ranked as one of the Top 10 best wreck dives in the world, the Zenobia is a Swedish Roll-on-roll-off ferry that sank on its maiden voyage in 1980 and was thus nicknamed ‘The Titanic of the Mediterranean’. She now lies on her portside on a flat bed of sand and rocks. The 165-metre ferry was carrying 108 articulated lorries with a varied cargo, including cars, military equipment, games, food and telecommunication systems, and some of the one million hen eggs it was carrying have even remained intact under water.  ‘Diving at the Zenobia’.

MV Elpida

Location: Larnaca, Voroklini Coast

Type of dive site: Wreck

Depth: 32 metres

Access: By boat

Qualification Required: Advanced Open Water (AOW)

Interesting Facts: The MV Elpida was sunk in December 2019 to create the region’s first artificial reef. The vessel is 63m long and 10m wide. It was constructed in Germany in 1965 and used as an active cargo vessel  in Greece until it arrived to Cyprus for use as an artificial reef wreck.

LEF1

Location: Larnaca, Voroklini Coast

Type of dive site: Wreck

Depth: 13 metres

Access: By boat

Qualification Required: Suitable for all levels

Interesting Facts: The LEF1 was sunk in December 2019 and is the island’s first and only artificial reef suitable for snorkellers. The vessel is 15.5m long and 4m wide and was constructed in 1955. It was donated by Lefkaritis Brothers Ltd

HMS Cricket

Location: Xylophagou, Larnaka Bay

Type of dive site: Wreck

Depth: 27 metres

Visibility: 25 metres

Access: By boat

Qualification Required: Advanced Open Water (AOW)

Features: There is a sandy dip under the wreck allowing divers to swim underneath it as well as inside the hull through escape hatches. The vessel is home to groupers and other fish.

Interesting Facts: This old British river gunboat rests upside down. It survived the war and was then anchored in Larnaka Bay and used as target practice by the RAF, but sank in 1947 due to bad weather.

Alexandria Wreck

Location: Larnaka Bay

Type of dive site: Wreck

Depth: 32 metres

Visibility: 25 metres

Access: By boat

Qualification Required: Advanced Open Water (AOW)

Features: Located 200 metres from the famous Zenobia wreck, this site also features the same marine life with schools of fish including grouper, barracuda, kingfish, jacks and trigger fish, as well as moray eels, stingrays, turtles and octopus.

Interesting Facts: The Alexandra was a wooden Egyptian fishing vessel that sank in 2006 and measures 37 metres across.