Updated
X
Copy link
Impact Link
Save
Saved
Read in app
subscribers. Become an Insider
and start reading now.
Have an account? .
- The Edinburgh of the Seven Seas settlement is considered the most remote settlement in the world.
- The settlement, which is on the island of Tristan da Cunha, is home to just over 200 people.
- It can only be reached after a nearly week-long boat trip departing from Cape Town, South Africa.
Forget summer 2025 — if you want to visit the world’s most isolated settlement, it’s time to start planning for summer 2026.
That’s because the government of Edinburgh of the Seven Seas — one of the British Overseas Territories on the island of Tristan da Cunha, which is in the middle of the South Atlantic Ocean — recommends planning at least a year ahead if you want to make the trek.
After all, you’ll need to find a boat to take you, most likely from the nearest city of Cape Town, South Africa. Then you need to write to the Tristan government, seeking their approval to visit. Once permission is granted and you’ve shared details of any criminal history, you can begin your boat journey … which will take a week to complete.
Tristan da Cunha is an active volcanic island. The last time it erupted was in 1961, which forced islanders to evacuate to England, according to the website of the Tristan da Cunha Government and the Tristan da Cunha Association.
Now just 209 people live there, but the remoteness grants the lucky few plenty of tranquility and safety.
The economy relies on the export of crawfish, known as Tristan rock lobster, but tourism also makes up a small part. However, there are no hotels on the island, so the government has created a homestay program for visitors for £65 a night, or around $88 a night, according to the island’s website.
Here is what life is like in what its residents call “the most remote settlement in the world.”
Edinburgh of the Seven Seas is known as the most remote settlement in the world.
Source: Smithsonian, Tristan da Cunha
It lies at the edge of an island, Tristan da Cunha, in the middle of the South Atlantic Ocean.
The island of Tristan da Cunha is more than 1,700 miles (nearly 2,800 kilometers) off the coast of Cape Town.
The island is one of Britain’s 14 overseas territories.
Source: Britain’s Treasure Islands, BBC
The settlement was named after the Duke of Edinburgh, Queen Victoria’s second son, after he visited in 1867.
As of May 2025, 209 islanders and visitors are living there, including descendants from original settlers and stationed researchers.
Being the remotest settled island in the world is Tristan’s claim to fame.
The island is so remote that the government actually recommends visitors start to plan their trips a year in advance.
Prospective visitors need to get their trip approved by the Tristan government. They need to email the Secretary to the Administrator, providing reasons for their visit.
The island is only accessible by boat across the South Atlantic Ocean — most trips leave from Cape Town, South Africa.
The trip from Cape Town takes six days, and boats leave on an inconsistent schedule — sometimes they set sail multiple times per month and sometimes they skip a month entirely.
The settlement is known for its warm hospitality and will welcome all visitors after the long journey.
Of the 209 people currently living on the island, 25 are not part of the permanent group of residents. And of the permanent islanders, there are only 11 different last names.
One islander told a 2016 documentary that the island is one giant family-like community — residents will share food and help each other with fixes to their homes.
Source: Redfern Natural History Productions
One native islander was asked about what it was like to grow up on Tristan. He joked, “Pretty good, as long as you can find something to do.”
Edinburgh of the Seven Seas is a rural settlement, which sustains itself by growing mainly potatoes on patches of land about a mile away from the town.
Source: Redfern Natural History Productions
The farming part of life in Tristan allows islanders to grow their own food without having to import.
There’s one road that leads to the patches …
Source: Redfern Natural History Productions
… and anyone can take the bus to get there.
Source: Redfern Natural History Productions
Every family living on the island has a few fields to grow potatoes and other crops. They harvest inside “walled patches” made from volcanic rock, and use hand tools rather than machinery.
Each family can own livestock, but the government controls the numbers to prevent overgrazing of the limited land. Currently, each household is allowed to own one breeding cow.
More than 40% of the island’s territory is declared a nature reserve. Animal life includes rare bird breeds and Northern Rockhopper penguins.
Source: Britain’s Treasure Islands
There are three different species of albatross native to the island, but the albatross are threatened by mice every year.
Source: Island Conservation, Tristan da Cunha
The same boats that brought people to the island brought mice and rats as well. In killing the chicks of native birds, the rodents could be eradicating a number of species.
Source: RSPB, Tristan da Cunha
In fact, it’s such a problem that the islanders have an entire holiday dedicated to ridding the island of the vermin: Ratting Day.
On this holiday, residents team up and compete to see who can catch the most, and the biggest, rats and mice — it was an idea thought up before mice repellent existed on the island.
Judges count the rats and measure the tails to decide which team wins. Teams then receive prizes and have a dance-filled celebration.
The residents also celebrate traditional Catholic holidays, including Easter.
The church was built in 1923 and was the first on the island.
Before the church was created, islanders held services in people’s homes.
Islanders say they feel a sense of community while dealing with death just as much as they do while living and celebrating life.
“Whether family or not, a passing touches the hearts of the whole community, and this is when you see islanders not only as a community but as a family,” wrote one islander, Dawn Repetto, on the community’s website.
Scientists visit the island to gather information on the rare plant and animal species living on the island among the volcanic rock.
The settlement also has all the basics you would expect from any small town, such as a supermarket, a bar, an internet cafe, and bus stops.
Source: Redfern Natural History Productions
There’s also a school, St. Mary’s, for students aged between 3 and 16. It has five classrooms, a library, a hall with a stage, a computer room, and a science room.
The local economy depends largely on the harvest of rock lobster — which they sell internationally — and fish.
They also sell postage stamps to collectors abroad and make a limited amount through tourism.
While some cruise ships have added the port to their route from Africa to Latin America so tourists can have a peek into this style of remote life, it’s generally not somewhere people just pass through.
Source: Smithsonian, Lonely Planet
But for the tourists that do make it to the island, there are a few options when it comes to tourist accommodations.
Some islanders open up their homes to visitors on a homestay basis. They collect 88% of the guest fees while the other 12% goes to the government.
There’s a museum called “Traditional Thatched House Museum” that’s available as a guesthouse for one night for two people. The price includes tea, coffee, milk, sugar, candles, sleeping bags, and a “traditional Tristan cooked meal” for lunch.
Tourists can climb the active volcano on their visit. This peaceful, quiet settlement was almost destroyed in 1961 when the volcano erupted and sent lava spewing down the mountains.
You can see here how close the lava got to the settlement. It stopped before it reached the buildings.
Islanders were forced to evacuate. Most went to England, where they got a taste of modern life.
By November of 1963, all the islanders who chose to reject the swinging sixties in the UK had returned back to their settlement to carry on their legacy.
Read the full article here