MuyuTime B&B Green Island — Steps from Shilang Beach, Sea Views, Score 9.6 Island-Best
Green Island has several snorkeling spots, but Shilang Beach (石朗浮潛區) is the one locals call 浮潛聖地 — the holy site of snorkeling — and MuyuTime B&B (木魚時光) sits right on its doorstep. No scooter ride, no waiting: step out of your room and you're in the water. A score of 9.6 from 113 verified reviews makes this the most confidently-rated guesthouse on Green Island among properties with a meaningful review base.
Green Island (綠島 / Lyudao) is a small volcanic island 33 kilometres off the east coast of Taiwan's Taitung County. It is celebrated for crystalline water, healthy coral reefs, and one of only three seawater hot springs in the world. Shilang Beach (石朗浮潛區) on the southern side of Nanliao Village is the island's most beloved snorkeling spot — shallow water, abundant soft and hard corals, and fish life colourful enough to stop first-timers in their tracks. MuyuTime B&B (木魚時光) is the property whose front step is closest to that beach, making it the most naturally integrated option for anyone who came to the island to be in the ocean.
One guest recalls: "Woke up and went straight out snorkeling — no waiting, no driving, just walked out the door. The hosts sorted their scooter and diving trip within minutes of arrival. Room was spotless, views were incredible. They'll absolutely be back."
What separates MuyuTime from other Green Island guesthouses is its location, which is genuinely hard to replicate. Most properties on the island require a five-to-ten-minute scooter ride to reach Shilang or the island's other dive sites. Here, the gap between your bed and the coral is measured in footsteps. Guests consistently mention arriving early in the morning, stepping out before 8 am while other day-trippers are still on the ferry, and having the reef almost entirely to themselves. That is the kind of advantage that only a beachfront address can deliver — and reviews confirm that guests here feel it acutely.
The complimentary drinks provided by the property are a small but repeatedly praised gesture. On a remote volcanic island in summer, where humidity and heat arrive early and stay late, cold refreshments waiting when you return from a morning in the water land differently than they might elsewhere. Beyond drinks, the hosts actively assist guests with scooter rentals, snorkeling gear, and organised dive tours, absorbing the coordination that can be genuinely time-consuming to arrange independently on a small island with limited options.
Rooms range from compact doubles at 12 square metres up to a family room at 26 square metres accommodating four to six guests. Sea-facing rooms and garden-adjacent options are both available; the property's proximity to the waterfront means even rooms that are not directly ocean-facing are close enough that the ambient sound and light of the sea are a constant presence. Shared kitchen facilities are available for guests who want to prepare their own meals — a practical advantage for multi-night stays. Wi-Fi is provided free of charge, though as is typical on remote island properties, signal can be variable near the water. Free airport transfers (from the island's small airstrip) and on-site parking/scooter facilities complete a practical set of amenities suited to an island stay.
Getting to Green Island requires planning. Most visitors take the ferry from Fugang Harbour (富崗漁港) in Taitung — roughly 50 minutes in good conditions, with the caveat that services are cancelled frequently during typhoon season and winter swells. A small number of daily flights from Taitung Airport take 15 minutes, but seats are limited and book quickly. Once on the island, a rented scooter is the standard way to explore — the entire coastal ring road is less than 20 kilometres, and one circumnavigation comfortably covers the lighthouse, the hot springs, and all major beaches in a half-day.
The snorkeling experience at Shilang — so close to the guesthouse that it barely counts as a trip — is what drives the scores here. Coral depth in the main zones ranges from roughly one to three metres, making it genuinely accessible to non-swimmers with a snorkel mask and fins. Parrotfish, butterflyfish, and a dense cast of reef species are visible within minutes of entering the water. Early morning before 8 am is the ideal window: calmer water, better light for underwater visibility, and significantly fewer people than the midday rush that arrives with the day-tour groups from the ferry. Guests at MuyuTime simply step out and join that window without effort.
At a score of 9.6 from 113 reviews, MuyuTime B&B is the strongest single data point available for Green Island accommodation. Rates starting from approximately NT$1,800 per night represent strong value relative to the location — comparable beachfront properties elsewhere in Taiwan's island circuit charge considerably more for equivalent access. The property is best suited to ocean-focused travellers: snorkelers, divers, and anyone who wants their wake-up moment to involve coral reef rather than a car park. Book well ahead for the summer season (June–August), when the island fills and rooms here close off weeks in advance.
A final note on the seasonal reality: Green Island is a summer destination in the clearest sense. Between roughly October and March, typhoon-frequency and persistent swells make the island difficult to reach reliably, and many guesthouses — MuyuTime among them — close for the off-season. Plan your visit between April and September for the conditions the island is known for: clear visibility, calm waters, active reef life, and the kind of ocean access that produces reviews like the ones that have pushed this property's score to 9.6.
Summary from Booking & Agoda
- ✓ Location is unmatched — Shilang Beach is steps away, no scooter needed for a morning snorkel
- ✓ Hosts are exceptionally helpful: scooter rentals and dive tours arranged on arrival
- ✓ Complimentary drinks — a small but genuinely appreciated gesture in the summer heat
- ✓ Rooms are consistently described as clean, comfortable, and well-suited to an active beach stay
- ! Some room categories are compact (double rooms from 12 sq m)
- ! Green Island is remote — travel planning for ferry or small aircraft is required
- ! Books out quickly in summer; last-minute availability is rare in peak season
- ✓ The beachfront position at Shilang is this property's defining feature — no other guesthouse matches it for snorkel access
- ✓ Hosts handle everything: scooters, dive tours, local recommendations — genuinely reduces island-logistics stress
- ✓ Free drinks, clean rooms, reliable Wi-Fi for the island context
- ✓ Excellent value for the location — comparable beachfront access elsewhere costs more
- ! Wi-Fi signal can be weak in rooms closest to the water — bring a local SIM as backup
- ! Compact room sizes in the smaller categories; better suited to couples or solo travellers than large groups
- ! Island-wide food options are limited; meal planning ahead of arrival is advisable
- 💡The property is small and rooms are limited — book 1–2 months ahead for summer stays (June–August) and during any Taiwan public holidays. Green Island has finite accommodation island-wide; last-minute bookings here are rarely successful in peak season.
- 💡MuyuTime closes for the winter off-season (approximately October–March) — this is the norm for Green Island guesthouses. Typhoon activity and persistent winter swells make the island difficult to reach reliably in this period, and ferry cancellations are common. Plan your visit between April and September only.
- 💡Wi-Fi and mobile signal on Green Island are weaker than on the Taiwan mainland — rooms close to the sea may have intermittent signal. If you need reliable internet for remote work, Green Island is not the right setting → purchase a Taiwanese data SIM at Taitung airport or the ferry terminal before departing.