REVIEW · POSITANO
All Inclusive Private Boat Tour to the Amalfi Coast
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Private boat time on the Amalfi coast feels different. This private Gozzo cruise from Positano mixes quick swim breaks, famous photo moments, and real time in Amalfi, guided by skipper Christian. You also get the relaxed rhythm that comes with being only your group on the water.
What I love most is the small, practical comfort stuff done for you: snorkeling equipment, towels, and an aperitif with Prosecco plus snacks. I also like how the day is paced—short stops for water time, then a longer land break in Amalfi so you’re not just sightseeing from a distance.
One drawback to plan around: the tour needs good weather, and changes or cancellations aren’t refundable. If seas are rough, you’ll want flexibility in your schedule.
In This Review
- Key Points Before You Go
- Private Gozzo Boat Tour from Positano: What You’re Actually Buying
- Price and Value: Up to 6 People, One Fixed Group Fee
- Meet the Skipper: Why Christian’s Style Matters
- The 8-Hour Route: How the Day Flows Without Feeling Rushed
- Praiano: Pirate’s Cave Area Swim Time (About 20 Minutes)
- Furore Fjord Bridge: The Photo Stop That Actually Feels Worth It
- Conca dei Marini: Bay Swim Break (About 20 Minutes)
- Amalfi Town Stop: About 1 Hour for Walking (Lunch Optional)
- Ravello From the Sea: Why You Don’t Need Land Time Here
- Maiori: A Short Swim Stop Plus the Surprise
- What’s Included on Board: Comfort, Food, and Little Worries You Can Skip
- Meeting Point and Timing: Getting It Right Without Stress
- Who This Private Boat Tour Is Best For
- Should You Book This Amalfi Coast Private Boat Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the private boat tour?
- How many people can be on the boat?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- Is the boat tour fully private?
- What’s included with the tour?
- Is lunch included?
- Are any admissions included during the stops?
- What should I bring for snorkeling and swimming?
- What is the cancellation policy if I cancel?
- Is good weather required?
Key Points Before You Go

- Private group (up to 6): Your day sets the pace, not a schedule for strangers.
- Christian as skipper/guide: Warm, punctual, and focused on your safety and good moments on the water.
- Snorkeling + towels provided: You can swim without dragging gear or worrying about what’s available.
- Aperitif with Prosecco and Italian snacks: A proper break on the boat, not a vending-machine situation.
- Amalfi gets real time (about 1 hour): Enough to walk, look around, and plan lunch.
- Built-in swim stops: Praiano, Conca dei Marini, and Maiori get you close to the water.
Private Gozzo Boat Tour from Positano: What You’re Actually Buying
You’re paying for a day that feels like it was designed around the coast, not a checklist. Starting from Positano’s Marina Grande area, you head out on a traditional Gozzo boat with an expert skipper/guide, Christian, who sets the tone right away. In plain terms: you get the Amalfi Coast experience with breathing room.
The private format matters more than people expect. With room for up to six, you can spread out, move when you want, and take photos without waiting for the entire boat to shuffle into position. And because it’s private, the skipper can focus on your group’s rhythm—important on a coastline where wind, waves, and crowds can change the day minute to minute.
There’s also real value in what’s included. This isn’t just “get on a boat.” You get snorkeling equipment, towels, soda/soft drinks, beers, snacks, and an aperitif with Prosecco and Italian snacks. Add that the itinerary includes stop times where admission tickets are free, and the day costs less than a piecemeal plan would.
You can also read our reviews of more boat tours in Positano
Price and Value: Up to 6 People, One Fixed Group Fee

The price is $1,031.75 per group (up to 6) for about 8 hours (navigation time included). That sounds steep until you do the quick math.
- If you fill all six spots, you’re roughly around the low-$170s per person for the full private day.
- If you bring fewer people, it costs more per person, so it starts to make sense when you’re traveling as a family or a small group of friends.
Where it really earns its keep is the bundle: boat + skipper/guide time + snorkeling gear + drinks + snacks + towels + covered stop access fees. Lunch is not included, so you’ll still plan that part yourself, but the rest of the day is handled.
Meet the Skipper: Why Christian’s Style Matters

This tour’s reputation is strongly tied to the skipper. Christian shows up punctual and treats the boat time like it’s part tour, part care, part storytelling. One thing I’d pay attention to is how he helps with getting the right shots—especially with Positano in the background—without rushing you.
Safety and comfort come up again and again: a clean boat, towels on board, and a calm, friendly approach that makes people feel at ease. He also gives practical context, including Italian culture and everyday life, not just dates and place names. If you like your Amalfi Coast day to come with explanations that connect to what you’re seeing, you’ll probably enjoy this.
And there’s a real planning advantage: communication is set up so you can coordinate smoothly (WhatsApp is mentioned as the easy way people connect for planning). That’s the kind of detail that saves time and stress before you ever reach the pier.
The 8-Hour Route: How the Day Flows Without Feeling Rushed
The route is built around short water breaks and a longer town stop. You’re looking at a full day, but it doesn’t feel like non-stop motion. It’s more like: enjoy the coastline from the water, hop in when the conditions allow, then switch gears for a walk in Amalfi.
The main stops are:
- Praiano (Pirate’s cave area swim time)
- Photo moment at the Furore fjord bridge
- Conca dei Marini (swim time in the bay)
- Amalfi (boat-to-town time around 1 hour, lunch optional)
- Views of Ravello from the sea
- Maiori (a short swim stop plus a surprise)
Admission tickets are listed as free for the water-and-area stops (where applicable). That means you’re not stacking last-minute costs while you’re already on holiday.
Praiano: Pirate’s Cave Area Swim Time (About 20 Minutes)
Praiano is your first proper water stop, with a short window around 20 minutes at the Pirate’s cave area. This kind of stop works well in this itinerary because it’s timed for the moment you’re ready to stretch and cool off, not after you’re already tired.
Two practical tips for this part of the day:
- With only about 20 minutes, keep your getting-in time tight. If you’re dragging time trying to get suited up, you’ll lose the best water minutes.
- If you’re snorkeling, use the equipment you’re given rather than bringing your own—less hassle, faster entry.
You’ll also want to enjoy the views from the boat while you wait, since you’re transitioning from one distinct pocket of coastline to another. The coast looks different from Praiano compared with Positano, even when you’re close to both.
You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Positano
Furore Fjord Bridge: The Photo Stop That Actually Feels Worth It
Between swim stops, there’s a photo moment at the famous Furore fjord bridge. This isn’t a long detour. It’s a quick stop that’s timed so you can get the classic sight line without turning the day into hours of driving-by.
If photography matters to you, this is where you’ll likely be glad you’re on a private charter. Your skipper can help you position the boat for better angles, and you won’t have to fight for elbow room. For most people, 10 to 20 minutes here feels like the sweet spot: enough time for photos, not enough time for boredom.
Conca dei Marini: Bay Swim Break (About 20 Minutes)
Next is Conca dei Marini, another about 20 minutes water stop. The focus here is the bay—more about the water experience than long sightseeing. If you’ve been waiting for a chance to swim along the Amalfi Coast without dealing with complicated beach setups, this is the kind of stop that scratches that itch.
This is also a good spot to remember what’s included. Since snorkeling equipment and towels are provided, you can switch between swim and relax without planning around logistics. You can be in and out, then back to soaking up the ride.
Keep expectations realistic for short swim stops. You’re not running a full snorkeling session here. You’re getting a clean, focused taste of what the coast looks and feels like when you’re in the water.
Amalfi Town Stop: About 1 Hour for Walking (Lunch Optional)
Then you get the land break: Amalfi, with time for the city and a possible lunch stop. The time is about 1 hour.
That one-hour window is exactly why this tour stands apart from “boat-only” cruises. You’re not just seeing the coast from offshore—you get to step into the town and feel the pace change when you’re on foot.
A practical way to use the hour:
- Spend part of it simply walking the main streets near the harbor area so you get oriented fast.
- If you want lunch, pick something efficient rather than committing to a long sit-down meal. You don’t have much time, and it’s better to enjoy than rush.
One trade-off: one hour can be tight if your group wants museums or slower wandering. Still, for most people, it’s the right length to make the town stop feel meaningful without dragging the entire day.
Ravello From the Sea: Why You Don’t Need Land Time Here
You’ll sail in the waters near Ravello, seeing it from the sea. No land time is listed here. That might sound like a compromise, but it actually works in the flow of the day.
Ravello is known for its views and hillside feel, and you’re getting the best vantage point you can get without climbing up and losing time. For many people, it’s the perfect “see it, then keep moving” moment—especially on an eight-hour cruise where you already have one town stop built in.
If Ravello is on your must-do list for deeper exploring, you might plan a separate visit on another day. But as a sight moment during a boat route, it’s a strong add.
Maiori: A Short Swim Stop Plus the Surprise
The last named stop is Maiori, again with about 20 minutes of sea time. The plan includes a surprise, but it isn’t detailed, so treat this as a pleasant unknown. That uncertainty can be nice—less expectation, more enjoyment when something extra shows up.
Maiori also makes sense as a closing chapter. You’ve already done the cave-bay-town-view sequence. Now you wrap with one more water moment before returning.
If your group is traveling with kids, this is the part where they usually enjoy the most. After hours of scenery and town walking, the final water time can turn the day from pretty to memorable.
What’s Included on Board: Comfort, Food, and Little Worries You Can Skip
This tour is strong on the basics you’d otherwise have to figure out on your own:
- Snorkeling equipment so you can swim without bringing gear
- Towels (so you’re not improvising after the water time)
- Soft drinks and beers
- Snacks
- Aperitif with Prosecco and Italian snacks
- All fees and taxes so your budget stays cleaner
Notice what’s missing: lunch is not included. That’s normal, but it changes how you plan Amalfi. Since you might stop for lunch during the town hour, decide ahead of time whether your group wants a sit-down meal or something quick.
Also, admission tickets are listed as free for the stops where tickets apply. That’s another hidden value point. It means less ticket searching mid-holiday.
Meeting Point and Timing: Getting It Right Without Stress
You start at:
Spiaggia di Positano Marina Grande, Via del Brigantino, 84017 Positano SA, Italy
The activity ends back at the meeting point. It’s also noted as near public transportation, which is useful if you’re not staying right on the beach.
The duration is about 8 hours and includes navigation time. That matters because you should treat it as a full-day commitment, not a half-day boat ride.
A simple timing strategy: eat something before you go, then treat snacks and drinks on board as part of the day’s rhythm. Since you’re not guaranteed lunch onboard, plan a realistic hunger plan.
Who This Private Boat Tour Is Best For
This tour fits well if you want:
- A private experience with no crowds on your boat
- Several swimming breaks without complicated beach logistics
- Real time in Amalfi for walking and lunch choices
- A skipper who mixes local context with practical care
It’s especially good for couples who want a romantic day with a built-in aperitif, families who want water time plus a town stop, and small groups who can fill up to six seats.
If you’re the type who only wants one or two stops and hates boat time, this might feel like more movement than you want. But if you like the idea of experiencing the coast from multiple angles in one day, it makes sense.
Should You Book This Amalfi Coast Private Boat Tour?
Book it if you want the coast experience with real comfort built in: snorkeling gear, towels, drinks, and a Prosecco aperitif, plus the smart mix of swim breaks and about an hour in Amalfi. The private format is the multiplier here. It turns a scenic route into a day that feels personal.
Skip it or think hard if you don’t have weather flexibility. The tour requires good weather, and changes aren’t refundable. Also, if your group expects a long Amalfi exploration or a full lunch sit-down, the town time may feel short.
If your schedule can handle sea conditions and you’re aiming for a high-comfort day on the water, this is the kind of Amalfi Coast plan that’s worth putting at the top of your list.
FAQ
How long is the private boat tour?
The tour lasts about 8 hours, and the total time includes navigation.
How many people can be on the boat?
It’s a private tour for your group, with pricing set for up to 6 people.
Where does the tour start and end?
It starts at Spiaggia di Positano Marina Grande (Via del Brigantino, 84017 Positano SA, Italy) and ends back at the same meeting point.
Is the boat tour fully private?
Yes. Only your group participates.
What’s included with the tour?
The tour includes snorkeling equipment, soda/soft drinks and beers, snacks, an aperitif with Prosecco and Italian snacks, towels, and all fees and taxes.
Is lunch included?
No. Lunch is not included, though there is the possibility of stopping for lunch during the Amalfi time.
Are any admissions included during the stops?
Admission tickets are listed as free for the stops where tickets apply.
What should I bring for snorkeling and swimming?
You’ll have snorkeling equipment and towels provided, so you mainly need swimwear. Plan to use what’s on board to keep things simple.
What is the cancellation policy if I cancel?
The experience is non-refundable and cannot be changed for any reason. If the tour is canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
Is good weather required?
Yes. The experience requires good weather. Most people can participate, and it’s noted as near public transportation.

































