REVIEW · POSITANO
Private Full Day Capri Tour by Boat from Positano
Book on Viator →Operated by Restart boat · Bookable on Viator
Capri looks different from the water. This private boat day from Positano gives you flexible pacing with real time for swims and grottos, plus snorkeling gear and beach towels onboard. The one catch: the published price can rise with on-the-spot add-ons like the Blue Grotto entrance and a possible Capri port disembarkation fee, and there’s also a listed fuel surcharge.
What makes this experience feel worth it is how the day is run. Captains such as Francisco, Samuel, Nino, Daniele, Nicola, Luca, Matteo, and Federico show up ready with local insight, and many reviews mention they help with lunch planning and timing the route around conditions. If you want Capri without the packed-boat energy, this is the kind of day that stays calm.
It’s an 8-hour loop that hits the coastline between Positano and Capri, multiple caves, a full circumnavigation from the water, then a longer stretch with Capri time for swimming, snorkeling, and lunch. You’ll spend a lot of the day on the move, so it’s best if you enjoy being outside, not if you’re hoping for long, slow hangs on land.
In This Review
- Quick Hits Before You Book
- Why a Private Capri Boat Day Works So Well from Positano
- What’s Actually Included on the Boat (So You Can Pack Lighter)
- How the Day Flows: Positano Harbor, Amalfi Coast Transit, Then Caves
- The opening sail from Positano
- The transit along the Amalfi Coast
- White Grotto and Green Grotto
- White Grotta and Grotta Verde: The Contrast Stops You’ll Remember
- White Grotto (Grotta Bianca)
- Green Grotto (Grotta Verde)
- Capri by Boat: Punta Carena Lighthouse and the Faraglioni Signature Views
- Punta Carena lighthouse
- Faraglioni Rocks
- Your Main Capri Block: Swimming, Snorkeling, Lunch, and Free Time
- Blue Grotto Optional Entry: The One Add-On You Should Decide Early
- Marina Piccola: A Calm Beach Dip Right After the Big Sights
- Price and Value: What You’re Paying For, and What Can Raise the Total
- Tips to Get the Smoothest Day Possible
- Should You Book This Private Full-Day Capri Tour from Positano?
- FAQ
- How long is the Private Full Day Capri Tour by Boat from Positano?
- Is this tour private?
- What’s included in the tour price?
- Does the tour include Blue Grotto entry?
- What is the free time like on Capri?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- How many people is the boat for?
- Is mobile ticketing used?
- What if weather is poor?
Quick Hits Before You Book

- Private boat pace from Positano so you can linger at viewpoints or keep moving when seas are calm
- Included snorkeling setup (masks and noodles) plus beach towels for easier water time
- A cave-and-coast run that combines White Grotto, Green Grotto, and optional Blue Grotto
- 2 hours on Capri for lunch and swimming, not just a quick photo stop
- Iconic water views timed around Punta Carena and the Faraglioni rock formations
Why a Private Capri Boat Day Works So Well from Positano

If you’ve ever stared at Capri from the shore and wondered how it really looks up close, a boat tour is the answer. From Positano, you get that dramatic coastline right away, then the day shifts into open-water sightseeing where Capri’s cliffs and coves actually make sense.
The private part matters. With a small group and your own captain, you’re not stuck with someone else’s schedule. The itinerary is set in a broad way, but your day can breathe. That flexible pace shows up in real-world guidance too: multiple captains named in customer feedback are described as patient, accommodating, and tuned to what you want to see and how long you want to stop.
One more practical thought: this is a full day. You’re mostly on the water, and the return is the same route in reverse. If you’re the type who likes long breaks in cafés on foot, plan to use your Capri time well (more on that below).
You can also read our reviews of more boat tours in Positano
What’s Actually Included on the Boat (So You Can Pack Lighter)
The included items are straightforward and useful, not just “nice to have.”
You get:
- Snorkeling equipment: masks and noodles
- Drinks: soda/pop, prosecco, limoncello, soft drinks, and beer
- Beach towels
This matters because it reduces the friction. In Capri, the cost of little conveniences can add up fast. Having towels and basic snorkeling gear ready means you can spend more of the day in the water and less time hunting for rentals or figuring out what you need.
Also, the operator is set up for groups. The listing notes a flat-rate per boat model that can work for different group sizes, including boats that can take up to 12 people. If you’re traveling as a family or a small friend group, this is often where private value starts to beat public tours.
How the Day Flows: Positano Harbor, Amalfi Coast Transit, Then Caves

Think of the route as three stages: the sail there, the cave circuit around Capri, and the time budget you get once you’re actually at Capri.
The opening sail from Positano
You start in Positano and head out with your captain exploring along the coast. This first stretch is short in the schedule, but it’s more than a warm-up. You’ll watch the shoreline unfold from the water, including little fishing areas and hidden-feeling beaches that you’d likely miss from land.
The transit along the Amalfi Coast
Next is a cruise segment described as a crociera along the Amalfi coastline to reach Capri. This is where you settle in, grab a drink, and let the captain set the rhythm. The itinerary lists it as about 50 minutes.
You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Positano
White Grotto and Green Grotto
Then you start hitting caves one after another. These stops are short, but they’re the kind where timing matters. The caves are about contrast—white rock against water color, and cave light against open sea.
One practical drawback: because these are water-access sights, what you see depends on conditions and the boat’s positioning. That’s also why having a captain who can judge the moment helps a lot.
White Grotta and Grotta Verde: The Contrast Stops You’ll Remember

Capri caves aren’t all the same. This day treats them like separate “chapters,” not just quick photo moments.
White Grotto (Grotta Bianca)
The White Grotto is described as one of Capri’s most suggestive caves. The big visual idea is contrast: white cave light against the blue sea beyond white limestone rocks. The stalactites and stalagmites create that surreal feeling where the cave looks like it’s lit from inside.
In a private setup, you can usually get a better look than you would in a big group rush. You can also linger just a bit longer when you spot a good angle from the water.
Green Grotto (Grotta Verde)
The Green Grotto is known for the water’s green color, caused by how light reflects inside the cave. In many parts of Capri, color comes and goes with sun and wave action. This is the type of stop where it helps to be ready with your eyes, not just your camera.
The scheduled time here is around 30 minutes. That’s enough to enjoy the scenery without turning it into a long “wait and hope” situation.
Capri by Boat: Punta Carena Lighthouse and the Faraglioni Signature Views

Once you arrive, you get a water-level circumnavigation. That’s a gift, because it shows you Capri’s structure quickly: headlands, cliffs, and those signature rock formations that postcards usually flatten.
Punta Carena lighthouse
The Punta Carena lighthouse is listed as an active lighthouse near the island’s southwest side, about 3 km from Anacapri. It’s also described as among Italy’s brightest and one of its oldest, first used in 1867.
Sighting a working lighthouse from the water gives you scale. You’re not just looking at buildings; you’re looking at navigation infrastructure that has mattered for generations.
Faraglioni Rocks
Then comes Capri’s most famous rock trio: the Faraglioni. The schedule calls out the three named spurs:
- Stella (still attached to the land)
- Faraglione di Mezzo
- Faraglione di Fuori, also known as Scopolo
This is where the private pace can pay off. If your captain slows slightly near landmarks, you get time to take photos from multiple angles instead of one quick pass.
Your Main Capri Block: Swimming, Snorkeling, Lunch, and Free Time

The tour gives you about 2 hours on Capri for your own plans. This is the part that decides whether your day feels relaxed or rushed.
You can:
- swim and snorkel in bays from the water
- get lunch at restaurants near the coast
- explore the island on your own
This is also where guidance from the captain can make your day easier. Many reviews mention captains arranging lunch reservations, and several name specific restaurants or describe helping with where to eat based on what the group wants. If you like eating without stress, this is a real value point.
A quick practical note: Capri can be a foot-traffic puzzle, with stairs and packed areas close together. If your captain offers advice like where to minimize walking or how to time your visit, take it. You’ll feel the difference during the “free time” portion.
Blue Grotto Optional Entry: The One Add-On You Should Decide Early

The Blue Grotto is famous for a reason. It’s described as a natural sea cave about 60 meters long and 25 meters wide, with clear water that looks unreal in photos and, more importantly, in person.
But here’s what you should know before you decide to add it:
- the cave mouth is about two meters wide, but only around one meter high
- you enter via small rowboats that carry a maximum of four passengers
- the boat ride into the cave is separate from the main boat tour stop
The entrance to the Blue Grotto is optional and listed as not included, with a fee on the spot (the price is given in the data as EUR 18 per person). That optionality is exactly why this stop can be worth it or not.
If your group is patient and you like iconic “do it once” sights, plan to go. If your priority is maximum swimming time and low waiting, you might choose to skip it and stay focused on Capri’s other water areas.
Also, this cave can involve a wait. In real-world feedback, I saw that some days ended up not doing Blue Grotto due to conditions, including how long it took to access it. Your captain will help you make the call based on what’s feasible that day.
Marina Piccola: A Calm Beach Dip Right After the Big Sights

After the Blue Grotto segment, you get a stop at Marina Piccola, described as the southern coast’s best spot if you want to take a dip with the Faraglioni rock formations in the background.
The schedule lists about 30 minutes here. That’s a sweet spot: long enough to cool off and take photos, short enough that you’re not stuck with wet suits and sunscreen for hours.
If you’re the kind of person who gets tired of standing around, this is the stop that usually feels like a reward. It’s also the easiest time to turn “touring” into “actually enjoying the water.”
Price and Value: What You’re Paying For, and What Can Raise the Total
The listed price is $687.87 per group (up to 5) for a private boat, and the tour runs about 8 hours. That’s not cheap. But private boat pricing in this area often boils down to one thing: you’re paying to control time and access.
When this tour becomes good value:
- If you’re a group where splitting private costs still leaves you far more comfortable than a big public tour
- If your group wants real time for swimming and snorkeling, not just passing scenery
- If you like having a captain handle on-the-water navigation and offer practical guidance
What can change the final math:
- Fuel surcharge: €350.00 per booking (listed)
- Blue Grotto entrance is not included (optional, pay on the spot)
- There can be a disembarkation fee in the main port of Capri listed as EUR 100.00 if necessary
So I’d treat the base price as the start of the estimate, not the full quote. If your group plans to do Blue Grotto, budget for it. If you’re aiming for a “no waiting” day, you can keep costs lower by skipping that optional entrance.
A good way to think about it: you’re buying time, not just sightseeing. If your goal is to avoid crowds and get water access that most visitors can’t easily replicate, this is one of the more straightforward ways to do it.
Tips to Get the Smoothest Day Possible
These are small things, but they have outsized effects at sea.
Start thinking about swim time early. You have snorkeling gear onboard and time on Capri, but you still need to be ready: bring what you’ll want right after a dip, and keep sunscreen practical.
Ask your captain about lunch timing. Multiple captains in feedback are described as arranging reservations. If you want lunch to happen without a scramble, that’s where you’ll feel the benefit most.
Be flexible about Blue Grotto. If the cave timing looks slow that day, don’t fight it. Your captain can often help you adjust so you still get a great day rather than a frustrating one.
Confirm your boat size if you’re comparing options. One review described a situation where an upgrade to a larger boat (for comfort) made a big difference for a family. That’s not something you want to discover mid-ride.
Should You Book This Private Full-Day Capri Tour from Positano?
Book it if you want Capri in a way that feels personal: a private boat day, multiple grottos, and enough time on Capri to actually swim, snorkel, and eat without panic. The included snorkeling gear, drinks, and towels take away the hassle. And the captain-driven pace can make the day feel calm even when Capri is busy.
Skip (or rethink) if:
- your group hates extra fees and optional add-ons
- you don’t like being on the water for most of the day
- your plan depends on doing Blue Grotto no matter what, even if the cave access involves waiting
If you’re weighing this against a crowded group tour, this is the kind of experience that’s easier to justify when you’re traveling as a group and want control over your day. Capri’s best moments often happen where the boats can get you. This tour is built around that idea.
FAQ
How long is the Private Full Day Capri Tour by Boat from Positano?
The duration is listed as approximately 8 hours.
Is this tour private?
Yes. It’s private, meaning only your group participates.
What’s included in the tour price?
Included items listed are snorkeling equipment (masks and noodles), drinks (soda/pop, prosecco, limoncello, soft drink, and beer), and beach towels.
Does the tour include Blue Grotto entry?
Blue Grotto entry is optional and not included. The fee is listed as EUR 18.00 per person paid on the spot.
What is the free time like on Capri?
You get about 2 hours on the island of Capri for swimming and snorkeling in bays, having lunch at coastal restaurants, and exploring on your own.
Where does the tour start and end?
The tour starts in Positano, Italy, and ends back at the meeting point.
How many people is the boat for?
The price is listed per group up to 5, and the features note that you pay one flat rate per boat for different group sizes, with boats up to 12 people. You should confirm the exact boat capacity for your booking.
Is mobile ticketing used?
Yes. The tour includes a mobile ticket.
What if weather is poor?
The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. Free cancellation is also available up to 24 hours in advance.

































