How to Book a Boat Tour in Cagliari

The first thing that surprises you about Cagliari is the flamingos. Actual pink flamingos, hundreds of them, standing in the shallow lagoon right next to the city. You drive in from the airport and there they are, casually existing between a highway and a Mediterranean capital like something out of a nature documentary that nobody told the urban planners about.

The colourful waterfront of Cagliari Sardinia with historic buildings along the harbour

Cagliari from the waterfront. The layers of the city stack up the hill behind the port — medieval at the top, 19th century in the middle, chaos at the bottom. It works somehow.
The second thing that surprises you is the coastline. Cagliari sits on the southern tip of Sardinia, wrapped around a wide gulf with the headland of Sella del Diavolo — the Devil’s Saddle — pushing out into water so clear you can see the sand rippling at five meters. This is not some distant island you need a ferry to reach. It is a city of 150,000 people with beaches that would make the Caribbean self-conscious.

Sailboats moored at the Cagliari Marina in Sardegna Italy on a bright sunny day

The marina is where most boat tours depart from. Morning light here is particularly good — the water catches it and throws it back at the buildings.
And the best way to see all of it — the cliffs, the caves carved into the limestone beneath the Devil’s Saddle, the hidden coves that you cannot reach on foot — is from a boat. A two or three-hour tour around the Gulf of Cagliari will show you a version of this city that you simply cannot get from shore.

A seagull flying over the coastline of Cagliari with the historic cityscape in the background

The headland from a distance. Sella del Diavolo is the rocky promontory on the right — the cliffs underneath it are where most boat tours spend the bulk of their time.
Golden sunset over Cagliari Sardinia with the Mediterranean Sea and city skyline
Late afternoon turning to evening. Cagliari has some of the best sunsets in the Mediterranean, and the light does ridiculous things to the water in the last hour before it drops.
Here is everything you need to know about booking a boat tour in Cagliari — which ones are worth your money, what you will actually see, and how to time it right.

In a Hurry?

My top three picks if you just want to book and get on the water:

  1. Best overall: Boat Tour with 4 Swim Stops, Snorkeling and Prosecco — $59/person, 3 hours. The most popular boat tour in Cagliari and it is easy to see why. Four swimming stops, snorkeling gear included, a glass of prosecco on the water. Covers the whole Sella del Diavolo coastline. Hard to beat.
  2. Best value: Sella del Diavolo Boat Magic Tour with Drinks and Snacks — $42/person, 2 hours. Shorter but packed tight. Drinks and local snacks on board, and the route hits the most scenic stretch of coastline. Best bang for your euro if you are watching your budget.
  3. Most fun format: Zodiac Boat Tour with 3-4 Swim Stops, Wine and Snorkeling — $41/person, 2 hours. A zodiac (rigid inflatable) instead of a traditional boat, which means you sit closer to the water and feel every wave. Wine instead of prosecco. Different energy entirely.

The Best Boat Tours in Cagliari

A sailboat on the azure blue sea near the coast of Cagliari Sardinia

The Gulf of Cagliari on a calm day. The water colour shifts from deep blue in the middle to almost transparent near the shore. This is what you are paying to spend a morning in.
I have gone through the Cagliari boat tours and picked four that cover different budgets and styles. All of them take you around Sella del Diavolo and along the dramatic coastline, but they differ in duration, extras, and the kind of boat you are on.

1. Boat Tour with 4 Swim Stops, Snorkeling and Prosecco

Boat tour with swim stops snorkeling and prosecco in Cagliari Sardinia

  • Price: $59 per person
  • Duration: 3 hours
  • Provider: GetYourGuide

This is the one most people end up booking, and for good reason. Three hours on the water gives you enough time to actually settle in rather than feeling rushed, and the four designated swimming stops mean you spend a decent chunk of that time in the water rather than just looking at it from the deck.

The route follows the coastline around Sella del Diavolo, passing the limestone cliffs and sea caves that make this stretch of coast so photogenic. The snorkeling gear is included, and the water clarity here is genuinely startling — you can see fish, sea urchins, and the rocky bottom in sharp detail even from the surface. The swimming spots are chosen based on conditions, so the skipper adjusts the route depending on wind and current. Some days you get more sheltered coves; other days you are swimming right at the base of the cliffs.

The prosecco comes out somewhere around the second stop. It is not fancy, but sitting on a boat in the Mediterranean sun with a cold glass of prosecco and a view of the Sardinian coastline is not something that requires a vintage label to feel good.

One thing to know: the boat can fill up in peak season. Twenty-odd people on a single vessel means it gets cozy. If that bothers you, look at the zodiac option below. But for most people, the atmosphere is part of the fun — strangers comparing snorkeling finds and passing around sunscreen.

Best for: The default pick. Best combination of time on the water, swimming opportunities, and value. If you only do one boat tour in Cagliari, make it this one.

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2. Devil’s Saddle Boat Tour with Spritz and Chips

Devil Saddle boat tour with spritz and chips in Cagliari Sardinia

  • Price: $65 per person
  • Duration: 3 hours
  • Provider: GetYourGuide

Same duration as the first option but a different character. The name says it all — this one leans into the Sella del Diavolo (Devil’s Saddle) as the centrepiece rather than trying to cover maximum coastline. The focus is tighter, and the narrative from the captain tends to go deeper into the geology and mythology of the headland. Legend has it that the Devil and the angels fought over this bay, and the saddle-shaped rock is where the Devil fell from the sky. The skippers here love telling that story, and the good ones make it land.

The spritz-and-chips combo is not fancy cuisine, but it matches the mood. This is an afternoon-on-the-water kind of tour — laid back, slightly indulgent, with a skipper who treats the whole thing like showing friends around their neighbourhood rather than running a commercial operation.

At $65 it is the most expensive option on this list, and honestly the extra $6 over the swim-stops tour is not buying you dramatically more. What it is buying is a slightly different vibe — more focused on the storytelling, less on the we-are-all-jumping-in-the-water-now energy. If you prefer watching the scenery with a drink rather than getting wet, this is the better fit.

Best for: People who want the coastline experience without mandatory swimming stops. Also good for anyone who likes a guided narrative about local history and geology.

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3. Sella del Diavolo Boat Magic Tour with Drinks and Snacks

Sella del Diavolo boat magic tour with drinks and snacks in Cagliari

  • Price: $42 per person
  • Duration: 2 hours
  • Provider: GetYourGuide

If you are working with a tighter budget or a tighter schedule, this is the sweet spot. Two hours is enough to see the key stretches of the Sella del Diavolo coastline, swim at a couple of stops, and enjoy drinks and local snacks on board — all for $42, which is about as affordable as Cagliari boat tours get.

The snacks are Sardinian — think local cheese, cured meats, and bread — rather than the generic chips-and-crackers you get on some budget tours. The drinks are generous. And two hours goes faster than you expect when the scenery looks like this.

The trade-off is obvious: fewer stops, less coastline covered, and a shorter window of time to enjoy it all. But nothing feels rushed. The pace is relaxed, the swimming stops are legitimate (not perfunctory five-minute dips), and you come away feeling like you got your money’s worth. Which at $42, you did.

Best for: Budget-conscious travellers who still want the core experience. Also works well if you have a packed itinerary and cannot spare three hours.

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4. Zodiac Boat Tour with 3-4 Swim Stops, Wine and Snorkeling

Zodiac boat tour with swim stops wine and snorkeling in Cagliari Sardinia

  • Price: $41 per person
  • Duration: 2 hours
  • Provider: GetYourGuide

This is the outlier on the list and my personal pick for anyone who wants something that feels less like a tour and more like an adventure. The zodiac — a rigid inflatable boat — sits lower in the water than a standard vessel, which means you feel the sea underneath you. Every wave, every swell, every shift in the current. It is a completely different physical experience.

The smaller boat size means smaller groups, which changes the dynamic. Eight or ten people on a zodiac have a different energy than twenty on a cruiser. The captain can take you into caves and tight spots that bigger boats cannot access. And the swimming stops feel more spontaneous — the skipper reads the conditions and drops anchor wherever looks best, rather than following a fixed route.

Wine instead of prosecco or spritz. It is usually a local Sardinian white — Vermentino, probably — and it pairs well with salt air and sunshine. Snorkeling gear is included, and the clarity of the water in the spots these zodiacs reach is among the best around Cagliari.

The downside? Zodiacs are less comfortable. No shade, minimal cushioning, and if the sea picks up, you will feel it. Anyone prone to seasickness should think twice. But if you want the most hands-on, in-the-water, close-to-the-sea version of this experience, the zodiac is it.

Best for: Adventurous types, small groups, couples who want something more intimate. Skip this if you get seasick easily.

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When to Go

Turquoise blue waters and sandy beach along the coast of Sardinia Italy

Sardinia’s water is ridiculously clear. This is not a filter — this is just what it looks like from May through October.
Timing matters here, maybe more than you think.

May through June is the golden window. The water is warm enough for comfortable swimming (around 20-22C), the boat tours run full schedules, and Cagliari is not yet drowning in peak-season crowds. Late May especially is a sweet spot — long days, warm sun, and enough breeze to keep the heat from becoming oppressive. Book a few days ahead and you will be fine.

July and August bring the heat and the people. Temperatures push past 35C regularly, the Poetto beach is wall-to-wall bodies, and boat tours sell out days in advance. The water is at its warmest and clearest, which is the upside. The downside is that everything costs more, availability shrinks, and the experience feels more crowded. If you are going in high summer, book your tour the moment you lock in your Cagliari dates.

September is underrated. The sea is still warm from months of summer sun, the crowds thin out sharply after the first week, and the light turns softer and more golden. Some people argue September is the best month in the whole Mediterranean, and they might be right. Boat tour prices sometimes drop slightly too.

Clear turquoise waters and rocky coastline of Sardinia under blue skies

September light on Sardinian rock. The water stays warm well into October in a good year, but boat tour schedules start thinning out after mid-September.
October and April are risky. Some operators still run, but cancellations due to weather are common. The Mistral wind can blow hard from the northwest and turn the gulf choppy without much warning. Worth it if you get lucky with conditions, because you will have the coastline to yourself. But have a backup plan.

Time of day: Morning tours (departing 9-10 AM) get the calmest water and the best underwater visibility. Late afternoon tours (4-6 PM) give you the most dramatic light on the cliffs. Avoid midday departures if you can — the high sun flattens everything and the heat on a boat with no shade is brutal.

What You Will See

A secluded Sardinian beach with turquoise waters surrounded by rocky cliffs

Some of the coves along the Sella del Diavolo coastline are only accessible by boat. No roads, no paths, just rock and sea. This is what you are signing up for.
The centrepiece of every Cagliari boat tour is Sella del Diavolo — the Devil’s Saddle. It is a massive limestone headland that juts out into the Gulf of Cagliari, and from the water it is genuinely imposing. The cliffs rise 100 meters, pockmarked with caves and overhangs that the sea has been carving out for millennia. The rock face changes colour through the day — pale grey in the morning, warm honey in the afternoon, almost pink at sunset.

Underneath the headland is where things get interesting. The sea caves here range from small openings you can barely peer into to cavernous grottos where the boat floats inside and the light refracts off the water onto the ceiling. The colour of the water shifts from deep blue outside to electric turquoise inside the caves, and on calm days the clarity is almost unsettling — you look down and see every detail of the bottom at six or seven meters.

A boat floating near the sandy coast of Sardinia with turquoise water

The transition from open gulf to the sheltered coves is sudden. One minute you are in deep blue water, the next you are drifting over sand you could count the grains of.
Calamosca Beach is a small beach tucked below the headland that most tours pass or stop at. It faces south and is sheltered from the Mistral, which means the water is usually calm even when conditions elsewhere in the gulf are choppy. Good snorkeling here — the rocks around the edges are full of sea life.

Poetto Beach is the long, sweeping sandy beach that runs along the eastern edge of the gulf. From the water you get a perspective on its full eight-kilometer length that you simply cannot appreciate from the shore. On a clear day, the beach, the salt flats, and the mountains behind Cagliari all line up in a way that feels almost staged.

Boats anchored near a serene Sardinian beach with crystal clear turquoise waters

The swimming stops are where the tour earns its money. Anchoring in a cove like this, with nothing but rock and water in every direction, is worth the ticket price alone.
The flamingo lagoon — Stagno di Molentargius — is visible from the water on some tours, especially those that swing wider around the gulf before heading to Sella del Diavolo. Seeing pink flamingos from a boat in the Mediterranean is one of those things that feels like it should not be real, but there they are.

Aerial view of Porto Giunco Tower and turquoise waters in Villasimius Sardinia

The wider Cagliari coast stretches for miles in both directions. If you have extra days, the beaches south toward Villasimius are some of the best in the entire Mediterranean.
If you are visiting Sardinia more broadly, a Cagliari boat tour pairs perfectly with a trip to the La Maddalena Archipelago in the north. Different coastline, different character, but the same absurd water clarity that makes Sardinia one of the best places in Europe to be on a boat.

Tips for Your Boat Tour

A person snorkeling in the crystal clear blue waters of Sardinia Italy

The snorkeling here is excellent even without fancy equipment. The water is so clear you barely need a mask to see what is going on below the surface.
A few things that will make the difference between a good trip and a great one:

Bring reef-safe sunscreen and reapply it. Two or three hours of Sardinian sun reflected off water will burn you faster than you think. There is no shade on most of these boats. SPF 50, applied thickly, reapplied after every swim. I cannot stress this enough.

Wear something you can swim in. Even if you think you will not get in the water. You will look at that turquoise cove and your plans will change. Bring a towel too — none of the tours provide them.

Motion sickness is real on smaller boats. The zodiac especially can pitch and roll in even moderate conditions. If you are prone to it, take medication 30 minutes before boarding. Ginger sweets work for some people. Sitting near the centre of the boat helps.

A diver exploring turquoise underwater waters off the coast of Sardinia

For those who want to go deeper, Cagliari has a proper diving scene too. But the snorkeling on a standard boat tour gets you closer to the action than you would expect.
A waterproof phone case is worth the five euros. You will want photos inside the caves, and between spray and wet hands, your phone is at risk the entire time. A cheap waterproof pouch from any shop near the marina does the job.

Book at least 2-3 days ahead in summer. The popular tours (especially the $59 swim-stops tour and the $41 zodiac) sell out regularly from June through August. In May or September, same-day booking is usually fine.

Eat before or after, not during. The onboard snacks and drinks are pleasant but light. If you want a proper meal, Su Cumbidu in the Marina district does incredible Sardinian home cooking for reasonable prices. Or grab a panino with local cheese and cured meats from the Mercato di San Benedetto, one of the biggest covered markets in Italy, and eat it on the waterfront before your tour.

Colourful fishing boats moored in a Mediterranean harbour under blue skies

The fishing boats near the marina still head out at dawn. Some of the best seafood restaurants in Cagliari buy directly from these fishermen, which is why the raw fish here is so good.
Bring cash for tips. Not expected but appreciated. If your skipper went above and beyond — pointed out marine life, took extra time in the caves, generally made the trip memorable — a few euros per person is a kind gesture.

If you are planning a wider Italy trip and heading to Rome on the same itinerary, the Colosseum is worth building a day around. But Cagliari and Rome are very different speeds. After a morning on the water here, the idea of fighting crowds at a historical site feels like it belongs in another holiday entirely.

And if you have not already seen the La Maddalena guide, that pairs well with a Cagliari visit — head north for a day or two and see how different the Sardinian coast looks up there. Same island, completely different personality.


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