Catamaran Islas Marietas – Snorkel & Open Bar

REVIEW · PUERTO VALLARTA

Catamaran Islas Marietas – Snorkel & Open Bar

  • 3.53 reviews
  • 10 hours (approx.)
  • From $92.00
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A day on the Pacific with Marietas Islands scenery feels like a trade-up. This Puerto Vallarta boat day combines snorkeling and water toys with breakfast and lunch, plus an open bar on the return. I also like that it’s built around the Marietas Islands National Park, with chances to see wildlife from the water and around the rocks. One thing to consider: even though it’s offered in English, I’d be ready for a mixed-language crowd and plan around variable snorkeling time or gear depending on the day.

You’ll start early and spend most of the day moving between protected coves and open water views of Banderas Bay and Puerto Vallarta. The overall pace is part cruise, part playground: breakfast and hot cakes first, lunch on board, then your time in the sea with snorkeling and paddle/kayak gear. And yes, there’s onboard music and games, sometimes even karaoke, to keep the mood light on the ride back.

This is a solid fit if you want a full-day experience without having to plan equipment or meals. But if you’re very picky about boat type, drink strength, or tight timing on snorkeling, do a quick sanity check before you go.

Key things I’d zero in on before you book

Catamaran Islas Marietas - Snorkel & Open Bar - Key things I’d zero in on before you book

  • UNESCO-protected Marietas National Park: You’re going to a marine sanctuary, not just a random coastline stop.
  • Breakfast + lunch included: Continental breakfast with hot cakes, then lunch on board.
  • Open bar is on the way back: So plan your drinking with the schedule, not the marketing.
  • Snorkel + paddleboard + kayak gear included: You shouldn’t need to rent anything separately.
  • Optional Hidden Beach (Playa del Amor): It’s not guaranteed, so keep expectations flexible.
  • Max group size of 90: Better than the mega-dayboats, but still a crowd.

Catamaran Day Plan: From 8am Puerto Mágico to Returning With Saltwater Hair

The day starts at 8:00am at Puerto Mágico (Puerto Magico Blvd. Francisco Medina Ascencio, Zona Hotelera Nte., 48333). The tour ends back at the same meeting point, so you’re not scrambling for transportation afterward. It’s sold as a full-day trip (about 10 hours), which matters because you’re not just “doing snorkeling”—you’re buying a long day on the water with meals and activities built in.

I like tours that run on a clear rhythm, and this one does: fuel early (breakfast and hot cakes), move to the islands, then spend afternoon hours on the water, and finish with the onboard vibe and drinks during the return. That structure helps you avoid the common Mexico-tour problem where you’re hungry, waiting, and guessing what’s happening next.

The practical catch? If you’re the kind of person who likes exact minutes and quiet pacing, this won’t be that. One key detail from real-world experience with this style of tour: timing can stretch. So I’d plan the whole day like it might run long, and I’d skip anything that relies on being back in town at a precise hour.

You can also read our reviews of more boat tours in Puerto Vallarta

Marietas Islands National Park: What Makes This Water Worth the Long Day

Catamaran Islas Marietas - Snorkel & Open Bar - Marietas Islands National Park: What Makes This Water Worth the Long Day
Marietas Islands National Park is a UNESCO-protected marine sanctuary just off Puerto Vallarta. That means you’re in protected waters where wildlife is a main event. Even if your snorkeling isn’t perfect, the scenery from the boat—rock formations, sea life, and that feeling of being out in the open Pacific—adds up.

For you, the value is simple: you’re not paying for “a boat ride to look at something.” You’re paying for a day in an area designed to support marine life, plus time where you can interact safely with what’s around you. And the tour is built to include both passive viewing (views from the deck) and active time (snorkel, paddleboard, kayak).

One more thing to keep in mind: the islands are protected, so access and timing can depend on conditions. That’s normal. Your best move is to treat the day as exploration with a plan B, not a guarantee of a specific moment on cue.

What’s Included On Board: Breakfast, Lunch, Open Bar, and the Stuff You Actually Need

Catamaran Islas Marietas - Snorkel & Open Bar - What’s Included On Board: Breakfast, Lunch, Open Bar, and the Stuff You Actually Need
This trip feeds you. You get a continental breakfast with hot cakes (fruit, yogurt, granola, honey, juice), then lunch, and you also get insurance on board. For a full-day excursion, that matters because it keeps your budget under control—you’re not stuck buying snacks at tourist prices mid-ride.

The open bar is another big selling point, but it’s not “all day.” It’s listed as alcoholic drinks on the way back. In other words, your first hours are about water time, not tipping back cocktails. Plan your drinking accordingly and don’t count on it to start the party early.

Water gear is included too: snorkel, paddleboard, and kayak equipment. That’s a big deal if you don’t want to carry gear or arrange rentals. Still, I recommend you ask what’s provided on the day in case of any equipment changes. In one experience someone reported not getting snorkel gear due to Covid-era rules. Even if that’s not the current norm, it’s a reasonable question to ask when you check in.

Also, you’ll find onboard entertainment like music, games, and even karaoke on the return. That’s great if you like a social atmosphere. If you want quiet and minimal chatter, bring something for distraction and expect group energy.

Stop at Islas Marietas: How the Time on the Water Works

Catamaran Islas Marietas - Snorkel & Open Bar - Stop at Islas Marietas: How the Time on the Water Works
The main focus is Islas Marietas. Your day revolves around sailing there, spending time on and near the islands, and using the equipment during the windows you get. The exact split can vary, but the overall flow is consistent: you arrive, you do water activities, and you return later with onboard fun.

Snorkeling is the headline activity. The goal is clear: get you into the clear water where you can see marine life around the rocks and coves. But here’s the honest planning note: snorkeling time may be shorter than you expect on busy days. One reported experience included a limited snorkeling window. So if your top priority is long, relaxed snorkeling, I’d manage expectations and treat it as a curated taste of the water rather than a long session.

Also, you might be on a schedule that includes more than one activity during the same overall window. That means you’ll want to move efficiently when it’s your turn for gear, and you should be ready for instruction and regrouping.

Kayak and Paddleboard Setup: Active Fun Without Needing to Be a Pro

Catamaran Islas Marietas - Snorkel & Open Bar - Kayak and Paddleboard Setup: Active Fun Without Needing to Be a Pro
In plain terms, kayak and paddleboard time is there to add variety to the day. Snorkeling is about floating and looking. Kayaking and paddleboarding are about movement—slow, guided exploration around rocky formations and secluded coves (the kind of scenery that looks different when you’re at water level).

The benefit for you is choice. If the sea feels a bit choppy for snorkeling, you still have options. And if snorkeling is great, kayaking still gives you a different view of the coastline shapes.

Just remember: those activities work best when you show up wearing practical gear. Bring swimwear, and wear water-friendly clothing you don’t mind getting wet or salty. Comfortable shoes also matter because moving on and off the boat can be slippery.

Catamaran Islas Marietas - Snorkel & Open Bar - Hidden Beach (Playa del Amor): Optional, Popular, and Not Guaranteed
Hidden Beach, also called Playa del Amor, is an optional add-on. It’s famous for a specific kind of dramatic access, but the key for your planning is this: optional means it can be skipped based on conditions and timing.

I’d treat it as a bonus, not your main goal. If it happens, great—you get a memorable stop. If it doesn’t, you’re still spending the day in Marietas National Park with snorkeling and water toy time, and you can still enjoy the protected-water views.

Food, Drinks, and Music: Where This Tour Can Feel Great (or Slightly Off)

Catamaran Islas Marietas - Snorkel & Open Bar - Food, Drinks, and Music: Where This Tour Can Feel Great (or Slightly Off)
On paper, you’ve got breakfast, lunch, and an open bar on the return. That’s already a strong value play because you’re not paying extra for every meal and drink.

But real-world comfort depends on how the day runs for your group. One experience with this style of tour mentioned the food was so-so and the alcohol portion felt light. I’m not saying that will happen every time, but I am saying you should avoid building your whole day around a guaranteed party cocktail experience.

On the upside: music and games can turn the ride into a social event, and one reported highlight was the staff being very nice and friendly. That kind of attitude can make a crowded, long day feel smoother.

My practical take: if you want good snacks and a decent cruise vibe, you’ll probably enjoy it. If you’re chasing top-shelf drinks and strict timing, bring a backup plan in your expectations.

Group Size, English Promises, and Boat-Type Questions You Should Ask

Catamaran Islas Marietas - Snorkel & Open Bar - Group Size, English Promises, and Boat-Type Questions You Should Ask
This tour lists a maximum of 90 travelers, which is meaningfully smaller than some mass day trips. Still, it’s large enough that you’ll feel the group rhythm—waiting, regrouping, and listening for calls.

Language is another consideration. The experience is offered in English, but with a mixed crowd, you might still hear more Spanish in the background. One report said the guide was not consistently English-speaking and the music was largely Spanish. So for your comfort, I’d check what language support looks like on the day when you confirm.

Boat type is a third thing I’d sanity-check. The tour is marketed as a catamaran, but one guest reported it wasn’t actually a catamaran on their departure. That doesn’t mean it’s always different, but it’s an easy question to ask: what type of vessel will you be on?

These are not deal-breakers. They’re just the details that affect how smooth your day feels once you’re actually on the water.

Practical Packing for Pacific Sun and Salt Water

Don’t overpack. But don’t show up empty-handed either. Bring:

  • Swimsuit
  • Towels
  • Extra clothes (you’ll get wet)
  • Comfortable clothes and shoes you can walk in
  • Biodegradable sunscreen
  • Insect repellent

The biodegradable sunscreen note is not just marketing. It matters in a marine sanctuary area, where you want to reduce extra chemical runoff.

Also, if you wear contact lenses, consider how you feel about wind and salt. It’s not listed, but it’s a common comfort issue on open-water days.

Finally, if you’re pregnant, there’s a safety restriction: the company reserves the right to refuse boarding due to maritime risks. If that’s your situation, it’s best to skip this one.

Price and Value Check: Is $92 Worth It for a Full-Day Marietas Trip?

At $92 per person, you’re buying a full-day package: breakfast, lunch, and a bundle of water activities (snorkel, paddleboard, kayak equipment) plus insurance on board. That’s usually better value than piecing together separate tours and rentals.

But you should also account for additional costs. The tour lists government fees and a SEMARNAT bracelet listed at $10 per person. There are also government fees listed as $3.00 per person and $10.00 per person. Those extra items can shift the real total. So before you lock in, I’d budget for those fees and ask what you’ll pay at the site.

How to judge value for you:

  • If you’ll use the snorkel, paddleboard, and kayak time and you want meals included, it’s a solid deal.
  • If you only care about one activity (like just snorkeling), you may want to compare against shorter tours.
  • If open bar is central to your plan, remember it’s on the way back and alcohol strength can vary by day.

Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Prefer a Different Style)

This fits best if you want:

  • A full-day water adventure without planning food or rentals
  • A mix of deck time, snorkeling, and active fun
  • A social vibe with music, games, and possibly karaoke
  • A group size that’s not tiny, but not massive either (up to 90)

It may not fit as well if you:

  • Need an ultra-precise schedule for snorkeling time
  • Get frustrated by language mix in a mixed group
  • Are very sensitive to drink strength or food quality
  • Are counting on the exact boat type being identical to the marketing

My best advice: if you’re flexible and there to enjoy the day, you’ll likely have a good time. If you’re strict about process and details, ask more questions before you go.

Should You Book This Catamaran Islas Marietas Snorkel & Open Bar?

If your top priorities are Marietas National Park, included meals, and having snorkel + paddle/kayak gear handled for you, this is an easy “yes to consider.” The day is structured, and that reduces hassle for your trip.

I’d only hesitate if you’re very picky about:

  • consistent English guide delivery,
  • long snorkeling windows,
  • guaranteed equipment,
  • and strong open-bar expectations.

If you book, do three smart things: confirm the language expectation, ask about snorkel gear availability for the day, and budget for SEMARNAT/government fees. Then show up ready for a long, sunny, saltwater day on the water.

FAQ

How long is the Catamaran Islas Marietas tour?

It’s listed as approximately 10 hours.

What time does the tour start?

The start time is 8:00am.

Where do I meet for the tour?

You meet at Puerto Mágico Blvd. Francisco Medina Ascencio, Zona Hotelera Nte., 48333 Puerto Vallarta, Jal., Mexico.

What meals are included?

You get a continental breakfast (including hot cakes) and lunch served onboard.

Is there an open bar?

Yes. Alcoholic drinks are included on the way back.

What water activities are included?

Snorkeling equipment, paddleboard equipment, and kayak equipment are included.

Is Hidden Beach included?

Hidden Beach (Playa del Amor) is described as optional.

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