Cruise Waikiki at sunset on a private high-speed boat, with time to swim
1.5 hours
Up to 6 people
Cooler with ice, snorkel gear
Ride a 32-foot high-speed adventure boat on a private sunset cruise off Waikiki, with space for up to six guests. Bring your own drinks and snacks, then stop to swim and snorkel near Diamond Head.
Ages 5+ only. The boat is not handicap accessible and has no onboard bathroom. Not recommended for pregnant travelers or those with neck/back issues due to a bumpy ride.
Full refund if you cancel at least 24 hours before departure. No refunds within 24 hours of departure (no exceptions). If the captain cancels due to inclement weather or unsafe conditions, you can rebook for free or get a full refund. Minimum 3 passengers required; if not met, you’ll be offered a different time/date or a full refund.
Bring a swimsuit, towel, sunscreen, sunglasses or a hat, and a light jacket or windbreaker. You can also bring a camera or GoPro, motion sickness medication if needed, and cash or Venmo to tip the crew. Bring your own drinks and snacks if you want—your cruise includes a cooler with ice.
No. There is no onboard bathroom, so plan accordingly before you board.
No. The boat is not handicap accessible.
Pier B
This snorkeling tour stands out for doing something most operators don't: keeping groups genuinely small. With a maximum of six to eight passengers on their rigid inflatable boat, you're getting an intimate experience that reviewers consistently contrast with the "cattled" feeling of larger tour boats. The crew, including Max, Santiago, Sophia, Sandy, Holly, and Scott, get praised not just for being friendly but for genuinely caring about each guest's comfort level in the water. Multiple families mention how guides stayed close to kids and nervous swimmers, checking in frequently and offering flotation belts when people got tired. The turtle sightings seem to be reliably excellent, with guests spotting multiple turtles, fish, eagle rays, and occasionally even small sharks. What really wins people over is the personal attention. Sophia and Santiago take photos and videos during the tour (available for purchase), and while one reviewer joked about needing to do some photoshop work afterward, most seem thrilled with their images. The equipment quality gets positive mentions, and several Korean-language reviews indicate Korean-speaking staff make the experience accessible for international visitors. The main caution: one reviewer had a complete no-show situation with no communication, which is concerning even if it's an outlier. Also, book directly rather than through third-party sites since there was an incident where a family of seven got turned away at the dock due to capacity limits that weren't properly communicated. Most people found the 11am or afternoon slots worked well, though morning tours can be less crowded on the water.