El Nido Private Boat Charter Guide 2026: Costs, Operators & Custom Itineraries

El Nido Private Boat Charter Guide 2026: Costs, Operators & Custom Itineraries

Island hopping on a private bangka is one of El Nido’s best upgrades — the same stunning lagoons and beaches, but on your own schedule, with your own group, without 20 strangers sharing the same stops at the same time. For groups of 4 or more, private charter is often competitive with shared tour pricing per person. This 2026 guide covers everything you need to know.

Private Charter vs Shared Tour: The Core Difference

Factor Shared Tour Private Charter
Cost per person ₱1,200–₱2,000 ₱600–₱1,300 (split between group)
Group size 10–25 strangers Your group only (max 10–12)
Itinerary Fixed stops, fixed order Fully customisable
Timing Fixed departure, fixed return Leave when you want, stay as long as you like
Crowd experience Shared stops with other boats Can time arrivals to avoid crowds
Snorkel/swim time 20–40 min per stop (rushed) Unlimited — stay until you’re ready to leave

How Much Does a Private Charter Cost in El Nido? (2026)

Boat Type Daily Rate Capacity Best For
Standard bangka (outrigger) ₱5,000–₱7,000/day Up to 10 pax Groups of 4–8
Large bangka (double outrigger) ₱7,000–₱10,000/day Up to 15 pax Groups of 8–12
Speedboat ₱8,000–₱15,000/day Up to 8 pax Remote islands, long range
Overnight sailing (Tao-style) USD 500–800/day 6–10 pax Multi-day expeditions

Rates include captain and 1–2 crew, fuel, basic snorkelling equipment, and lunch preparation facilities (you bring the food, or arrange catering). Per-person cost for a standard bangka split between 8 people: ₱625–₱875 — often cheaper than shared tours with infinitely more flexibility.

What’s Typically Included vs Extra

Included in charter rate:

  • Boat, captain, 1–2 crew
  • Fuel for agreed itinerary
  • Basic life jackets
  • Snorkelling mask and fins (quality varies — bring your own for best experience)
  • Cooler (bring your own drinks/ice)

Usually extra:

  • Food and drinks (buy at the market before departure)
  • Island/lagoon entrance fees (₱50–₱200 per stop, paid on-site)
  • El Nido environmental fee ₱200 (one-time, if not yet paid)
  • Crew tip (₱300–₱500 per crew member per day — strongly recommended)
  • Kayak rental at lagoon entrances (₱200–₱400/kayak)

How to Book a Private Charter

Option 1: Tourism Office (Most Transparent)

The El Nido Tourism Office on Real Street maintains a list of accredited charter operators with standardised rate cards. Rates are regulated; quality is vetted. Best option for first-timers.

Option 2: Direct with Boat Captain

Walk to the main beach early morning (6–7 AM) and talk directly to boat captains. You can negotiate custom routes and sometimes get slightly lower rates (10–15%) by cutting out the middle layer. Verify the boat has life jackets and a working radio.

Option 3: Your Accommodation

Most guesthouses have preferred charter captains. Convenient but may include a small commission markup. Ask if the rate includes all crew and fuel for your proposed route before confirming.

Option 4: Online Pre-Booking

Platforms like Klook and KKday offer private charter packages. Convenient for advance planning but typically priced higher than direct booking. Useful for peak season when boats are scarce.

Custom Itinerary Ideas

The Classic Lagoon Day (Tour A/C Combined)

Big Lagoon → Small Lagoon → Shimizu Island (deep snorkelling) → Star Beach (lunch) → Seven Commando Beach (afternoon swim). Better than either standard tour alone because you control the timing — arrive at each lagoon before shared tours.

The Far Islands Explorer (Tour D Extended)

Matinloc Shrine → Hidden Beach → Tapiutan Island → Helicopter Island → Cadlao Lagoon (sunset). Full day; depart 6:30 AM to have Matinloc before the Tour D crowd arrives.

Sunrise Lagoon + Nacpan Beach Combo

Depart 5:30 AM → Big Lagoon sunrise (completely private) → Small Lagoon → return to mainland → overland to Nacpan Beach for the afternoon. Requires pre-arranging the overland segment with a tricycle or motorbike.

Multi-Day Island Camping

Charter for 2–3 consecutive days with overnight camping on uninhabited islands. Requires self-sufficient camping gear; the captain can resupply from town mid-trip. Coordinate through the tourism office for permits.

Practical Tips

  • Confirm departure time the night before — aim for 6:30–7:00 AM to beat shared tour traffic
  • Agree the full itinerary in writing (a simple note or WhatsApp message) — specify all stops and order
  • Bring more food than you think — boat days are long and active; pack a proper lunch, snacks, and 2+ litres of water per person
  • Tip the crew generously — ₱300–₱500 each is appropriate and genuinely matters to their income
  • Check weather forecasts the morning of departure; captains will advise on sea conditions

For island-hopping context see our island hopping tips guide. For swimming spots at each charter stop see our swimming spots guide. For what to pack on the water see our packing guide.

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