Cinque Terre Boat Trips: Ferries, Private Tours & Prices for 2026
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The Cinque Terre villages stack up the cliffs facing the sea, which means the classic postcard view — Vernazza’s tower above the harbour, Manarola glowing at sunset — only exists from the water. The train gets you between villages in minutes, but it runs through tunnels. At least one leg of your visit should be by boat. Here are the options as of 2026.
Option 1: The public ferry (hop-on hop-off)
The Golfo dei Poeti ferry line runs from La Spezia and Portovenere along the coast, stopping at Riomaggiore, Manarola, Vernazza, and Monterosso — not Corniglia, which has no harbour, and weather permitting at the smaller piers.
- One-day all-route pass: approximately EUR 42 as of 2026 (afternoon-only versions around EUR 30)
- Single hops: EUR 8–15 depending on distance
- Season: roughly late March to early November, multiple sailings daily in summer
- Buy at the pier kiosks or online; outside August queues are manageable
The full La Spezia/Portovenere–Monterosso run takes about 1.5 hours and doubles as a cheap coastal cruise. Sea swell cancels sailings a handful of days each month — always have the train as backup.
Option 2: Small-group cruises
Operators out of La Spezia, Monterosso, and Levanto run 2–4 hour small-group trips on traditional gozzo wooden boats or RIBs, typically including a swim stop in a cove you cannot reach on foot, prosecco or local wine, and a slow pass of all five villages.
- Daytime cruise (2.5–4h): roughly EUR 60–95 per person
- Sunset cruise with aperitivo: roughly EUR 75–110 per person
- Groups are usually capped at 10–12; summer dates sell out days ahead
The sunset slot is the one to book: the villages face west-southwest, and the last hour of light hitting Manarola and Vernazza is the best photograph you will take in Liguria.
Option 3: Private charter
A private gozzo with skipper for 2–4 hours costs roughly EUR 350–600 as of 2026 depending on boat and season, split between up to 6–8 passengers — comparable per-person to a group cruise for a full boat, with your own itinerary and swim stops.
Weather, cancellations and backup plans
The Ligurian Sea decides whether you sail. Ferries and small-boat tours cancel when the swell picks up — most commonly on afternoons with a southwesterly libeccio wind, and on a handful of days in any month, even midsummer. Scheduled ferry cancellations are posted at the pier kiosks and on the operator’s site the same morning; small-group operators normally message you the evening before and offer a rebooking or full refund — confirm that policy when you book. Build your boat leg into the first or second day of a Cinque Terre stay rather than the last, so a blown-out sailing can slide to the next morning. If the sea stays rough, the train plus the high coastal viewpoints — Manarola’s Punta Bonfiglio and the Nessun Dorma terrace, or the Doria castle in Vernazza — recover most of the postcard angles from land.
Planning notes
- Best departure points: Monterosso has the largest pier and most departures within the five villages; La Spezia has the widest choice of operators and is the practical base for most visitors.
- Add Portovenere. The ferry’s southern terminus — a fortified harbour town outside the national park — is arguably the most beautiful stop on the whole line and far less crowded than the five villages.
- Mornings are calmest. Afternoon sea breeze can make the return leg bouncy; anyone prone to seasickness should book before noon.
- Swimming: group cruises stop in coves near Punta Mesco or Riomaggiore; bring swimwear and a towel, June–September water is 22–26°C.
- No boats needed for Corniglia: admire it from the water, visit it by train and the 382-step Lardarina staircase.
For the land side of the planning — trains, the Cinque Terre Card, hiking trail status, and where to stay — see our Cinque Terre itinerary and our Cinque Terre guide. Working out the season? Our best time to visit Italy guide covers when the Ligurian coast is at its best.
Our recommendation
Do the villages by train and trail, then spend one late afternoon on a small-group sunset cruise from Monterosso (~EUR 85) — it compresses the entire reason Cinque Terre is famous into two golden hours. On a tighter budget, the EUR 42 ferry day pass with a final leg into Portovenere delivers 80% of the same views.
Frequently Asked Questions
- How much is the Cinque Terre ferry in 2026?
- A one-day hop-on hop-off ferry pass costs approximately EUR 42 as of 2026, with single hops between villages from around EUR 8–15. The ferry runs roughly late March to early November and does not stop at Corniglia, which sits on a cliff.
- Are boat tours better than the train in Cinque Terre?
- They answer different questions. The train is transport — fast, cheap, but underground most of the way. The boat is the view: the five villages were built to be seen from the sea, and the coastal panorama is the best single sight in the area. Most visitors should do one leg by boat.
- Do Cinque Terre boat trips sell out?
- Scheduled ferries rarely sell out but queues get long in July–August. Small-group sunset cruises and private gozzo charters absolutely sell out — book those at least a few days ahead in summer.
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