Glide beneath the colossal honey-coloured bastions of Valletta and the Three Cities in a brightly painted, gondola-like dghajsa -- a boat design tracing to Phoenician times. The Grand Harbour is one of the world's great natural deep-water harbours and the stage of the 1565 Great Siege; seeing it from the water at the foot of the fortifications, with the Three Cities marina and Fort St Angelo sliding past, is the single image the port is famous for.
What to expect
You board a brightly painted dghajsa—a traditional gondola-like boat whose design traces back to Phoenician times—and glide slowly beneath the colossal honey-coloured bastions of Valletta and the Three Cities. The Grand Harbour unfolds around you: Fort St Angelo and the Three Cities marina slide past as you see the very stage of the 1565 Great Siege from the water, at the foot of the fortifications. The ~35-minute private tour captures the single image the port is famous for—the world's great natural deep-water harbour seen from the intimate vantage of a traditional wooden boat, not a modern tour launch. If you extend with the EUR 8 water-taxi crossing, you can drift across to Birgu or Senglea and wander the quieter Three Cities on your own pace.
The ship's 'Two Harbours' scenic boat cruise runs $50-$80pp. Booking the same authentic dghajsa direct is ~$28-$31pp -- you save roughly $20-$50pp, get a more iconic traditional boat (not a tour launch), and can tack on the cheap EUR 8 water-taxi to wander the quieter Three Cities on your own.
Good to know
Book the dghajsa direct with Grand Harbour Tours Malta (family-run operator based in Senglea) to save ~$20–$50pp versus the ship's 'Two Harbours' cruise, and budget ~EUR 25–28 (~USD 28–31pp) for the full private 35-minute tour, or ~EUR 8pp for the heritage water-taxi crossing alone. The operator is walkable from the cruise pier; confirm exact meeting point and departure time when booking to ensure a 30–45 minute buffer before all-aboard. Wear sun protection and bring cash (EUR preferred) as the family-run operator may not accept cards; the boat is open-air and the harbour crossing takes 35 minutes, so plan accordingly for your 6–8 hour port window.