Es Vedra is THE iconic Ibiza image: a 400m limestone monolith rising sheer from the sea off the southwest coast, wrapped in mariner legend and unreachable by land. This 4-hour boat circles Es Vedra and Vedranell, slips past sea caves and the 'Atlantis' quarry, and drops anchor for a ~50-minute swim and snorkel stop in the crystalline coves by Cala d'Hort. The only way to experience the island's most photographed landmark up close.
What to expect
You'll depart Port of San Antonio at 10:00 on a boat that circles the monumental 400m limestone Es Vedra and its neighbor Vedranell, gliding past sea caves and the 'Atlantis' quarry to witness Ibiza's most iconic landmark rising sheer from the sea. The boat then anchors in the crystalline coves by Cala d'Hort for roughly 50 minutes of swimming and snorkeling in gin-clear water, with snorkel gear and floats provided. After you're back aboard and dried off, you'll enjoy a fruit-and-snacks aperitif as the boat returns to port. The entire arc—departure, exploration, swim, return—takes approximately 4 hours, leaving your afternoon free for the rest of your port day.
Direct wins. Ship-sold scenic island drives ($69-110pp) never get you near Es Vedra by water at all, and cruise catamaran outings cost $85-120pp. At $48 this is the cheapest way to the iconic view. Caveat: it leaves from San Antonio, ~25-30 min by taxi/bus from the cruise dock, so budget transfer time both ways.
Good to know
Budget 25–30 minutes by taxi or bus from the cruise dock to Port of San Antonio, plus return transfer time, so depart your ship no later than 9:15 to make the 10:00 departure comfortably. The 4-hour boat trip returns by early afternoon, giving you 2–3 hours on-ship before typical all-aboard times. Bring a towel, reef-safe sunscreen, and water shoes; snorkel gear is included, but consider booking ahead directly with Nautilus Ibiza ($48 adult / $25 child) rather than relying on ship-sold packages, which are more than double the price and don't reach the water. Allow buffer time for transport delays, especially if relying on public buses rather than a private taxi.