Polignano a Mare is the cliff-top jewel of the Adriatic — whitewashed houses balanced on a sheer limestone bluff above impossibly turquoise water, including the famous Grotta Palazzese sea cave beneath the legendary cliff-side restaurant. Boarding a small skippered boat at San Vito and threading the coastal grottoes — Grotta Palazzese, Grotta delle Rondinelle and more — then dropping anchor for a swim in the clearest water in Puglia and a Prosecco-and-taralli aperitivo on deck, is the most purely joyful, luxurious thing to do near Bari. It is the Puglia of the postcards.
What to expect
Departure is from the small harbor at San Vito, about 10 minutes from Polignano's center, beneath a 10th-century Benedictine abbey. The skipper noses the open boat into the sea caves, the water shifting from sapphire to glassy aqua, and on calm days you'll anchor for a swim. The onboard aperitivo of taralli and Prosecco is the signature touch. Allow extra time afterward to walk Polignano's old town and the Lama Monachile cove viewpoint.
Lines like MSC sell a Polignano caves boat excursion (often bundled with the Castellana Caves) at a meaningful premium per person. Booking the same caves-and-aperitivo boat direct with Pugliamare at EUR 35/person — or splurging on a private boat at ~EUR 300 for your group — is both cheaper and far more intimate (10-person open boat vs. a packed party vessel). Book direct; just leave yourself transfer time, as Polignano is a 30-40 min drive from the port.
Good to know
Polignano is ~36 km / 30-40 min south of Bari port; you'll need a pre-arranged transfer or driver to reach the San Vito launch, so factor that into your all-aboard math. Boats run roughly March-October and are weather-dependent — confirm the morning of. Bring a swimsuit, towel, reef-safe sunscreen and a light cover-up. Pre-book the slot; cruise-day boats fill fast.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Bari — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.