The universal core
Every legitimate Saona ticket, from $64 to $165, includes the same skeleton: round trip hotel transport from the Punta Cana and La Romana zones, the boat legs (catamaran, lancha or combo), beach time on the island, a Dominican buffet lunch and the natural pool stop. If a listing is missing any of these five, it is not a full day tour, it is something else wearing the name.
The differentiators, ranked by real value
- Park fee included: worth confirming every time, the dockside surprise nobody enjoys.
- Group size cap: the single biggest experience variable, detailed in our small group ranking.
- Snorkel stop with gear: a real reef stop plus mask beats pool only itineraries.
- Beach club access: some tours land at serviced beaches with loungers, others at open sand.
- Bar quality: house rum punch is universal, branded spirits and mixology are premium tier.
What is never included
Crew tips, spending at Mano Juan village, the photographers who materialize at the pool with sea urchins and starfish poses (their prints cost, and handling wildlife is discouraged anyway), and travel insurance. None are traps, all are choices, but arrive with small cash so the choices are yours.
Reading a listing like a pro
Scan for the five core items, then the park fee line, then the capacity number. Cross reference the price guide to see if the premium over base rate buys real differentiators or adjectives. Two minutes of reading beats any surprise at the dock.
No asterisks island day
The classic fully inclusive ticket: five core items, park fee, zero surprises.
Frequently asked questions
On most mid range and premium tours yes, on some budget listings no, it collects in cash at the dock. The Cotubanama entrance fee applies to every visitor, check the inclusions line before booking.
Within the standard range yes: rum mixes, beer, soft drinks and water flow freely on the boat and often at the beach. Premium spirits, cocktails beyond the house punch and bottled extras cost separately where offered.
Crew tips (5 to 10 dollars per person is customary), souvenir and snack money at Mano Juan, optional photos vendors sell at the pool, and snorkel gear rental on tours that do not bundle it. Twenty dollars cash covers a typical day.

