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	<title>capri private boat tour Archivi - Sorrento Sea Tours</title>
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	<title>capri private boat tour Archivi - Sorrento Sea Tours</title>
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		<title>How much does a private boat tour in Capri cost? (and what you&#8217;re actually paying for)</title>
		<link>https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/price/capri-private-boat-tour-how-much-does-it-cost/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[niko.masuzzo]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 25 May 2026 12:54:15 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Price]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Boat tours Capri]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Capri boat tour cost]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Capri private boat]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[capri private boat tour]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Private boat trip Capri]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Private experiences Capri]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sorrento sea tours]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[What is included in a Capri boat tour price]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/?p=8942</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Capri private boat tour prices typically range from €600 to €5,800 per day depending on the vessel, with shared tours starting from €125 per person. But the real question isn&#8217;t just how much — it&#8217;s what that price actually includes, and what you&#8217;ll end up paying during the day. Most answers online are vague. Price...</p>
<p>L'articolo <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/price/capri-private-boat-tour-how-much-does-it-cost/">How much does a private boat tour in Capri cost? (and what you&#8217;re actually paying for)</a> proviene da <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com">Sorrento Sea Tours</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-8943" src="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Capri-private-boat-tour-Sorrento-Sea-Tours.webp" alt="Capri private boat tour - Sorrento Sea Tours" width="1920" height="1761" srcset="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Capri-private-boat-tour-Sorrento-Sea-Tours.webp 1920w, https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Capri-private-boat-tour-Sorrento-Sea-Tours-300x275.webp 300w, https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Capri-private-boat-tour-Sorrento-Sea-Tours-1024x939.webp 1024w" sizes="(max-width: 1920px) 100vw, 1920px" /><br />
<strong>Capri private boat tour</strong> prices typically range from €600 to €5,800 per day depending on the vessel, with shared tours starting from €125 per person. But the real question isn&#8217;t just how much — it&#8217;s what that price actually includes, and what you&#8217;ll end up paying during the day.</p>
<p>Most answers online are vague. Price ranges without context, numbers without explanation. This guide breaks it down clearly.</p>
<p>In this article:</p>
<ul>
<li>Why prices vary so much: it starts with the boat</li>
<li>What is included in a Capri private boat tour</li>
<li>What is NOT included and why it matters</li>
<li>How much does a Capri private boat tour actually cost?</li>
<li>Landing fees vs lunch: a practical difference</li>
<li>How to read a price and understand what you&#8217;re comparing</li>
</ul>
<h2>Why prices vary so much: it starts with the boat</h2>
<p>When you look at <strong>private boat trip Capri</strong> options, you&#8217;ll notice prices that seem to have nothing in common. That&#8217;s not a mistake.</p>
<p>It reflects something real: not all boats are the same, and not all experiences are built the same way.</p>
<p>At <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/private-boats/">Sorrento Sea Tours</a>, the fleet ranges from 8 to 23 metres. The starting price for a private day charter is around €600 for the smallest vessels, and goes up to €5,800 for the largest.</p>
<p>The number of passengers, the size of the boat, and the duration of the experience all affect the final figure.</p>
<p>But the boat is only part of the equation. The other part is what happens during the day — and that&#8217;s where the real value sits.</p>
<h2>What is included in a Capri private boat tour</h2>
<p>Understanding <strong>what is included in a Capri boat tour price</strong> is the most useful thing you can do before comparing options.</p>
<p>On a <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/experience/capri-tours/">private Capri tour</a> with Sorrento Sea Tours, the price covers:</p>
<ul>
<li>Skipper and hostess on board throughout the day (only on selected vessels)</li>
<li>Fuel for the planned route (included in the final charter price — the online deposit does not cover fuel )</li>
<li>Towels</li>
<li>Welcome drink with fresh fruit and Italian prosecco</li>
<li>Soft drinks</li>
<li>Limoncello</li>
<li>Snorkeling equipment</li>
<li>Indoor and outdoor shower</li>
<li>Awning</li>
<li>Fridge and ice</li>
<li>Safety equipment</li>
<li>Insurance</li>
</ul>
<p>That&#8217;s the baseline. What you&#8217;re paying for is not just transport from Sorrento to Capri.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s a full day at sea with everything needed to make it work, including the flexibility to stop where conditions are right and stay as long as the afternoon allows.</p>
<p>On the shared <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/tours/capri-island-tour-premium/">Capri Premium Tour</a>, the structure is different: a fixed price per person that includes snorkeling equipment, a caprese sandwich on board, soft drinks and beer, limoncello, skipper and guide, fuel, safety equipment, insurance and port taxes.</p>
<p>Up to 12 passengers, never more.</p>
<p>As we explained in the article on the <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/inside-the-coast/capri-boat-tour-what-you-really-see-when-you-leave-the-shore/">Capri boat tour</a>, the number of people on board changes the experience more than any other single factor.</p>
<h2>What is NOT included and why it matters</h2>
<p>This is where most people get surprised. Some costs are never part of the tour price — not because of the operator, but because they are external and variable.</p>
<p>The costs vary depending on whether you choose a shared or private tour.</p>
<p>On a shared tour, these costs are never included:</p>
<ul>
<li>Blue Grotto entrance: €14 to €18 per person, optional, paid on the spot</li>
<li>Destination fee: €10 per person, a port tax charged at certain stops, paid directly on the spot</li>
<li>Restaurant costs: always separate</li>
</ul>
<p>On a private tour, the costs that are not included:</p>
<ul>
<li>Blue Grotto entrance: €14 to €18 per person, optional</li>
<li>Landing fee at Marina Grande: €100 per vessel, optional</li>
<li>Landing fee at Marina Piccola for boats up to 10 metres: €5 per person, optional</li>
<li>Restaurant costs: the meal is always separate, though the reservation is handled in advance</li>
</ul>
<p>This last point is worth understanding properly. The landing fee at Marina Grande is €100.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s a significant cost for what is essentially a port receipt. This is why <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/">Sorrento Sea Tours</a> consistently recommends booking lunch at a seaside restaurant instead of a standard land stop.</p>
<p>Arriving directly at a restaurant reachable by boat means the vessel moors at the restaurant&#8217;s buoy field rather than at a paid landing point.</p>
<p>The lunch replaces the landing fee — and you get a table above the sea, not a port receipt.</p>
<p>Knowing these figures in advance means you can plan the day without surprises. A family of four visiting the Blue Grotto adds roughly €60 to €72 to the day&#8217;s total.</p>
<p>And if you&#8217;re on a <strong>Capri private boat tour</strong>, choosing lunch at one of the seaside restaurants instead of a standard landing at Marina Grande saves you €100 in port fees.</p>
<h2>How much does a Capri private boat tour actually cost?</h2>
<p>There is no single number that fits every case, but here is a realistic framework.</p>
<p>For a private boat trip to Capri departing from Sorrento, the boat charter price depends on the vessel:</p>
<ul>
<li>Smaller vessels (8 to 10 metres, up to 8 passengers): from €600 per day</li>
<li>Mid-range vessels (11 to 14 metres, up to 12 passengers): from €1,250 to €2,200 per day</li>
<li>Larger vessels (16 to 20 metres, up to 12 passengers): from €2,600 to €4,700 per day</li>
<li>Top of the fleet (the Aicon 72, 23 metres, up to 12 passengers): from €5,800 per day</li>
</ul>
<p>Divided across a group, the per-person cost shifts significantly. Six people on a mid-range boat at €1,500 works out to €250 each. That&#8217;s a different conversation than the headline price suggests.</p>
<p>The shared <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/tours/capri-island-tour-premium/">Capri Premium Tour</a> starts from €125 per person, with everything included and a fixed itinerary covering the full island circuit, four hours of free time on land, and a swim stop on return.</p>
<p>For a detailed look at the fleet and what each vessel offers: <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/private-boats/">our fleet overview</a> on the Sorrento Sea Tours website.</p>
<h2>Landing fees vs lunch: what changes on a Capri private boat</h2>
<p>This is a detail that makes a real difference in how you plan the day.</p>
<p>If you want to stop on the island of Capri, there are two approaches.</p>
<p>The first is a standard landing: you pay the port tax and spend time on shore exploring independently. Free time at the Giardini di Augusto, the Piazzetta, Anacapri by chairlift.</p>
<p>The second is to build lunch into the stop. On a <strong>Capri private boat</strong> tour, the skip-the-line reservation service covers some of Capri&#8217;s best restaurants:</p>
<ul>
<li><b>La Fontelina</b>, on the rocks at Marina Piccola, directly facing the Faraglioni</li>
<li><b>Il Riccio</b>, on the northern coast near the Blue Grotto, with a Michelin star and a Dior pop-up on the terrace</li>
<li><b>La Canzone del Mare</b>, at Marina Piccola since the 1940s</li>
<li><b>Da Tiberio</b>, on the island, quieter and less crowded, the right choice when you want a good meal without the iconic setting</li>
</ul>
<p>The restaurant cost is separate, but the reservation and the queue are handled in advance.</p>
<p>A lunch at one of these places, with the boat waiting and the afternoon still ahead, is a different kind of stop from a quick visit and a port tax.</p>
<p>As we covered in the article on <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/routes-and-itineraries/sorrento-to-capri-boat-tour-what-happens/">the Sorrento to Capri boat tour</a>, the way you use free time on the island changes the whole rhythm of the afternoon.</p>
<h2>How to read a price and understand what you&#8217;re comparing</h2>
<p>Once you know what&#8217;s included and what isn&#8217;t, comparing options becomes much more straightforward.</p>
<p>A shared tour at €125 per person, all-inclusive, is a clear and complete proposition. You know exactly what you&#8217;re getting and exactly what the day looks like.</p>
<p>A private charter at €1,500 for the day looks different until you divide it by six people, add the fact that the itinerary is totally customizable, lunch happens at a restaurant you&#8217;ve chosen, and the boat never carries anyone else.</p>
<p>Then the comparison becomes more honest.</p>
<p>The questions worth asking before booking any tour:</p>
<ol>
<li>What is included in the price, exactly?</li>
<li>What external costs should I expect during the day?</li>
<li>How many people are on board?</li>
<li>Is the schedule fixed or flexible?</li>
</ol>
<p>As we wrote in the article on <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/before-you-step-on-board/sorrento-sea-tours-what-a-day/">what a day on these waters actually looks like</a>, the difference between private and shared is not about comfort. It&#8217;s about control over how the day develops.</p>
<p>To explore both options: <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/private-experiences/">Private Experiences</a> and <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/tours/">Shared Tours</a> on the Sorrento Sea Tours website.</p>
<p>L'articolo <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/price/capri-private-boat-tour-how-much-does-it-cost/">How much does a private boat tour in Capri cost? (and what you&#8217;re actually paying for)</a> proviene da <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com">Sorrento Sea Tours</a>.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Where to eat in Capri during a boat tour (and why it changes the entire experience)</title>
		<link>https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/inside-the-coast/where-to-eat-in-capri-by-boat-best-restaurants/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[niko.masuzzo]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 May 2026 14:03:01 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Inside the Coast]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[best restaurants in capri reachable by boat]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Capri beach restaurants by the sea]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Capri Italy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[capri private boat tour]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sorrento sea tours]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[what to do in Capri Italy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Where to eat in Capri]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Where to eat in Capri during a boat tour]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/?p=8914</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>What to do in Capri Italy during a boat tour comes down to a decision that most people only think about once they&#8217;re already on the water: where to stop for lunch. Not in the review-site sense of which restaurant has the best reviews. In the practical sense of which restaurant fits inside a day...</p>
<p>L'articolo <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/inside-the-coast/where-to-eat-in-capri-by-boat-best-restaurants/">Where to eat in Capri during a boat tour (and why it changes the entire experience)</a> proviene da <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com">Sorrento Sea Tours</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img decoding="async" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-8915" src="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/What-to-do-in-Capri-italy-Sorrento-Sea-Tours.webp" alt="What to do in Capri italy - Sorrento Sea Tours" width="1920" height="1432" srcset="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/What-to-do-in-Capri-italy-Sorrento-Sea-Tours.webp 1920w, https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/What-to-do-in-Capri-italy-Sorrento-Sea-Tours-300x224.webp 300w, https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/What-to-do-in-Capri-italy-Sorrento-Sea-Tours-1024x764.webp 1024w" sizes="(max-width: 1920px) 100vw, 1920px" /><br />
<strong>What to do in Capri Italy</strong> during a boat tour comes down to a decision that most people only think about once they&#8217;re already on the water: where to stop for lunch.</p>
<p>Not in the review-site sense of which restaurant has the best reviews. In the practical sense of which restaurant fits inside a day that began at 9:30 from Marina Piccola and still has the afternoon ahead of it.</p>
<p>The answer depends on where the boat is at midday, how much time you want to spend off the water, and what kind of pause you want the meal to be.</p>
<p>Here is what the choices actually look like, one by one.</p>
<p><b>In this article:</b></p>
<ol>
<li><u><a href="#summary1">Why lunch is not just a break during a Capri private boat tour</a></u></li>
<li><u><a href="#summary2">Best restaurants in Capri reachable by boat</a></u></li>
<li><u><a href="#summary3">La Fontelina: lunch at the foot of the Faraglioni</a></u></li>
<li><u><a href="#summary4"> Il Riccio: a longer pause near the Blue Grotto</a></u></li>
<li><u><a href="#summary5">La Canzone del Mare: an afternoon at Marina Piccola</a></u></li>
<li><u><a href="#summary6">Lo Smeraldo: the practical option close to the port</a></u></li>
<li><u><a href="#summary7">Da Tiberio: when you want a meal without the spectacle</a></u></li>
<li><u><a href="#summary8">Where to eat in Capri during a boat tour: how to choose</a></u></li>
<li><u><a href="#summary9">Da Paolino: the evening option that completes the day</a></u></li>
</ol>
<h2 id="summary1">Why lunch is not just a break during a Capri private boat tour</h2>
<p>On a <strong>Capri private boat tour</strong>, the day moves through a sequence rather than a schedule. Three hours pass: the island circuit, the grottos, the Faraglioni passed between rather than admired from far away.</p>
<p>Then comes a moment when the engine slows and the boat looks for a mooring. That moment is lunch, and what you do with it shapes the rest of the afternoon.</p>
<p>A quick stop on land with a return time set in advance is one approach, useful when the goal is to keep moving.</p>
<p>A proper meal at a restaurant with direct sea access is another, and it asks for more from the day in exchange for giving more back.</p>
<p>The table is booked through the skip-the-line service included in the <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/experience/capri-tours/">private Capri experience</a>, the queue doesn&#8217;t apply to you, and the afternoon belongs to the group rather than to a queue ticket.</p>
<p>As we wrote in the article on the <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/inside-the-coast/capri-boat-tour-what-you-really-see-when-you-leave-the-shore/">Capri boat tour</a>, arriving by sea at a place like La Fontelina is not the same kind of arrival as walking down from the Piazzetta.</p>
<p>The angle is different. The light is different. The day reads differently from there.</p>
<h2 id="summary2">Best restaurants in Capri reachable by boat</h2>
<p>The <strong>best restaurants in Capri reachable by boat</strong> are not always the most famous addresses on the island.</p>
<p>They&#8217;re the ones that fit inside a day on the water: tables you can reach from the deck or with a short transfer, kitchens that are worth the stop, schedules that can hold a group of six or twelve without falling apart.</p>
<p>Five names cover most of what works:</p>
<ul>
<li><b>La Fontelina</b>, at the foot of the Faraglioni, reachable by private boat or by the restaurant&#8217;s shuttle from Marina Piccola</li>
<li><b>Il Riccio</b>, on the cliff at Anacapri near the Blue Grotto, part of the Jumeirah Capri Palace</li>
<li><b>La Canzone del Mare</b>, at Marina Piccola, one of the historic beach clubs of the island</li>
<li><b>Lo Smeraldo</b>, also at Marina Piccola, less talked about and easier to slot into the day</li>
<li><b>Bagni Tiberio</b>, on the northern coast at the site of Tiberius&#8217; villa, with the restaurant built on a platform over the sea</li>
</ul>
<h2 id="summary3">La Fontelina: lunch at the foot of the Faraglioni</h2>
<p><strong>Capri beach restaurants by the sea</strong> get no more literal than La Fontelina.</p>
<p>The pergola sits directly on the rocks at the base of the Faraglioni, the tables are a few meters above the water, and the only thing between you and the stacks is the air.</p>
<p>The Arcucci and Gargiulo families have been running the place for as long as the pergola has stood there, and the menu has stayed close to what it was at the start.</p>
<p>The boat moors at the buoy field below the restaurant and the transfer to the table is a matter of minutes. For guests not arriving by private charter, the restaurant runs its own shuttle from Marina Piccola, which keeps the experience consistent regardless of how the morning was structured.</p>
<p>What you eat is what makes sense in that position: fresh fish from the morning catch, the house spaghetti, ravioli capresi, and a white sangria that has become a signature of the place, ordered as often as the wine list.</p>
<p>None of it tries to be more than it is, which is part of the point.</p>
<p>This is the lunch that closes the loop after the island circuit. You&#8217;ve just passed the Faraglioni from the water.</p>
<p>The restaurant is right there. Going on land somewhere else means leaving an area you&#8217;ve spent the morning building toward. Staying means letting the day arrive where it was already heading.</p>
<p>Reservations open in spring and the high-season weeks fill quickly.</p>
<p>Through the skip-the-line booking handled by <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/">Sorrento Sea Tours</a>, the table is confirmed before the boat leaves the dock, which is the only reliable way to secure La Fontelina in July or August.</p>
<h2 id="summary4">Il Riccio: a longer pause near the Blue Grotto</h2>
<p>Il Riccio is a different proposition. The restaurant sits on the cliff at Anacapri, close to the Blue Grotto, and belongs to the Jumeirah Capri Palace.</p>
<p>A seasonal Dior pop-up has occupied the terrace in recent summers, which gives a sense of the register: this is a destination meal, not a stop along the way.</p>
<p>The kitchen leans into seafood with the kind of structure that the location demands. The Plateau Royal of raw fish opens most lunches. Spaghetti alla chitarra with sea urchins and breaded black cod are standard.</p>
<p>The dessert room, the Temptation Room, is the moment most guests remember, lined as it is with the full repertoire of Neapolitan pastry.</p>
<p>Reaching it by boat is straightforward when the morning has covered the northern coast. If the Blue Grotto visit is part of the day, Il Riccio sits naturally either before or after, and the position makes the timing work without forcing the schedule.</p>
<p>This is not a stop you compress. It runs longer than La Fontelina and asks the day to settle around it. Groups that want a centre of gravity for the afternoon, rather than a quick interruption, find it here.</p>
<h2 id="summary5">La Canzone del Mare: an afternoon at Marina Piccola</h2>
<p>La Canzone del Mare has been part of Marina Piccola for the better part of a century, and the place has held its position as one of the historic addresses of the port without changing what it does.</p>
<p>The terrace looks across the water at the Faraglioni from the side opposite to La Fontelina, which means the same rocks read completely differently from there.</p>
<p>The boat reaches it directly through the most sheltered port on the island, and the access is among the simplest of any restaurant on Capri.</p>
<p>Once you&#8217;re at the table, the sea is there, the swimming is there, and the rhythm of the afternoon stops asking to be pushed forward.</p>
<p>For groups whose priority is to spend more time off the boat without losing the proximity to the water, this is the address that reconciles both.</p>
<p>The day stays anchored to Marina Piccola, the boat stays close, and the lunch becomes the long pause around which the rest of the afternoon shapes itself.</p>
<h2 id="summary6">Lo Smeraldo: the practical option close to the port</h2>
<p>Lo Smeraldo also sits in the area of Marina Piccola, and what it offers is exactly the kind of stop that doesn&#8217;t require an event around it.</p>
<p>The reservation is easier to get than at La Fontelina or Il Riccio. The walk-in from the dock takes minutes. The kitchen does Caprese cooking without the mise-en-scène, which for some groups is precisely the right register.</p>
<p>The best use of Lo Smeraldo is structural. When the morning has already been intense and the afternoon plan is full, what the day needs is a meal that doesn&#8217;t take it over.</p>
<p>This is that meal. You eat well, you stay close to the boat, and you&#8217;re back on the water without the afternoon having shifted around the lunch.</p>
<h2 id="summary7">Bagni Tiberio: lunch on the water above the ruins of Tiberius&#8217; villa</h2>
<p>Bagni Tiberio sits on the northern coast of Capri, in the bay where the emperor Tiberius built Palazzo a Mare as his summer residence.</p>
<p>The remains of the villa are still visible among the rocks below the waterline, and the restaurant occupies a wooden platform built directly over the sea on the same stretch of shore.</p>
<p>You eat with the water under the boards and the cliff of Capri rising behind you. The arrival by private boat is the simplest of any restaurant on this list.</p>
<p>The skipper anchors at one of the buoys reserved for guests and the tender brings you to the beach club. For guests not arriving by charter, a free shuttle boat runs between Marina Grande and Bagni Tiberio throughout the day, starting at 9:30.</p>
<p>The walk-in route from Via Palazzo a Mare takes ten minutes, but most guests come by water, which is part of the point.</p>
<p>The kitchen leans into Caprese tradition: fresh fish, the pasta dishes that the island has refined over generations, antipasti built around the morning catch.</p>
<p>The setting is unhurried and the room reads as a beach club rather than a stage, which keeps the focus where it belongs. The restaurant runs daily from 12:00 to 15:00 between April and September.</p>
<p>For groups that want a lunch directly on the water without the queue at La Fontelina or the formality of Il Riccio, Bagni Tiberio is the address that holds together both the access by sea and the quiet of a place that knows what it is.</p>
<h2 id="summary8">Where to eat in Capri during a boat tour: how to choose</h2>
<p><strong>Where to eat in Capri during a boat tour</strong> reduces, in practice, to three questions: where the boat is at midday, how much time the day still has to give, and what kind of moment you want lunch to be.</p>
<p>A short guide:</p>
<ol>
<li>After the full island circuit, finishing near the Faraglioni: La Fontelina is the natural choice</li>
<li>Around the Blue Grotto, on the northern coast: Il Riccio fits the geography and the register</li>
<li>For maximum time off the boat with the water still in front of you: La Canzone del Mare</li>
<li>For a practical, well-cooked meal that doesn&#8217;t take over the afternoon: Lo Smeraldo</li>
<li>For lunch on the water on the northern coast, above the ruins of the Roman villa: Bagni Tiberio</li>
</ol>
<p>All five can be booked in advance through the skip-the-line reservation service included in the <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/experience/capri-tours/">Sorrento Sea Tours private Capri tour</a>, with departures available from Sorrento, Capri, Positano, Amalfi or Naples depending on the itinerary.</p>
<p>The table is confirmed before the day starts. The cost of the meal is separate from the price of the tour, which is the standard arrangement for any premium itinerary on the island.</p>
<p>For the boats that make this kind of day work in the first place, the full <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/private-boats/">Sorrento Sea Tours fleet</a> is on the website, alongside the broader range of <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/private-experiences/">Private Experiences</a> built around the same logic of slow days at sea.</p>
<h2 id="summary9">Da Paolino: the evening option that completes the day</h2>
<p>Da Paolino isn&#8217;t reachable by boat and doesn&#8217;t belong inside the structure of the tour.</p>
<p>Open only in the evening from mid-June onwards, the restaurant occupies a lemon grove above Marina Grande, where the trees themselves form the ceiling of the dining room and the scent of the citrus stays in your clothes after you leave.</p>
<p>The De Martino family has held the restaurant across generations, and the cooking stays inside Caprese tradition without trying to update it.</p>
<p>The seafood antipasti, the lemon ravioli, the dessert room where the homemade cakes are arranged under the trees, all of it works because none of it pretends to be elsewhere.</p>
<p>What Da Paolino offers is the second half of the day. The boat is back at the dock, the salt is still on the skin, and the evening needs a setting that matches the quality of what came before it.</p>
<p>Reservations are essential and fill weeks in advance during high season. Booked early, this is <strong>what to do in Capri Italy</strong> after a day that started at 9:30 at Marina Piccola and ended with a slow circuit of the island and a lunch at La Fontelina.</p>
<p>For the full picture of how a day from Sorrento to Capri actually unfolds, the article on <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/routes-and-itineraries/sorrento-to-capri-boat-tour-what-happens/">what really happens during a Sorrento to Capri boat tour</a> covers the timing and the structure in detail.</p>
<p>For the Blue Grotto stop that often shares the same morning: <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/from-the-sea/blue-grotto-capri-what-it-feels/">Blue Grotto Capri: what it actually feels like when you drift inside</a>.</p>
<p>L'articolo <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com/inside-the-coast/where-to-eat-in-capri-by-boat-best-restaurants/">Where to eat in Capri during a boat tour (and why it changes the entire experience)</a> proviene da <a href="https://www.sorrentoseatours.com">Sorrento Sea Tours</a>.</p>
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