Yacht with Beach House
- 8h
- Yacht
- Beach house
- Breakfast
- Family-friendly
vanaf $150 /per
Waar eilandbewoners hun bezoekers heen sturen
[NL] Why Klein Curaçao? It is the day trip islanders send every visitor on — pristine sand, calm turquoise shallows, and snorkeling over shipwrecks and turtle grounds.
Selecteer een datum of vergelijk eerst hieronder
vanaf $150 /per
vanaf $140 /per
vanaf $169 /per
vanaf $140 /per
vanaf $140 /per
vanaf $140 /per
vanaf $140 /per
vanaf $140 /per
vanaf $140 /per
Exclusief voor jouw groep, plus de bemanning.
vanaf $1,750 /10 people + $175 per extra person
vanaf $2,200 /8 people + $175 per extra person
vanaf $2,200 /8 people + $175 per extra person
vanaf $2,200 /8 people + $175 per extra person
vanaf $2,200 /8 people + $175 per extra person
vanaf $2,200 /8 people + $175 per extra person
vanaf $2,200 /8 people + $175 per extra person
vanaf $2,200 /8 people + $175 per extra person
vanaf $2,200 /8 people + $175 per extra person
vanaf $2,200 /8 people + $175 per extra person
vanaf $2,200 /8 people + $175 per extra person
vanaf $1,950 /8 people + $175 per extra person
vanaf $1,400 /8 people + $175 per extra person
vanaf $1,950 /8 people + $175 per extra person
Onze topkeuzes - één voor elk type reiziger
The island's only dive school, a massage with a million-dollar view, and a fully equipped beach house all on a quieter stretch, set apart from the other boats.
Full dayvanaf $150
The biggest catamarans on the island and the best open bar of any Klein Curaçao trip. Most-booked year after year - for the ultimate Caribbean sailing vibe.
Full dayvanaf $140
A beach house with its own watch-tower a 360° view over the whole island. A calm, steady boat. Easy and relaxed for families and friends.
Full dayvanaf $150
Onze eerlijke keuzes, geen betaalde plaatsingen. Alle tours bekijken
Alle zes de boten varen naar Klein Curaçao. Frisdrank en een BBQ-lunch inbegrepen. Dit is wat er anders is zodra je er bent.
Een vlak, onbewoond eiland van 1,7 km², 10 km voor de zuidoostkust van Curaçao. Geen winkels, geen bereik, alleen zand, rif en geschiedenis.
Klein Curaçao has one of the longest white-sand beaches in the Caribbean: over a kilometre of fine, powdery sand along the calm, reef-protected south shore. The water runs in bands of turquoise to deep blue, shallow and clear right off the sand. It's the reason most people make the trip, a full day on an undeveloped beach with nothing built on it and no crowds beyond the day boats. The north shore is the opposite: rough, windswept, and where the wrecks lie.
In 1871, British mining engineer John Godden found phosphate on Klein Curaçao, left by centuries of nesting birds. Within fifteen years, they had dug out around 90,000 tons for fertiliser and cattle feed, leaving the island around 3 metres lower and stripped bare, which is why it's flat and treeless today. In the 1700s and 1800s, the West India Company used it as a quarantine station for enslaved people. Its ruins still stand in the northwest, and the graves of those who didn't survive remain in the south. A Carmabi project has since restored some green.
Klein Curaçao is a protected nesting ground for three sea turtle species: Hawksbill, Loggerhead, and Green sea turtles. The whole island is a protected Ramsar wetland and a designated Important Bird Area. Those hatched here return year after year to the same beach to nest. While snorkeling you'll very likely see them grazing in the shallows, with the best chance during nesting season, March to October. Watch and swim alongside them, but never touch.
Klein Curaçao's eastern reef is one of the healthiest untouched coral systems left in the Caribbean, rare in a region where bleaching has hit most reefs hard. With visibility up to 30 metres, you take in coral formations, underwater caves, and dense fish life: a real dive site, not just a snorkel stop. One operator runs the island's only dive school, and snorkel gear comes standard.
Klein Curaçao's pink lighthouse, officially the Prins Hendrik tower, stands 20 metres tall in the middle of the island as its standout landmark. First built in 1850, it was destroyed by a hurricane in 1877, rebuilt in 1879, and first lit in 1913. Left empty for decades, it gained a solar-powered LED beacon in 2008, and stairs added in 2017 let you climb to the top for a view over the whole island, though they're weathered and unmaintained now.
Heading out, you sail straight into the trade winds, so the front of the boat takes the chop. Sit at the back, ideally back-centre, keep your eyes on the horizon, and most stomachs settle fast.
There are enough beach beds and palapas for everyone, so take your time getting off the boat. The only perk of the first dinghy is first pick of your spot for the day.
The sun out here is fierce and bounces off the water and white sand, so reapply often. Go reef-safe: the reef is protected, and ordinary sunscreen harms the coral.
Ja. De meeste bezoekers vinden de dagtrip zeer de moeite waard, een van de langste en mooiste witte zandstranden van het Caribisch gebied. Een hele dag op het strand en in het water, perfect voor zonnen, zwemmen en snorkelen, met een beschermd rif en zeeschildpadden in het ondiepe water. Het eiland is volledig onbebouwd, zonder drukte buiten de dagboten. We hebben nog niemand ontmoet die er spijt van had.
Klein Curaçao's north shore holds three shipwrecks. Low and hard to spot, with strong currents, the island has caught out passing boats for centuries. The most visible is the Maria Bianca Guidesman, an oil tanker stranded in 1988. Two French sailing yachts lie nearby: the Tchao, wrecked in 2007, and another lost in 2024. Wind, salt, and sand are slowly reclaiming all three. The north-shore walk takes you right past them.
Signal is weak and patchy. You'll catch a bit out on the Hammerhead pier or up in the watchtower, but mostly you're off the grid, so tell people at home before you sail and enjoy a full day unplugged.
This isn't the usual "limited availability" line: boats to Klein Curaçao genuinely sell out three to four weeks ahead, year-round. If your dates are fixed, lock it in early.
You can climb to the top for a view over the whole island, but the stairs are weathered and unmaintained. Take them slowly, watch your footing, and hold on.