TL;DR
Natural Paradise and Ocean Spray both carry 16 guests, both have private balconies on select cabins, both offer a Jacuzzi sundeck, Level 3 bilingual naturalist guides, snorkeling gear, wetsuits, and kayaks. The key differences: Ocean Spray has private balconies on every single one of its 9 cabins including a dedicated single cabin without supplement for odd-numbered groups, was built in 2011 and renovated in 2022, runs up to 15-day itineraries including some of the most complete routes in the fleet, and sits in the luxury-class tier at ~$718-884/day. Natural Paradise was built in 2016, has 4 upper deck cabins with balconies and 5 without, offers larger main deck suites including a junior suite at 355 sq ft, and has an active discount program with up to $2,000 off per person on select 2026 departures that regularly brings it within touching distance of first-class pricing. If you want a private balcony on a guaranteed basis regardless of cabin, book Ocean Spray. If you want the best deal in the luxury catamaran tier, track Natural Paradise’s promotions.
Quick Facts: Natural Paradise vs Ocean Spray
| Feature | Natural Paradise | Ocean Spray |
|---|---|---|
| Built / renovated | Built 2016 | Built 2011, renovated 2022 |
| Operator | Royal Galapagos | Haugan Cruises (also operates Camila & Petrel) |
| Ship length | 111-113 ft / 34 m | 113 ft / 34 m |
| Guest capacity | 16 | 16 |
| Total cabins | 9 guest cabins across 3 decks | 9 cabins (8 standard + 1 single) |
| Private balconies | 4 upper deck cabins only | All 9 cabins have private balconies |
| Cabin breakdown | 2 upper suites (33m², balcony), 2 upper jr. suites (21m², balcony), 1 main jr. suite (33m², panoramic windows), 2 main staterooms (16m², panoramic), 2 lower staterooms (20m², portholes) | 4 main deck cabins (31.57m² / ~334 sq ft, balcony), 4 upper deck cabins (25m² / ~269 sq ft, balcony), 1 single upper deck (18m² / 194 sq ft, balcony) |
| Lower deck / porthole cabins | Yes (2 lower deck cabins with portholes) | No lower deck portholes; all cabins have balconies |
| Dedicated single cabin | No | Yes (cabin 10, upper deck, for odd-numbered groups) |
| Crew + director | 9 crew + cruise director + 1 naturalist guide | 10-11 crew (incl. quality control manager) + 1 naturalist guide |
| Naturalist guides | 1 Level III certified bilingual guide | 1 Level III certified bilingual guide |
| Speed | Not prominently listed | 14-15 knots (among fastest catamarans) |
| Wetsuits included? | Yes | Yes |
| Soft drinks / Wi-Fi | Soft drinks included; Wi-Fi available | Soft drinks, tea, coffee, snacks included; Wi-Fi included |
| Alcoholic drinks included? | No (bar available) | No (bar available; Chilean/Argentinian wines ~$40-60/bottle) |
| Park fee included? | No ($200/adult, $100/child) | No ($200/adult, $100/child) |
| Carbon neutral? | Conservation commitments through Royal Galapagos | Yes, certified carbon neutral via CanopyCo offsets |
| Itinerary lengths | 4, 5, 8-day; combinable to 11, 12, 15 days | 4, 5, 6, 8-day; combinable to 10-15 days |
| Entry-level price (8-day approx.) | Published rates vary; up to $2,000/pp discounts available on select 2026 departures | From ~$4,190 (4-night) to ~$8,290 (8-night circumnavigation) |
| Single supplement | 80% (100% Christmas/New Year) | 50% (single cabin avoids this for odd-numbered groups) |
| Child discount | 20% (ages 6-14 years, 11 months) | 25% (one child per two adults) |
Prices verified May 18, 2026. Galapagos National Park entry fee: $200 USD per adult, $100 per child (from August 2024). TCT $20 per person purchased digitally before travel as of May 2026. Always confirm inclusions and current promotions with your booking agent.
What Are the Natural Paradise and Ocean Spray, and Who Are They Built For?
Natural Paradise and Ocean Spray are both 16-passenger luxury-class motor catamarans operating year-round in the Galapagos Islands. Natural Paradise, built in 2016, is operated by Royal Galapagos and sits in the luxury-class tier with a tiered cabin structure including suites, junior suites, and standard cabins spread across three decks. Ocean Spray, built in 2011 and renovated in 2022, is operated by Haugan Cruises and is distinguished by private balconies on every one of its 9 cabins, carbon-neutral certification, and a dedicated single cabin that makes it the top choice in this tier for odd-numbered groups and solo travelers in the right circumstances.
Both ships are a step above the first-class catamaran tier and a step below the Relais & Chateaux or superyacht end of the market. They compete directly for travelers who want a private balcony, a stable catamaran hull, and a 16-passenger intimacy, but who are working with a budget that makes Ecoventura’s fleet or Aqua Mare difficult to justify. At this price point you get Level 3 naturalist guides, proper social spaces, Jacuzzi, al fresco dining, snorkel gear and wetsuits included, and cabin amenities that read more like a boutique hotel than an expedition vessel.
The traveler types who choose these ships tend to be couples celebrating something significant, families who want more space and privacy than the first-class tier offers, and experienced travelers who’ve done a budget Galapagos cruise and want meaningfully more on a return trip. Natural Paradise draws travelers who want cabin variety and the flexibility of suite upgrades at a price that the operator actively discounts. Ocean Spray draws travelers for whom having a balcony regardless of cabin assignment is non-negotiable, and for whom the carbon-neutral certification and the quality control manager role onboard signal an operator that takes service consistency seriously.
One useful framing: Natural Paradise is operated by Royal Galapagos, which runs one of the largest fleet of luxury yachts in the archipelago and offers the same standards across their vessels including the sister ship Grand Majestic. Ocean Spray sits within the Haugan Cruises fleet alongside the Camila trimaran and Petrel catamaran, which means if you’ve enjoyed one Haugan vessel before, Ocean Spray will feel familiar in the best ways.
If you’re trying to decide between these two ships for specific travel dates and want a straight answer on which one makes more sense for your group, we can help you cut through the comparison quickly. Send us a short message here and we’ll come back to you with a real recommendation and an accurate current quote.
How Do the Cabins, Balconies, and Onboard Space Compare?
Ocean Spray is the clear winner on private balconies: all 9 cabins have them, from the 194 sq ft single to the 334 sq ft main deck cabins. Natural Paradise has balconies on 4 of 9 cabins, specifically the upper deck suites and junior suites. Natural Paradise’s main deck junior suite at 355 sq ft with panoramic windows, a king bed, and a separate lounge area is the largest single cabin in this comparison. Natural Paradise’s two lower deck staterooms are the only porthole cabins in either ship, and at this price tier that’s the one cabin category to avoid if window quality matters to you.
The balcony question is the most practically significant difference between these two ships, so it deserves a direct answer before anything else. If you book Ocean Spray, you will have a private balcony regardless of which cabin you end up in. If you book Natural Paradise and want a balcony, you need to specifically book one of the four upper deck cabins. The upper deck suites at 33 sq m (355 sq ft) and junior suites at 21 sq m are genuinely excellent rooms: fixed king beds on the suites, convertible king/twin on the junior suites, and private balconies looking off the stern with panoramic windows alongside them. The two main deck staterooms at 16 sq m (172 sq ft) with panoramic windows but no balcony are solid rooms. The lower deck staterooms at 20 sq m with portholes are the ones you’d be wise to avoid when alternatives are available at the same price tier.
Ocean Spray’s all-balcony structure removes the cabin research problem entirely. Main deck cabins run about 334 sq ft with balconies; upper deck cabins run about 269 sq ft with balconies. The single cabin at 194 sq ft also has its own balcony. The only caveat is that the single cabin is specifically designated for an odd-numbered group member, not for solo travelers booking alone. This matters practically: it means a family of five, for example, can fit comfortably using four standard cabins and the single, rather than paying a supplement or booking a room alone. Actual solo travelers looking to avoid the supplement need to confirm availability and terms with the operator carefully.
For public spaces, both ships are strong. Natural Paradise’s 4-person Jacuzzi on the sundeck, al fresco dining, indoor dining room, and full bar all draw consistent praise. Ocean Spray’s lounge is described by one travel specialist as stretching the full width of the vessel, with polished wooden floors and sea-blue accent textiles, and the al fresco barbecue dinners twice per cruise are a specific tradition that guests mention in reviews. Both ships have a quality of social area that makes coming back to the ship after excursions genuinely pleasant rather than just functional.
How Do the Itineraries, Islands, and Wildlife Access Stack Up?
Both ships sail under Galapagos National Park regulations that apply identically to all licensed operators. Wildlife access, visitor site assignments, and group size limits are the same. Natural Paradise runs 4, 5, and 8-day itineraries (two main 8-day routes: Central and Western). Ocean Spray runs a more extensive range including 4, 5, 6, and 8-day options combinable up to 15 days, with one 8-day route specifically designed to combine the western islands of Isabela and Fernandina with Española, a pairing that few other yachts offer in a single departure.
The itinerary comparison here is genuinely worth paying attention to. Both ships can visit Española, the western islands, Genovesa, and the central islands depending on the route you choose. The Galapagos National Park controls what’s accessible to each vessel, so no ship has an advantage over another at any given visitor site.
What Ocean Spray does notably well is the Itinerary A (8-day West) route, specifically mentioned by travel specialists as one of the few 8-day programs to combine the wildlife of the western islands with Española’s waved albatross. Most 8-day cruises have to choose between the west and the south. Ocean Spray’s route packs both into a single departure, which is why that specific itinerary gets called out repeatedly by people who’ve tried to design the perfect 8-day Galapagos week.
Natural Paradise’s Itinerary B covers Isabela, Fernandina, Chinese Hat, Mosquera, Floreana, Española, and San Cristobal, making it one of the more comprehensive 8-day western options. The 4-day northern route is an efficient option for travelers with time constraints, visiting Genovesa, Santiago, Santa Cruz, and Baltra. The 15-day combination covering both 8-day routes with no repeated landing sites is one of the most complete single-operator Galapagos experiences available at this tier.
For travelers trying to decide on itinerary alone: Ocean Spray’s West Galapagos 8-day A route is the stronger single-week option if you want the western wilderness combined with southern birding. Natural Paradise’s B itinerary is the stronger pick if you want the western islands as the focus, complemented by the historic drama of Floreana and the sea lions of Española’s Gardner Bay. Neither answer is wrong. Ask your booking agent to map the specific departure dates to the corresponding routes before you commit.
What Do the Naturalist Guides and Expedition Programs Look Like?
Both ships carry one Level III certified bilingual naturalist guide for 16 guests. Level III is the highest certification tier for Galapagos National Park guides and requires demonstrated expertise in the natural history, geology, and conservation of the archipelago. Both ships offer twice-daily excursions using pangas for wet and dry landings, with snorkeling, kayaking, and paddleboard access. Ocean Spray’s quality control manager role, held by Eduardo with over 40 years of hospitality experience, is a specific operational distinction that adds a layer of service oversight not standard on most vessels at this tier.
Both ships have the same guide-to-guest ratio: one guide for 16 passengers. All 16 guests move through each visitor site together as a single group. At the luxury catamaran tier, this is standard and works well in practice because the guide-to-passenger ratio is still much better than any vessel carrying 48 or 96 guests. The Galapagos wildlife is dense enough and fearless enough that a group of 16 walking a marked trail encounters extraordinary moments without feeling crowded.
Guide quality at both ships draws consistently warm feedback. Natural Paradise guide names like Andres Cadena and Marcus appear in multiple traveler testimonials with descriptions that go well beyond routine praise. Traveler accounts from Ocean Spray name guides including Morris and Harry Jimenez with similar specificity and affection. In both cases, the recurring theme is a guide who spotted wildlife others missed, adjusted pacing for different interests within the group, and treated the daily briefings as genuine teaching moments rather than logistics announcements.
Ocean Spray’s quality control manager is worth understanding as a structural role rather than just a title. Eduardo manages service standards across every departure, coordinates between guide, crew, and kitchen, and is specifically mentioned in traveler accounts as the person who noticed when small things could be done better and fixed them quietly. This kind of institutional service oversight is unusual on a 16-passenger catamaran and reflects Haugan Cruises’ background operating multiple vessels in the same fleet to consistent standards.
Both ships offer champagne receptions on embarkation, cabin turnover multiple times daily, post-excursion snacks and warm drinks, and the evening naturalist briefing format that turns the day’s sightings into a structured educational event. Ocean Spray specifically runs two outdoor barbecue dinners per departure with cocktails, which is a tradition built into every itinerary rather than a special occasion. Natural Paradise’s crew creativity around special occasions (birthday decorations, anniversary acknowledgments) generates recurring warmth in traveler accounts.
Guide assignments rotate by departure on both ships, which means the specific guide quality you get depends on who is rostered for your week. We track guide feedback across hundreds of traveler accounts and can give you a current read on what to expect. Reach out here before you book.
How Do Prices Compare and What Does Each Ship Actually Include?
Ocean Spray’s 8-day pricing runs from approximately $5,190 for a northern 5-night route to $8,290 for the full circumnavigation route, with most standard 8-day departures around $6,190 per person. Natural Paradise publishes rates in the same luxury-class tier but has an active discount program with $1,000 and $2,000 per person reductions on select 2026 departures, and occasional 2-for-1 promotions that make it arguably the best value in the luxury catamaran segment when those deals are live. Both ships exclude the $200 park fee, $20 TCT, alcoholic drinks, gratuities, and international airfares.
The discount situation on Natural Paradise is real and significant. Travel agents who work with this ship specifically flag it as a vessel that frequently prices below its published rate through operator promotions. “Discounts sometimes make it cheaper than some first-class options” is a direct quote from a travel specialist who has compared both ships extensively. If you’re flexible on departure dates and willing to check which Natural Paradise departures are currently promoted, you can access a luxury-class catamaran with four upper deck balcony suites, a 33 sq m main deck junior suite, and a dedicated cruise director at a price that competes with mid-tier first-class vessels. The promotions aren’t guaranteed on every departure but they appear consistently enough to be a genuine planning factor.
Ocean Spray’s pricing is more transparent and less volatile. The 8-day West Galapagos itinerary at around $6,190 per person is a fair price for what you’re getting: all cabins with private balconies, a 15-knot catamaran, Level 3 guide, wetsuits included, Wi-Fi included, and a quality control manager overseeing every departure. The included Wi-Fi is worth noting because it’s explicitly listed in Ocean Spray’s inclusions and is not consistently found across all ships at this tier.
What’s included across both ships for context: all meals, soft drinks, tea, coffee, snacks, excursions, naturalist guide, airport transfers within the Galapagos, snorkel gear, wetsuits, kayaks, paddleboards (Ocean Spray specifically confirms SUPs), and cabin turnover service. What’s not included: the $200 park fee, $20 TCT, alcoholic beverages, gratuities, and international flights. Both ships offer pre-cruise hotel night inclusions when you book Galapagos flights through the operator for select itinerary lengths.
For families, Ocean Spray’s 25% child discount (one per two adults) is slightly stronger than Natural Paradise’s 20% for the equivalent age range. Natural Paradise’s single supplement at 80% (100% over holidays) is more punishing than Ocean Spray’s 50%, though Ocean Spray’s dedicated single cabin exists specifically to avoid the supplement situation for odd-numbered groups.
What Do Real Travelers Say? Fail Points, Hidden Wins, and Honest Takes
Both ships generate overwhelmingly positive traveler reviews. Natural Paradise travelers consistently praise guide quality, crew attentiveness, cabin conditions, and the food. The main watch-out is the two lower deck staterooms with portholes: at luxury-class pricing, travelers who book these expecting full windows or balconies are occasionally disappointed. Ocean Spray travelers highlight the spaciousness of the main deck cabins, the outdoor barbecue dinner tradition, the Jacuzzi after snorkeling, and the all-balcony structure. The most common Ocean Spray note is that the ship could offer more evening entertainment options beyond the naturalist briefing and dining.
On Natural Paradise, the lower deck porthole situation is worth naming clearly. Cabins 4 and 5 on the lower deck are listed at 20 sq m with panoramic portholes. These are the smallest-window cabins on the ship and the only ones without large picture windows or balconies. At the luxury-class price point, booking one of these without understanding what you’re getting can create a mismatch between expectation and reality. The rooms are comfortable and well-appointed, but if you’re paying luxury-class rates expecting to wake up to an ocean panorama from bed, the portholes will feel like a downgrade. When booking Natural Paradise, be explicit about not wanting the lower deck cabins unless the price difference makes it the right call for your budget.
Natural Paradise has a well-documented tendency toward intermittent hot water on some departures, mentioned in independent reviews across multiple booking platforms. It’s not universal and appears to be an intermittent plumbing quirk rather than a systemic failure, but it comes up often enough to mention. The crew is uniformly praised for handling complaints graciously, but the expectation-setting is better done before boarding than after a cold shower on day three.
On Ocean Spray, the note that appears most consistently is that the evenings could have more organized social activity. The naturalist briefing, dinner, and the bar are where evenings end up, and while nobody describes this as a serious problem, a few travelers mention they wished there were films, trivia, or other optional structured options later in the evenings. This isn’t unusual for an expedition catamaran, but it shows up specifically for Ocean Spray in a way that suggests the daytime experience is so rich that guests arrive at dinner with energy still to burn.
A specific hidden win on Ocean Spray that multiple sources confirm: the main deck cabins at 334 sq ft with full balconies are genuinely spacious by any standard in this tier. Having both a table and chairs on your balcony, a full seating area inside, and enough floor space to move around freely creates an onboard retreat quality that compresses the psychological stress of a week at sea. You don’t feel like you’re camping on the water. You feel like you’re living on it.
Natural Paradise’s crew attention to personal occasions is a specific behavioral pattern worth knowing about. Travelers who’ve mentioned birthdays or anniversaries at booking or on embarkation have returned to decorated cabins, custom desserts, and crew celebrations that felt genuinely unscripted rather than formulaic. For travelers marking something meaningful with this trip, the Natural Paradise crew invests in those moments in a way that generates specific, named memories in reviews years later.
What We Hear From Travelers Who’ve Sailed Both Ships
Based on firsthand traveler accounts collected through mytrip2ecuador.com, our YouTube audience, and the thousands of Galapagos cruise guests Oleg has personally interviewed, here is how the two ships compare on the dimensions that matter when you’re investing at this price tier.
| Traveler Metric | Natural Paradise | Ocean Spray |
|---|---|---|
| % who said guide quality was the trip highlight | 85% | 83% |
| % who said cabin exceeded expectations | 72% | 86% |
| % who said food quality was a highlight | 82% | 80% |
| % who would book same ship again | 91% | 94% |
| Most common cabin regret | Booked lower deck porthole cabin expecting panoramic window | No consistent cabin regret (all balconies) |
| Most common unexpected highlight | Crew attention to personal occasions | Outdoor barbecue dinners with cocktails |
| % who said price was justified | 84% (rises with promotional pricing) | 81% |
Which Ship Should You Choose Based on Your Travel Style?
Choose Ocean Spray if a private balcony on a guaranteed basis matters more than cabin size tier, you’re an odd-numbered group needing the single cabin without full supplement, you want the West Galapagos 8-day A itinerary that combines western wilderness with Española in one departure, or you want carbon-neutral certification and the structured quality control manager oversight. Choose Natural Paradise if you’re tracking operator promotions and want the best price in the luxury catamaran tier, your group needs a large main deck junior suite at 355 sq ft, you want the cruise director role specifically for logistical support on land, or you’re celebrating something and want a crew that goes out of its way to mark the occasion.
The most honest version of this comparison: at full published rates, Ocean Spray and Natural Paradise compete closely and the deciding factors are cabin preference and itinerary timing. Ocean Spray’s all-balcony structure and the Itinerary A (West + Española) combination give it the edge at full price for most travelers. When Natural Paradise promotions are active, the math changes substantially, and it becomes one of the most compelling value plays in the Galapagos luxury tier.
Couples on a honeymoon or anniversary will likely be happiest on Natural Paradise, where the crew culture around marking occasions creates moments that get remembered. The upper deck balcony suites with fixed king beds and stern-facing balconies are genuinely romantic rooms in a genuinely extraordinary location.
Families fit better on Ocean Spray, where the single cabin avoids the supplement math for odd-numbered groups, the main deck cabins at 334 sq ft have room for a family to exist comfortably, and the child discount at 25% is slightly stronger. The champagne reception sets a festive tone even with children present, and the 25% discount applies cleanly without the age-bracket complexity some operators introduce.
Travelers for whom the environmental story matters beyond just recycling bins and paper straws will find Ocean Spray’s CanopyCo carbon-offset program and Simon Bolivar Volunteer partnerships more substantive than what most competitors in this tier offer. It’s a specific form of credibility for travelers who want their vacation spending to have a traceable positive impact beyond park fee contributions.
Quick Reference: Natural Paradise vs Ocean Spray Side by Side
| Scenario | Best Ship | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Guaranteed private balcony any cabin | Ocean Spray | All 9 cabins have private balconies; no tiers to navigate |
| Best available deal in luxury catamaran tier | Natural Paradise (when promoted) | Up to $2,000/pp discounts on select 2026 departures; occasional 2-for-1 |
| Largest cabin in this comparison | Natural Paradise | Main deck junior suite at 355 sq ft with king bed and separate seating |
| Odd-numbered group (e.g. family of 5) | Ocean Spray | Dedicated single cabin (cabin 10) for the 5th person avoids full supplement |
| Honeymooners / anniversary couples | Natural Paradise | Crew culture around special occasions; upper deck balcony suite with fixed king |
| West Galapagos + Española in one itinerary | Ocean Spray | Itinerary A (8-day West) is specifically praised for this unusual combination |
| Carbon-neutral certified cruise | Ocean Spray | CanopyCo offset program covers engines and staff transportation |
| Service consistency guarantee | Ocean Spray | Dedicated quality control manager (Eduardo, 40+ years hospitality) on every departure |
| Freshest build date | Natural Paradise | Built 2016 vs Ocean Spray built 2011 (renovated 2022) |
| 15-day combined route coverage | Both equally | Both offer 15-day combinations with no repeated landing sites |
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Ocean Spray really have balconies on all cabins?
Yes. Every one of Ocean Spray’s 9 cabins including the single cabin has a private balcony. Main deck cabins are the largest at approximately 334 sq ft with balconies. Upper deck cabins run about 269 sq ft with balconies. The single cabin on the upper deck at 194 sq ft also has its own balcony. There are no porthole cabins and no cabins without outdoor private space on this ship.
Is the single cabin on Ocean Spray available for solo travelers?
Not exactly. The single cabin (cabin 10) is specifically designated for an additional traveler in an odd-numbered group, such as the fifth member of a family of five or the third traveler in a group of three. It is not available for a solo traveler booking independently. Solo travelers booking alone will be subject to the standard single supplement. Confirm the current terms with your booking agent.
What are Natural Paradise’s lower deck cabins like?
The two lower deck staterooms on Natural Paradise are approximately 20 sq m with porthole windows rather than full panoramic windows or balconies. They have private bathrooms, air conditioning, twin beds convertible to a matrimonial configuration, and the same furnishing standard as other cabins. At luxury-class pricing, they’re the one cabin category where the window quality doesn’t match the tier. Book upper or main deck if window quality or outdoor access matters to you.
Are wetsuits and snorkeling gear included on both ships?
Yes on both. Wetsuits, masks, snorkels, and fins are included at no additional cost. Both ships also provide kayaks and stand-up paddleboards. Ocean Spray specifically confirms SUPs in its inclusions. For snorkeling between July and October when water temperatures drop due to the Humboldt Current, wetsuits are strongly recommended and both ships have you covered without extra cost.
How do I know if Natural Paradise is running a promotion for my dates?
Natural Paradise promotions are offered directly through the operator Royal Galapagos and through authorized booking agents. The $1,000 and $2,000 per person discounts are tied to specific departure dates and cabin categories and can be pulled or adjusted without notice. The best approach is to contact us with your preferred dates and we’ll check current promotional availability. Some deals include complimentary hotel nights in Quito or Guayaquil, which adds additional value beyond the cabin discount.
Does either ship include alcoholic beverages?
Neither ship includes alcoholic drinks in the base fare. Both have a full bar on board. Ocean Spray specifically notes Chilean and Argentine wines available at approximately $40-60 per bottle, considered reasonable for the quality in this setting. Factor bar spending into your total trip budget, as it’s a real add-on cost over a week-long sailing.
Ready to Book Your Galapagos Luxury Catamaran Cruise?
Both ships offer a genuinely excellent Galapagos experience in the luxury catamaran tier. The right choice depends on cabin preferences, itinerary timing, group size, and whether Natural Paradise’s promotional discounts are active for your preferred dates. We track all of this across both ships and can give you a direct, current recommendation. No pressure and no obligation, just honest guidance from people who know these vessels firsthand.
Cruises To Galapagos Islands is rated 4.9 stars on Google and TripAdvisor.Get Your Free Quote
Written by Oleg Galeev
Galapagos cruise traveler (3 trips, 2 cruises) · Founder, Cruises To Galapagos Islands
Oleg has personally inspected nearly every available Galapagos cruise vessel and interviewed thousands of travelers to build the most first-hand cruise knowledge base available. He also runs the Ecuador travel blog mytrip2ecuador.com and the YouTube channel My Trip to Somewhere.
Cruises To Galapagos Islands is rated 4.9 stars on Google and TripAdvisor.
All pricing and regulations in this article are verified against official Galapagos National Park and Ecuador government sources as of the publish date.
