Luna M.
Sydney, AU



Per Tur
AC & Eget Bad
Maks Kapasitet
Labuan Bajo
Live Octopus Phinisi is currently anchored at Labuan Bajo Harbour
UPDATED: 4:44:52 PMVerified for structural integrity and 2026 maritime safety compliance by KomodoExplorer Indonesia.
Fra private dobbeltkabiner til store fellesrom for 6 personer — de 6 kabinene på Octopus Phinisi tilbyr både privatliv og fellesskap.

En privat, inngjerda kabine på hoveddekket, skapt for par som søker stillhet og nærvær. Plassert mot det rolige skroget av båten, gir den en følelse av å være helt borte – et privat paradis i bevegelse mellom Rinca og Padar.
Capacity
2 Guests
Bed Type
Double Bed

En romslig familiekabine på hoveddekket, tenkt for fire personer – ideell for familier eller grupper som ønsker nære dager sammen. Designet kombinerer funksjonalitet med varme materialer, og stillheten omkring gir rom for både felleskap og personlig tid under en komodo safari med phinisi.
Capacity
4 Guests
Bed Type
2 Double Beds

En delt kabine under dekk med plass til fire, tilpasset reisende med et åpent sinn og sans for fellesskap. Her møtes stier, historier og reiserfaringer – en innfallsport til en mer autentisk komodo dykkekrus, uten pomp og overflødighet.
Capacity
4 Guests
Bed Type
2 Double Beds

Det største fellesskapet ombord – et livfullt samlingspunkt med plass til seks. Energien er nærværende, stemningen åpen, og hver kveld blir til en del av en felles reisehukommelse, ideelt for å skape bånd under en private komodo båttur med andre med samme reiselyst.
Capacity
6 Guests
Bed Type
2 Double Beds + 2 Single Beds
Octopus Phinisi fører deg til hjertet av Komodo nasjonalpark – soloppgang på Padar, den rosa strenden og komodovarerne på Rinca.
KELOR ISLAND
Ancient sailors called it "The Guardian." Dutch colonials built watchtowers on its crown. Local legend says it's a giant sea turtle turned to stone. A 20-minute climb rewards you with 360° views of dragon territories. The coral gardens below hide patrolling sea turtles in crystal shallows.
MANJERITE
Every sunset, tens of thousands of flying foxes launch from mangroves, creating a black river across orange skies. Ancient sea nomads believed these bats carried souls to the afterlife. Watch from your deck at 17:30. The sky will erupt. You'll forget to breathe.
PADAR ISLAND
Three crescent bays—turquoise, cobalt, jade—curve around dragon-spine ridges. Legend says a dragon princess died here protecting her brothers. Her body became the ridgeline. Her tears became three seas. The 30-minute climb is ruthless, but every explorer says: "I can die now."
PINK BEACH
One of only seven pink beaches on Earth. Microscopic red coral creates a rose-gold blush. Sailors once feared it was cursed by dragon blood. The reef drops from knee-deep to 50 meters—turtles, reef sharks, and octopi patrol waters so clear you'll think you're dreaming.
KOMODO ISLAND
Ground zero. The throne. Komodo dragons—largest lizards on Earth, unchanged for 4 million years. They sprint 20 km/h, kill with venom-laced bites. Trek with armed rangers. Watch them sun like kings. Feel evolution stare back. This isn't a zoo. It's their Kingdom
TAKA MAKASSAR
A sandbar that emerges at low tide, then disappears beneath waves. Sea nomads called it "Ghost Island"—a resting place for ocean spirits. Stand in the middle of the ocean with ankle-deep water. Snorkel where the island vanishes. Your private Maldives, but only for 2 hours.
MANTA POINT
A submerged pinnacle where currents collide, creating a cleaning station for manta rays with 7-meter wingspans. Divers call them "Royal Stingrays"—reincarnated ocean kings. The taboo: look, never touch. Watch them barrel-roll beneath you. Swimming with mantas IS your bucket list.
GILI LAWA
Twin islands—Lawa Darat and Lawa Laut—frame the golden highway between sky and sea. Ancient traders navigated by these peaks. At sunrise, watch the world ignite from savannah ridges. At sunset, the sky bleeds into three shades of fire. The 30-minute trek is steep, but the 360° view makes kings jealous.
SLABA ISLAND
Slaba rises like a fortress from deep blue—a volcanic dome crowned with savannah where white-bellied sea eagles hunt. Bajo fishermen call it "Pulau Rajawali" (Eagle Island), believing the birds are guardians of hidden treasures below. Dive the walls where currents deliver big fish, sharks, and swirling barracuda. Above: eagles. Below: an underwater avalanche of life.
SEBAYUR ISLAND
Sebayur guards one of Komodo's best-kept secrets: untouched coral gardens teeming with life. While others chase dragons, divers chase legends here—pygmy seahorses, ghost pipefishes, and macro critters hiding in soft coral forests. The bay is a natural aquarium. The hillside trek offers sunrise views without the Padar crowds.
KANAWA ISLAND
While crowds chase Pink Beach, explorers slip to Kanawa—pristine coral reefs, zero crowds. Fishermen once avoided it, believing the Sea Goddess protected these waters. The reef here is 80% live coral. Turtles nest on beaches. Blacktip sharks patrol shallows. This is the Komodo nobody talks about.
SABOLO ISLAND (RANGKO CAVE)
Hidden in Sabolo's limestone cliffs lies Rangko Cave—a saltwater cavern illuminated by a ceiling skylight. Sunbeams pierce the darkness, turning water neon blue. Local legend says bathing here grants courage to face dragons. Swim through the entrance tunnel. Surface inside the cathedral. Float in liquid sapphire while light dances on ancient rock.
BIDADARI ISLAND
Bidadari" means angel in Indonesian. One glance explains why. Powdery white sand. Turquoise shallows. Zero crowds. Fishermen say angels rest here between monsoons, leaving footprints in the sand that waves erase by dawn. Snorkel the fringing reef where baby blacktips patrol. This is your castaway fantasy—pristine, peaceful, perfect.
KELOR ISLAND
Ancient sailors called it "The Guardian." Dutch colonials built watchtowers on its crown. Local legend says it's a giant sea turtle turned to stone. A 20-minute climb rewards you with 360° views of dragon territories. The coral gardens below hide patrolling sea turtles in crystal shallows.
MANJERITE
Every sunset, tens of thousands of flying foxes launch from mangroves, creating a black river across orange skies. Ancient sea nomads believed these bats carried souls to the afterlife. Watch from your deck at 17:30. The sky will erupt. You'll forget to breathe.
PADAR ISLAND
Three crescent bays—turquoise, cobalt, jade—curve around dragon-spine ridges. Legend says a dragon princess died here protecting her brothers. Her body became the ridgeline. Her tears became three seas. The 30-minute climb is ruthless, but every explorer says: "I can die now."
PINK BEACH
One of only seven pink beaches on Earth. Microscopic red coral creates a rose-gold blush. Sailors once feared it was cursed by dragon blood. The reef drops from knee-deep to 50 meters—turtles, reef sharks, and octopi patrol waters so clear you'll think you're dreaming.
KOMODO ISLAND
Ground zero. The throne. Komodo dragons—largest lizards on Earth, unchanged for 4 million years. They sprint 20 km/h, kill with venom-laced bites. Trek with armed rangers. Watch them sun like kings. Feel evolution stare back. This isn't a zoo. It's their Kingdom
TAKA MAKASSAR
A sandbar that emerges at low tide, then disappears beneath waves. Sea nomads called it "Ghost Island"—a resting place for ocean spirits. Stand in the middle of the ocean with ankle-deep water. Snorkel where the island vanishes. Your private Maldives, but only for 2 hours.
MANTA POINT
A submerged pinnacle where currents collide, creating a cleaning station for manta rays with 7-meter wingspans. Divers call them "Royal Stingrays"—reincarnated ocean kings. The taboo: look, never touch. Watch them barrel-roll beneath you. Swimming with mantas IS your bucket list.
GILI LAWA
Twin islands—Lawa Darat and Lawa Laut—frame the golden highway between sky and sea. Ancient traders navigated by these peaks. At sunrise, watch the world ignite from savannah ridges. At sunset, the sky bleeds into three shades of fire. The 30-minute trek is steep, but the 360° view makes kings jealous.
SLABA ISLAND
Slaba rises like a fortress from deep blue—a volcanic dome crowned with savannah where white-bellied sea eagles hunt. Bajo fishermen call it "Pulau Rajawali" (Eagle Island), believing the birds are guardians of hidden treasures below. Dive the walls where currents deliver big fish, sharks, and swirling barracuda. Above: eagles. Below: an underwater avalanche of life.
SEBAYUR ISLAND
Sebayur guards one of Komodo's best-kept secrets: untouched coral gardens teeming with life. While others chase dragons, divers chase legends here—pygmy seahorses, ghost pipefishes, and macro critters hiding in soft coral forests. The bay is a natural aquarium. The hillside trek offers sunrise views without the Padar crowds.
KANAWA ISLAND
While crowds chase Pink Beach, explorers slip to Kanawa—pristine coral reefs, zero crowds. Fishermen once avoided it, believing the Sea Goddess protected these waters. The reef here is 80% live coral. Turtles nest on beaches. Blacktip sharks patrol shallows. This is the Komodo nobody talks about.
SABOLO ISLAND (RANGKO CAVE)
Hidden in Sabolo's limestone cliffs lies Rangko Cave—a saltwater cavern illuminated by a ceiling skylight. Sunbeams pierce the darkness, turning water neon blue. Local legend says bathing here grants courage to face dragons. Swim through the entrance tunnel. Surface inside the cathedral. Float in liquid sapphire while light dances on ancient rock.
BIDADARI ISLAND
Bidadari" means angel in Indonesian. One glance explains why. Powdery white sand. Turquoise shallows. Zero crowds. Fishermen say angels rest here between monsoons, leaving footprints in the sand that waves erase by dawn. Snorkel the fringing reef where baby blacktips patrol. This is your castaway fantasy—pristine, peaceful, perfect.
Octopus Phinisi er et kompakt 21,5 meter langt phinisi med plass til 16 gjester. Med 5 manns profesjonelle mannskap og 6 koselige kabiner, tar den deg gjennom dramatiske landskaper – fra Rinca til Pink Beach. Her møter du naturen på nært hold, i stil og ro.
A journey designed for those who seek discovery, serenity, and pure wonder.


























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guests
Final pricing confirmed by our team. Park fees & extras not included.
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4D3N
Octopus Phinisi er en 21,50 meter lang VIP-klassens phinisi-yacht bygget i 2018 for opptil 16 gjester. Med 6 luksuriøse cabins og premium service er den perfekt for eksklusive oppturer i Komodo. Ulikeving fra moderne komfort og tradisjonell phinisi-design gir en autentisk men elegant opplevelse.
Per Tur for 1-16 Passasjerer

Vi er de eneste som er modige nok til å si det.
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Octopus Phinisi gir premium-opplevelser til en riktig pris. Book din 2026-tur nå og opplev Komodo i komfort og stil.
Octopus Phinisi
Basert på 11 anmeldelser
Luna M.
Sydney, AU
Six months pregnant and craving stillness, I chose the Octopus Phinisi for its reputation of quiet luxury. It delivered. We spent a misty morning at Crystal Rock, where I floated at the surface while my partner dove slightly deeper—the visibility was crystalline, almost unreal. The crew adjusted seamlessly to my pace: lighter meals, shaded lounging spots, ginger tea always on hand. One afternoon, anchored near Padar, I napped below deck while the soft creak of the hull and distant seabirds formed a lullaby. The bathroom in our cabin had a slightly slow drain, but such minor things fade when you’re served fresh dragonfruit and coconut yogurt each morning. What I appreciated most was the lack of fuss—no rigid schedules, no over-enthusiastic guides. At Kalong, we watched the bats emerge without commentary, just presence. I’d have welcomed one additional night; four days felt like we’d just settled into the rhythm when it was time to disembark. Still, it was exactly what we needed—gentle, nourishing, deeply peaceful.
Freya D.
Waterford, IE
I came to the Octopus Phinisi seeking quiet, and found it in the space between breaths—at Kalong, watching the bats spiral into twilight; at Manjarite, where the reef rose like a submerged city beneath us. The boat moves with the water, not against it—its rhythm became mine. Our cabin, though small, had a large porthole that framed passing waves like living art. The only flaw: the freshwater pump sputtered once during a long shower, but it was resolved swiftly. What stayed with me was the crew’s intuition—they served chilled cucumber slices after our Padar Island hike before I even realized I needed them. Dinners were unhurried affairs: slow-roasted mahi-mahi, jackfruit curry, local greens sautéed with garlic. No menu theatrics, just deeply considered food. I’d return in a heartbeat, perhaps for seven days, to include more time near Nusa Kode’s untouched coves. This wasn’t escape—it was reconnection, subtle and profound.
Leah Stanton
York, GB
As part of a small corporate retreat, the Octopus Phinisi offered an unexpected reset. With six of us from the London office, the boat’s size—intimate but not cramped—allowed for both collaboration and solitude. We held a strategy session on deck at sunrise near Manjarite, the water so still it mirrored the sky. Later, a dive at Crystal Rock revealed vertical walls draped in soft coral, a stark contrast to our usual glass-and-steel meetings. The crew maintained a discreet professionalism—never intrusive, yet always present when needed. One evening, after a long discussion, we swam off the stern near Komodo Island under a half-moon, the bioluminescence flickering with each stroke. The cabins are compact but cleverly designed; I’d note the showers could have stronger pressure, though that’s a minor trade-off for a vessel of this vintage. What stayed with me was the sense of perspective—how problems that felt urgent in the city shrank against the vastness of the Flores Sea. We returned not just rested, but realigned.
Theodore V.
Asheville, US
As someone who travels frequently for work, I value precision—the Octopus Phinisi delivered it silently. Every transition—from anchoring at Komodo Island to the guided hike, then back to a perfectly timed lunch—felt seamless. We spent an afternoon snorkeling at Crystal Rock, where the current was strong but manageable, and the crew monitored us closely from the support dinghy. The cabins are compact but intelligently laid out; storage was ample, and the beds were firm, ideal for deep sleep after days in the sun. I did notice the Wi-Fi signal was limited to the upper deck, and even there, inconsistent—fine for me, but may frustrate others needing connectivity. What impressed me was the crew’s quiet professionalism: they remembered how each guest took their coffee, adjusted meal times without prompting, and kept the decks spotless without disrupting conversation. One evening, anchored near Kalong, we dined on miso-glazed snapper as the sky deepened to violet. No speeches, no fanfare—just well-executed moments. Exactly what I needed.
Ella M.
Cambridge, GB
I joined the Octopus Phinisi with two colleagues after a grueling project—what we needed wasn’t luxury, but restoration. The boat provided both. Sailing into Kalong Island at dusk, we sat in silence as thousands of flying foxes poured from the mangroves—a moment of pure, unscripted awe. The next day, we snorkeled at Crystal Rock, where currents carried us over gardens of hard coral in hues I didn’t know existed. Our cabins were simple but impeccably maintained; mine had a faint creak in the floorboard near the door, but it became a familiar sound, like the boat breathing. The food was a quiet triumph—fresh, balanced, never overwrought. One evening, they served a tamarind soup with rice noodles that tasted exactly like something I’d eaten in a village near Labuan Bajo, but elevated. What I admired most was the absence of pretense. No branded robes, no forced activities. Just a well-kept vessel, a skilled crew, and access to places that feel remote in the truest sense. We left feeling recalibrated, not just rested.
Oliver P.
Vancouver, CA
The Octopus Phinisi struck the perfect balance for our family—calm waters, attentive crew, and just enough space for two children to explore safely. We anchored at Nusa Kode mid-morning, and the kids were mesmerized by the reef’s clarity; the guide helped them spot clownfish between the anemones while we lounged on the deck with fresh coconut. Later, a short hike on Padar Island at golden hour offered sweeping views without the usual crowds. The cabins are thoughtfully laid out—ours had a subtle nautical elegance, though I’d have appreciated marginally stronger Wi-Fi for quick check-ins with the office. Still, that disconnection was part of the charm. The crew anticipated needs without hovering—fresh towels after snorkeling, chilled water delivered quietly. Dinners aboard felt intimate, even with ten of us—grilled reef fish with tamarind glaze, local greens, and a surprisingly refined Riesling. What stood out was the rhythm: unhurried, deliberate, never performative. We’ll likely return for a longer charter—perhaps six days next time—to include more remote coves.
Cassidy Boone
Ottawa, CA
I’ve sailed in Thailand and the Andamans, but the Octopus Phinisi redefined what a small-ship experience could be. From the moment we boarded, the crew’s quiet competence set the tone. We spent a full day exploring Komodo Island with a guide who knew the dragon lizards’ habits intimately—where they sunned, where they vanished into shadow. The next morning, a short sail to Nusa Kode offered some of the clearest snorkeling I’ve ever done; the reef felt untouched. The boat itself is a study in restraint: no gold trim, no loud patterns—just warm wood, clean lines, and thoughtful details like linen napkins that stayed put in the breeze. I did find the Wi-Fi nearly unusable, but that, I suppose, was the point. One night, anchored near Padar, the captain arranged a beach barbecue—grilled tuna, cassava chips, local beer—while the sky filled with stars. There was no agenda, no performance. Just ease. We’ve already discussed returning with friends next year—perhaps extending to seven days to include more secluded bays.
Michael B. Langley
San Francisco, US
The Octopus Phinisi doesn’t shout; it murmurs. Which is exactly why it works. We spent a sun-drenched afternoon at Padar Island, hiking the northern ridge before cooling off with a long snorkel at Crystal Rock. The visibility was extraordinary—layers of blue folding into one another. The boat, built in 2018, feels both modern and timeless: polished wood, clean lines, no unnecessary embellishment. Our cabin was serene, though the bedding, while crisp, was slightly too thin for my preference—nothing a spare blanket didn’t fix. The crew operated with a quiet grace: they anticipated needs but never imposed. One evening, after a silent sail near Komodo Island, they served a simple grilled fish dinner under the stars—no music, no speeches, just the sound of water against the hull. I’ve been on flashier yachts, but none that felt this grounded. I’d add a day or two next time—four felt like we’d just begun to sync with the sea’s pace.
Julian P.
Christchurch, NZ
I’ve been on larger yachts, but none with the soul of the Octopus Phinisi. We timed our ascent of Padar Island for sunrise—reaching the ridge as the first light spilled over the bay, turning the water from indigo to gold. The view stopped us mid-step. Later, we drifted at Manjarite, where the coral shelves rise so close to the surface they look like submerged architecture. The boat’s 2018 build shows in its reliability—smooth engine, steady deck—but retains the spirit of traditional phinisi craftsmanship. Our suite was comfortable, though the shower drain backed up once after heavy use—easily cleared, but worth noting. The crew, however, were flawless: anticipatory without being intrusive. One afternoon, they laid out a spread of tropical fruit and iced lemongrass tea without being asked, just sensing our need for stillness. This wasn’t a checklist trip; it was a slow immersion. We skipped one planned stop to linger at Nusa Kode, and no one batted an eye. That flexibility—that respect for rhythm—is rare.