REVIEW · FISHING
Private Fishing charter Punta Cana (Alondra)
Book on Viator →Operated by Pescando y Comiendo Fishing Charters · Bookable on Viator
This is fishing with your own spotlight. You get a private deep-sea run off Jellyfish beach, with a crew that actively works to get you bites, not just rows out and hopes for the best. I really like the mix of serious fishing (think blue marlin, mahi-mahi, tuna, and more) and the fact that it stays social and easy: snacks, an open bar, and onboard ceviche keep the trip moving.
I also love that the charter is built for comfort and your group’s pace—hotel pickup and drop-off from Bávaro in air-conditioned minibuses, then about 4 hours on the water. One drawback to plan for: the sea can get rough, and the operator may cancel or adjust for good-weather safety, which can change your day.
In This Review
- Private means all attention on you
- Key Takeaways Before You Go
- Entering The Deep: What the Private Charter Feels Like
- Jellyfish Beach to Open Water: The 4-Hour Rhythm That Works
- Fishing Targets: Blue Marlin, Mahi-Mahi, Tuna, and More
- How the Crew Helps You Catch: Skill Is Part of the Value
- Open Bar and Snacks: The Part You’ll Notice While Waiting
- Fresh Ceviche After the Catch: Turning Effort Into a Meal
- Pickup, Transport, and Staying on Schedule
- Rough Seas, Morning Decisions, and Your Best Plan
- Price and Value: $500 for Up to 7 People
- Who Should Book This Charter (and Who Might Not)
- Booking Timing and What to Watch For
- Should You Book Private Fishing Charter Punta Cana (Alondra)?
- FAQ
- What fish can I target on this private charter?
- How long is the fishing charter?
- Is this a private tour or shared with other people?
- What food and drinks are included?
- Do they pick me up from my hotel?
- What is the cancellation policy if weather is bad?
Private means all attention on you

This is not a shared boat experience. It’s for your party only (up to 7 people), so you’ll get direct help, not a “good luck, next time” vibe. In past trips, captains and crew like Captain Manuel and crew members such as Luis and Ruben have been praised for getting people on fish fairly quickly—even when conditions weren’t perfect.
Key Takeaways Before You Go
- Private charter for up to 7 keeps the experience focused on your group
- Target species are the real draw: blue marlin, mahi-mahi, tuna, barracuda, and more
- Open bar included with options like Mama Juana, Cuba Libre, rum, beer, soda, and water
- Onboard ceviche after the catch turns your effort into a fresh snack
- Weather matters: rough seas can lead to a morning cancellation or alternate date
You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Punta Cana
Entering The Deep: What the Private Charter Feels Like

The biggest value here is the feel of the day. When you’re on a private charter, the crew doesn’t have to split attention across strangers. That matters for learning what works—how you want the line handled, where you’re seeing activity, and what the crew thinks is the best next move.
You start on land with hotel pickup in Punta Cana’s Bávaro area. The ride uses comfortable, air-conditioned minibuses, which is a nice practical touch in a warm coastal region. Then you head to Jellyfish Beach and step onto a deep-sea fishing boat for your time on the water.
Once you’re out fishing, the trip shifts into a rhythm: cast and reel, check lines, and enjoy the sea air. If you’re traveling as a couple, with family, or with friends, you’ll like that you can keep things relaxed. You’re not stuck sharing space with a bunch of other parties trying to do the same thing.
Jellyfish Beach to Open Water: The 4-Hour Rhythm That Works

The charter runs about 4 hours total (approx.). That’s long enough to actually fish in a meaningful way, but not so long that you burn out before the meat of the trip.
Most of the time, you’ll be leaving during one of the day’s fishing windows. The provider notes there are two excursions per day, and pickup times depend on your hotel and schedule. That’s helpful because it gives you some flexibility if one window conflicts with your plans.
What makes this timing practical is that it lets you plan the rest of your vacation day. You’re not committing to an all-day outing where you can’t easily make dinner reservations later. Still, you should expect the day to start earlier than you might for a beach-only schedule, since pickup is prompt and you need time to reach the departure point.
Fishing Targets: Blue Marlin, Mahi-Mahi, Tuna, and More

The tour’s pitch is straightforward: you’re targeting a list of big-game and table-fare species off Punta Cana. Expect the hunt to include blue marlin, mahi-mahi, barracuda, tuna, and also bonito and similar varieties depending on what the water is offering that day.
Here’s what that means for you in real terms: you’re not just trying to catch something. You’re fishing for fish that can fight. That’s the fun part for anyone who likes the sport side—reeling, feeling weight on the line, and having the crew help you adjust when conditions change.
One small but important point: you’ll likely feel the sea before you feel the fish. If you’re prone to motion sickness, it’s worth planning for that, because rough conditions do happen. The trip is weather-dependent, and the operator may cancel rather than push you out in unsafe seas.
Also, don’t assume every species is guaranteed. The boat is going after what’s available and appropriate that day. Your best move is to go in with a mindset of being flexible—because the crew’s job is to put you in the right spots, not promise a specific catch every single trip.
How the Crew Helps You Catch: Skill Is Part of the Value

This is where the reviews shine. People specifically praise how fast the crew got them to action, even when conditions were rough. On one trip, the experience included Captain Manuel, plus crew members Luis and Ruben, and the feedback was that the team helped get anglers onto fish quickly.
That matters because deep-sea fishing is equal parts gear, technique, and decision-making. Even if you’re an experienced angler, you’ll still appreciate local expertise—what depth to try, how to read the day, and how to respond when the first spot doesn’t fire.
If you’re newer to fishing, private help is even more valuable. You’ll have fewer distractions and more opportunity to ask questions. And with a private charter, the crew can adjust their attention based on whether your group wants a more hands-on experience or a more relaxed ride while still fishing.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Punta Cana
Open Bar and Snacks: The Part You’ll Notice While Waiting

Fishing can mean waiting. The smart thing this charter does is fill that time with good distractions and included food.
While you’re out on the water, you get an open bar serving national drinks such as Mama Juana and Cuba Libre, along with rum, beer, Coca-Cola, and water. That helps keep the mood upbeat if you spend time between bites.
Food is included too—sandwiches and tropical fruit or fruit salad are part of the plan. This is exactly what you want on a sea day: something simple, not heavy, and easy to eat without ruining your appetite if you land a fish.
The practical takeaway: you can stay comfortable without scrambling for snacks mid-trip. If you’ve ever done excursions where the “included” meal is a sad afterthought, this setup feels like the operator understands people get hungry on the water.
Fresh Ceviche After the Catch: Turning Effort Into a Meal

One of the best parts is what happens once fish are caught. The crew prepares ceviche onboard using an appropriate catch, so you don’t just go home with photos—you get a taste of the experience while you’re still on the boat.
That ceviche moment does two things:
1) It rewards the fishing part immediately, rather than making you wait until dinner time back at your hotel.
2) It adds variety to the day, so the outing doesn’t depend entirely on your final catch.
Also, ceviche is the kind of food that fits the setting. You’re salty, sun-warmed, and maybe a little sea-swept; a fresh, citrusy bite hits the spot.
Just keep expectations reasonable. You’re not guaranteed a feast of everything on the list. The ceviche is tied to what fish are caught and what’s appropriate that day, which is normal for fishing charters.
Pickup, Transport, and Staying on Schedule

You’ll be picked up promptly at your hotel in Punta Cana, specifically in the Bávaro area. Transport runs via air-conditioned minibuses, and this is designed to reduce friction—no long taxi hunts, no complicated navigation at the start.
That said, one past concern noted in the feedback was pickup running late by around 20 minutes, and the person trying to call didn’t get an answer. I can’t predict that will happen on your date, but it’s smart to treat pickup time as a “be ready early” situation. If the minibus schedule is tight, being at the meeting point a bit before the stated time helps.
The good news: once you’re moving, the drive to the fishing spot is described as smooth. And because the charter is private, you’ll generally spend less time coordinating with other parties at departure.
Rough Seas, Morning Decisions, and Your Best Plan
Here’s the reality of Punta Cana fishing: the sea can change fast. The tour is explicitly weather dependent, and the operator may cancel if conditions aren’t good enough for a safe and comfortable trip.
In one documented case, the company contacted guests the morning of the scheduled trip after seas were rough and chose to cancel rather than take them out in those conditions. That’s actually a reassuring approach. It signals they’d rather protect safety than force a sale.
So what should you do with this information?
- Keep your plans flexible if you can.
- Avoid booking a tight, no-cancel dinner or activity that same hour if you’re sensitive to schedule changes.
- If you’re traveling with kids or anyone motion-sickness-prone, consider asking your hotel concierge about the day’s sea conditions and staying alert for provider updates.
Also, if a trip is canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered another date or a full refund. This is one of those “annoying but fair” realities of ocean tours.
Price and Value: $500 for Up to 7 People
The price is $500 per group, up to 7 people. That’s a big part of why this charter can feel like a bargain compared with individual fishing tours.
To think about value: if you bring the full group size, you’re looking at roughly $71 per person. Even with fewer people, you’re still paying for a private boat and full attention from the crew—so you’re not paying like it’s a seat-by-seat ticket.
What you’re also getting for that cost is not just “fishing time.” You’re included for:
- Hotel pickup and drop-off
- Time on a deep-sea fishing boat off Jellyfish Beach
- Snacks like sandwiches and fruit
- An open bar
- Onboard ceviche after the catch
If your main goal is catching fish and you want the comfort of not sharing the boat with strangers, the math starts to make sense fast. If you’re only two people, it can still be worth it because private attention is often the difference between a stressful experience and a fun one—but you’ll feel the cost more. For most value seekers, this is best when you can fill at least a small group.
Who Should Book This Charter (and Who Might Not)
This tour fits best if you want:
- A private deep-sea outing with your own crew attention
- A mix of sport and comfort (open bar and food included)
- A destination experience that feels like it turns into a meal, especially with ceviche onboard
You might hesitate if:
- You’re set on a rigid schedule and can’t handle morning weather changes
- Your group hates being on boats or struggles with motion sickness
- You’re expecting a guaranteed catch. Fishing doesn’t work like that, and you’ll be happier if you frame this as an action-filled day at sea.
Where this shines is families and mixed groups who want everyone included. A private charter is easier to manage than a shared boat, and the food and drinks help keep the mood up even when fishing takes time.
Booking Timing and What to Watch For
The average booking window is about 36 days in advance, which tells you demand isn’t random. If you’re going during a busy travel season or on popular dates, book earlier so you have more chances of landing the time window you want.
You’ll receive a mobile ticket, which is practical. The key thing you can control is showing up on time at pickup. Ocean days get sensitive when schedules stack up.
And when you get close to the trip, keep an eye on any provider communication about weather. With this kind of charter, the morning update matters.
Should You Book Private Fishing Charter Punta Cana (Alondra)?
If you want a fishing day where your group gets real attention, this is a strong choice. The combination of private charter, a real species target list (blue marlin and mahi-mahi are on it), plus included snacks, open bar, and onboard ceviche makes the whole day feel like more than a standard excursion.
I’d book it if you can handle the possibility of a weather-driven change. If you plan with flexibility and you’re excited about the experience of fishing at sea (not just the promise of a trophy), you’ll likely have exactly the kind of memorable Punta Cana day you came for.
FAQ
What fish can I target on this private charter?
The charter lists targets such as blue marlin, mahi-mahi, barracuda, tuna, bonito, and more while fishing off Punta Cana.
How long is the fishing charter?
The duration is approximately 4 hours.
Is this a private tour or shared with other people?
This is a private tour/activity. Only your group participates, up to 7 people.
What food and drinks are included?
Sandwiches and soda are included, and there is an open bar with national drinks such as Mama Juana, Cuba Libre, rum, beer, Coca-Cola, and water. Ceviche is prepared onboard once fish are caught.
Do they pick me up from my hotel?
Yes. Pickup is offered from hotels in Punta Cana, Bávaro, using comfortable air-conditioned minibuses, with drop-off provided after the trip.
What is the cancellation policy if weather is bad?
You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours before the experience starts. The experience requires good weather, and if it’s canceled due to poor weather you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.

































