REVIEW · MALLORCA
Cala d’Or | Jet Ski Tour 1 hour along southeast coast.
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by RIDE EXPERIENCES - CALA D'OR · Bookable on GetYourGuide
A jet ski ride off Mallorca feels like a cheat code. You get guided access to southeast coast coves that most people can’t reach by foot, and you can do it without a boat license. My favorite part is how “starter-friendly” it feels thanks to the instructor riding close, plus the ride itself on the SEADOO GTX 130 feels stable and confidence-building. One thing to watch: the clock for the “tour time” starts once you clear the port, not when you’re first seated on the jet ski.
What you’re really buying here is movement plus scenery: you’ll zip along the coast and get time to stop, look around, and swim on the longer option. The group stays small, and you’ll have a full safety briefing before you head out. Just keep in mind that changes can happen day-to-day with scheduling, so it’s smart to double-check the exact ride length you’re confirming at booking.
Finally, the departure point is right in Cala d’Or Marina, which helps. When a tour starts from a place you can actually find quickly, you spend less time stressed and more time ready for waves.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Put on Your Radar
- Jet Skiing Cala d’Or’s Southeast Coast: Why This Area Works
- Where You Meet: Cala d’Or Marina and Finding Porto Fino
- Safety Briefing and the No-License Part That Really Matters
- The Jet Ski Setup: SEADOO GTX 130 and Beginner Confidence
- Out on the Water: What the Ride Feels Like in Practice
- Sea-Only Coves: Stops Around Mallorca’s Bays (and What to Watch)
- Swimming and Photos: The Two Extras That Make It Feel Like a Full Package
- Price and Value: What You’re Paying For (and How to Think About It)
- Who Should Book This Jet Ski Tour (and Who Should Skip It)
- Practical Tips Before You Go: What to Bring and How to Prepare
- Should You Book This Cala d’Or Jet Ski Tour?
- FAQ
- Do I need a boat license for this jet ski tour?
- What is the minimum age to ride?
- What jet ski models are used?
- How long is the tour, and when does the time start counting?
- What’s included in the price?
- What do I need to bring, and what is not allowed?
Key Things I’d Put on Your Radar

- No license needed with a certified guide riding alongside you
- SEADOO GTX 130 jet skis, designed for a smoother, steadier ride
- Coves you can’t reach by walking, because you’ll approach by sea
- Small group size up to 8, so instructions are easier to follow
- Swim time on 1-hour tours plus photos taken by the guide
- Safety-first operations, including a briefing and port navigation rules
Jet Skiing Cala d’Or’s Southeast Coast: Why This Area Works

Cala d’Or sits in a sweet spot on Mallorca’s southeast side. The coastline here mixes open water stretches with sheltered coves, so you get that “wow” feeling without needing advanced skills. You’re also near a cluster of bays and inlets that look very different from each other—some feel calm and postcard-flat, others feel more dramatic once the wind catches you.
The biggest value of this tour isn’t just speed. It’s the way the guide can put you near coves like Cala Esmeralda, Cala Serena, Cala Ferrera, Cala Mitjana, Cala Sa Nau, and Cala Mondragó—places that are either hard, slow, or impossible to reach the same way on land. Approaching by sea changes the whole view. Even if you’ve seen photos, the angles are different once you’re riding along the waterline.
You’ll also appreciate the “guided close-by” style. When the instructor is watching distances and turns, you’re not spending all your energy figuring out what to do next. That matters if you’re a first-timer, or if you’re just trying to relax and enjoy the ride.
Where You Meet: Cala d’Or Marina and Finding Porto Fino

This starts at the end of the port, in front of Porto Fino restaurant. In plain terms: you don’t need to wander for ages to locate the operator. That matters on busy Mallorca days when you’re also trying to manage parking, heat, and timing.
Plan to arrive with a little buffer. Even if the action feels like it begins the moment you see the jet skis, there’s port procedure first. The tour timing is also worth understanding: the official ride time starts once you exit the port, not when you first get on the jet ski. So if you book the 1-hour option, you’re not going to spend that entire hour accelerating right away. Part of that “lost time” is actually purposeful—safety checks and navigating the rules of the marina.
If you’re prone to rushing, slow down. The better approach is to treat the first part as your warm-up: you’ll get briefed, fitted with a life jacket, and brought up to speed so you’re not trying to learn technique while looking at the horizon.
Safety Briefing and the No-License Part That Really Matters

The marketing says no boat license needed, and that’s accurate. But what you should care about is what replaces it: a certified instructor who stays in the middle of the experience with you.
Before you go out, expect a safety briefing and the basics of how to handle the jet ski properly. You’ll be given a life jacket, and you’ll talk through the rules and what to do if something feels off. On paper, that sounds standard. In practice, it makes a huge difference for first-timers, because your brain can focus on the ride instead of fear.
One detail I like: there’s professional supervision built into the format. For example, an instructor named Dylan is described as staying attentive the whole time, even if a rider ends up in the water. That kind of real-world care is the point. You’re not just being handed a machine and sent away; you’re being guided through a short, controlled experience on open water.
There are also clear boundaries on who should not ride. The tour is not suitable for pregnant women and it’s not for people with heart problems. If you have back issues or mobility limits, take that seriously. Jet ski riding involves movement and balance, even on calmer water.
The Jet Ski Setup: SEADOO GTX 130 and Beginner Confidence
You’ll be riding SEADOO GTX 130 HP models. That’s a practical detail worth caring about. A good beginner jet ski setup is less about making it slow and more about making it predictable—stable handling, solid acceleration control, and an overall ride feel that doesn’t throw you around.
With a guide riding alongside, you’ll learn the core movements quickly: how to start, how to keep your speed under control, how to handle turns without panic, and how to maintain safe spacing. Even if you’ve never touched a jet ski before, that guidance reduces the learning curve a lot.
Also, keep your expectations realistic. You’re going fast, yes, but this isn’t about racing. It’s about getting enough time to enjoy the coast, see the coves, and feel the thrill while staying within safe boundaries. For most people, that’s the sweet spot: fun without the stress.
Clothing matters too. You’ll want comfortable clothes that you don’t mind getting damp. You’ll be out on open water with sun and spray, and the life jacket does its job best when you’re not dressed in stiff or restrictive gear.
Out on the Water: What the Ride Feels Like in Practice
Once you clear the port, you’ll start moving along the southeast coast. This is where the tour earns its keep. You’ll be able to look at the coves from the waterline and see how the coastline bends and changes.
The experience is guided, so you’re not navigating while trying to enjoy the scenery. That’s a big deal if you’ve only ever seen coastline from land. Here, you’ll get a rolling sequence of coast views, then approaches to coves where the guide can manage the group safely.
Because the itinerary is designed around sea-only access, it tends to feel like you’re getting a mix of:
- quick cruising stretches (for speed and views)
- sheltered approaches (for calmer moments)
- stops where you can enjoy the setting and, on the longer tour, swim
Cala d’Or has a reputation for being pretty, but the sea-level views are the real upgrade. From the jet ski, you notice details you’d miss on foot: how the water color shifts near shore, where rocks create natural pockets, and how certain coves offer that protected feel.
Sea-Only Coves: Stops Around Mallorca’s Bays (and What to Watch)

The tour highlights list a group of coves. You may see stops around places like Cala Esmeralda, Cala Serena, Cala Ferrera, Cala Mitjana, Cala Sa Nau, Cala Mondragó, and others. Even if you don’t catch every single name during the ride, the pattern is consistent: the guide brings you to places where the sea route actually makes sense.
Here’s what you’ll likely appreciate at these stops:
- The close-up look at rocky shorelines and small inlets
- The way boats and swimmers use these pockets
- The color and clarity of the water where you’re allowed to swim
One practical tip: pay attention to what the guide tells you about when and where to enter the water. On a jet ski, a calm approach is safer than impulsive movement. If you’re a nervous swimmer, that’s not a problem for the tour overall, but follow the instructions carefully and don’t make it harder than it needs to be.
Also remember the time rule I mentioned earlier. You’ll have setup time in the port, then you’ll get your ride time outside. That’s why the longer option matters if swimming and more cruising are high on your wish list.
Swimming and Photos: The Two Extras That Make It Feel Like a Full Package

On 1-hour tours, you get free time to swim. That adds a real “break” to a jet ski experience. Instead of spending the whole time gripped to the handlebars, you get a chance to cool off and enjoy the water like a normal beach day—just with a much better viewpoint.
Then there are the photos. The tour includes photos taken by the guide. That’s valuable if you’re traveling solo, with friends who don’t want to manage a phone one-handed while you ride, or if you just want at least a few solid shots without doing everything yourself. The photos are also a nice way to capture the action without risking your equipment.
One small caution: don’t assume photos will replace your own memory. Still, it’s a good safety net, especially because you’ll be moving fast and the best angles don’t come from holding a camera steady.
Price and Value: What You’re Paying For (and How to Think About It)
You’ll see a price listed around $198 per person, and you may also see pricing described as from 109€ per jet ski (1 or 2 people). That difference usually comes down to how the operator prices seats and occupancy, plus the exact session you pick and the date.
So how do you judge value?
Ask yourself what you’re buying:
- You’re paying for guided access to coves you can’t just stumble into by walking
- You’re paying for no-license instruction and active supervision
- You’re paying for modern jet skis and included gear like life jackets and fuel
- You’re paying for included photos and, on the 1-hour option, swim time
In other words, it’s not just the jet ski rental. It’s the whole safety-managed experience, and that’s often what makes the difference between a fun day and a stressful one—especially for first-timers.
One drawback worth considering is that ride duration isn’t always perfect in the way you imagine. There’s an example of a booking where the promised 1-hour session was shortened after arrival. I can’t control operations, weather, or scheduling, but you can control what you do next: when you arrive, confirm your expected time and be clear about what the operator will provide if the start time changes.
Who Should Book This Jet Ski Tour (and Who Should Skip It)

This tour fits best if you want:
- a first-time-friendly jet ski experience
- a guide-led route with sea-only coves
- a small group setup (limited to 8 participants)
- included swim time on the 1-hour option
- photos without you having to manage everything
It’s also a great fit for people who get bored with long beach days but don’t want a multi-day adventure planning headache. You get movement, scenery, and a clear end point.
Skip it if any of the safety restrictions apply to you. The data is straightforward: not suitable for pregnant women and not for people with heart problems. It also notes not suitable for people with mobility impairments and highlights back-problem concerns, so be honest about your comfort and balance.
If you’re traveling with kids, the age rules are important to double-check. The minimum passenger age listed is 5, but the activity also states not suitable for children under 8 years. When there are two different cutoffs, it’s worth verifying which one controls for your specific child and session.
Practical Tips Before You Go: What to Bring and How to Prepare
Bring your passport or ID card. This tour requires it, and you don’t want to lose time scrambling at check-in.
Wear comfortable clothes. You will likely get wet. The operator provides lockers, which is helpful if you want to store valuables safely.
Bring a mindset that matches a water activity:
- expect some spray
- don’t overpack with fragile stuff
- keep your phone secured
- follow the instructor’s instructions without negotiating
Also, this one is explicitly not for alcohol and drugs. Keep it clean. You’ll enjoy the ride more, and it helps keep the whole group safer.
Should You Book This Cala d’Or Jet Ski Tour?
Book it if you’re excited by the idea of guided jet skiing with no license, you want to see coves from the water, and you’d enjoy a bit of swimming time—especially on the 1-hour option. The small group size and active instructor supervision are exactly what you want if you’re a beginner.
Think twice (or ask more questions before you commit) if you’re highly time-sensitive and need an exact 60 minutes of riding outside the port, because port procedures are part of the overall schedule. Also take the health and mobility restrictions seriously, and verify the child-age rules for your situation.
If your goal is a safe, well-run day on Mallorca’s southeast coast with real sea access to famous bays, this is the kind of tour that can deliver more “I can’t believe I did that” than stress.
FAQ
Do I need a boat license for this jet ski tour?
No. The tour is designed so you can ride without a boat license, with a certified instructor guiding you.
What is the minimum age to ride?
The minimum driver age is 16. For passengers, the minimum age is 5, but the activity also notes it is not suitable for children under 8, so it’s worth checking the exact rule for your child.
What jet ski models are used?
The tour uses SEADOO GTX 130 HP jet skis.
How long is the tour, and when does the time start counting?
The operator lists 30 minutes or 1 hour options. The official tour time starts once you exit the port, not when you get on the jet ski.
What’s included in the price?
Typically you get a safety briefing, life jacket, fuel, insurance coverage (tiers damages), and photos taken by the guide, plus use of the jet ski with your certified tour guide.
What do I need to bring, and what is not allowed?
Bring your passport or ID card and wear comfortable clothes. Alcohol and drugs are not allowed.










