Olivia
Badajoz, ES



Por Viaje
AC & Privado
Capacidad Máxima
Labuan Bajo
LiveElora Phinisi is currently anchored at Labuan Bajo Harbour
UPDATED: 1:49:17 PMVerified for structural integrity and 2026 maritime safety compliance by KomodoExplorer Indonesia.
Desde el Panoramic Deluxe Horizon hasta el Abyss Family Quad, cada cabaña está diseñada para el confort y la estética tropical.

La cima del lujo a bordo: una suite con jacuzzi privado y balcón exclusivo. Desde aquí, el mar se contempla sin intermediarios. Cada momento a bordo del Elora Phinisi es una experiencia inolvidable, cuidada hasta el más mínimo detalle para quienes exigen lo extraordinario en su alquiler de yate Komodo.
Capacity
2 Guests
Bed Type
King Size Bed

Cámaras de lujo en la cubierta superior con balcones privados y bañeras independientes, donde el confort interior se funde con el paisaje oceánico. Una navegación íntima diseñada para quienes buscan privacidad sin sacrificar el horizonte.
Capacity
3 Guests
Bed Type
Queen Bed + 1 Single Bed

Retiros elegantes en la cubierta inferior, con acabados en madera de alta gama y total intimidad en baño privado. Ideal para parejas que buscan un viaje exclusivo a Komodo, donde cada detalle susurra serenidad.
Capacity
2 Guests
Bed Type
Queen Bed

Una amplia camarote pensada para familias o grupos de amigos. Cuatro huéspedes viajan con comodidad sin fisuras, en un espacio que equilibra sociabilidad y descanso. El crucero Komodo 4 días cobra vida con armonía compartida.
Capacity
4 Guests
Bed Type
1 Double Bed + 2 Single Beds
Con Elora Phinisi navega desde Komodo hasta Pink Beach y Manta Point: cada destino es una explosión de vida marina y color.
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.
El Elora Phinisi es un velero phinisi de 33,89 metros, construido en 2024 con la maestría tradicional indonesia. Con espacio para 16 invitados en seis cabañas únicas, como el Panoramic Deluxe Horizon y el Abyss Family Quad, combina aventura y comodidad caribeña. Su tripulación profesional guía cada etapa: desde snorkel en Manta Point hasta atardeceres con cena gourmet frente a la Playa Rosa. Navegar con Elora es vivir una fiesta íntima entre naturaleza y estilo.
A journey designed for those who seek discovery, serenity, and pure wonder.


























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Elora Phinisi es un yate phinisi de clase VIP de 33,89 metros diseñado para viajeros exclusivos. Con 6 cabinas para máximo 16 huéspedes, combina artesanía tradicional con comfort moderno. Su estreno en 2024 ofrece una experiencia luxury en Komodo desde Labuan Bajo.
Por Viaje para 1-16 Pasajeros

Somos los únicos lo suficientemente valientes para decirlo.
¡#1 VIAJES DE EXPLORACIÓN KOMODO EN EL MUNDO!
Conoce al Último Dragón en la Tierra.
Cara a Cara con un Dinosaurio Viviente
Información clave, políticas y consejos para el viaje en Komodo Explorer.
Plazas limitadas — reserva ya tu travesía en Elora Phinisi con cena gourmet al atardecer incluida.
Elora Phinisi
Basado en 31 reseñas
Olivia
Badajoz, ES
Navegar en el Elora Phinisi fue, sin duda, un perfect equilibrio entre confort discreto y aventura bien curada. Como viajera en solitario, valoro especialmente la atención al detalle y la serenidad que ofrece un barco de estas dimensiones. Con solo seis cabins, el ambiente era íntimo sin caer en lo impersonal, y el staff anticipaba cada necesidad con una elegancia natural, nunca intrusiva. El itinerary nos llevó desde Taka Makassar —donde el coral se extiende como un tapiz bajo el agua— hasta Manta Point, donde nadar junto a esas criaturas silenciosas fue casi meditativo. La cabina que ocupé, aunque no era una master suite, tenía una iluminación tenue y materiales naturales que invitaban al descanso profundo. La cocina, muy enfocada en ingredientes locales, sorprendía cada noche: ceviche de wahoo con toques de tamarindo, o pollo satay servido bajo las estrellas en Kanawa Island. Hubo un pequeño glitch con el wifi —esperaba algo más estable para enviar unos correos—, pero al final lo agradecí: me obligó a desconectar del todo. El deck principal, con su diseño limpio y hamacas estratégicamente colocadas, fue mi rincón favorito para un morning coffee mientras el drone shot del día anterior se proyectaba en la tablet del salón. Solo desearía haber tenido un día más. Elora Phinisi no impone lujo; lo insinúa. Y eso, al final, es lo que más seduce.
Freya D.
Waterford, IE
We took our executive team of twelve aboard Elora Phinisi for a strategy retreat — skeptical at first that a boat could host serious work, but the main salon converted seamlessly. Polished wood tables, discreet power outlets, and a sound system that didn’t echo made meetings productive. Between sessions, we swam at Castle Rock, where the thermocline hit mid-dive and sent shivers through the group — in the best way. The real advantage was the enforced disconnection: no office politics, just open water and candid conversations on deck at dusk. One evening, anchored near Nusa Kode, we watched the island’s ridge darken as fruit bats spiraled from Kalong Island across the strait — a surreal punctuation to a day of rethinking our roadmap. Only wish? Another day. Three nights felt like two.
Dylan Thorpe
Winnipeg, CA
I’ve done a fair bit of solo travel, but rarely have I felt so completely untethered as on the Elora Phinisi. The scale of Komodo National Park — vast, raw — pairs perfectly with this boat’s quiet confidence. I spent a full day ashore on Nusa Kode, guided by the captain’s handpicked ranger. We saw Komodo dragons basking near tidal pools, then hiked to a ridge overlooking the strait. Returning at dusk, the boat looked like a floating lantern. Meals were simple but precise: grilled snapper with tamarind glaze, local greens sautéed in coconut oil. The lower deck cabin was cool and quiet, though the fan had a faint hum. Not disruptive, just present. I’d trade ten city hotels for that hum and the sound of waves slapping the hull.
Mia Prescott
Edinburgh, GB
We booked Elora Phinisi for a slow reconnection — no agenda beyond sea and sky. The staff never overstepped; they simply anticipated. A book left on the lounge? Returned with a ribbon bookmark. A preference for Earl Grey at 4 p.m.? Already poured. We spent a dreamy afternoon at Kanawa Island, where the sandbars shift with the tide, creating private lagoons. Snorkeling there felt like floating above a living mosaic. One night, anchored near Batu Bolong, we dined under a net of stars, the only sound the soft clink of cutlery and distant waves. The cabin’s layout maximized space, though the shower drain was slow — a minor flaw in an otherwise exquisite vessel. I still wake thinking of that silence.
Thea M.
Singapore, SG
My babymoon on Elora Phinisi was exactly the gentle transition I needed. At six months, I wanted movement without strain, and the rhythm of the boat — slow wakes at dawn, soft rocking at anchor — suited that perfectly. We spent a morning at Kanawa Island, where I waded at the edge while my partner snorkeled the outer rim. The staff adjusted seamlessly: lighter meals, extra cushions on loungers, no pressure to join every excursion. One afternoon, we anchored near Kalong Island just before sunset; the sky turned molten as the bats began their exodus. It felt symbolic, in a quiet way. The master suite’s layout allowed privacy without isolation, and the open-air bathroom made showers feel like rituals. Only note: bathroom threshold is a bit high — tricky in later trimesters. But that’s a small thing against such calm.
Iris Quinn
Singapore, SG
Sailing the Flores Sea aboard the Elora Phinisi felt less like a charter and more like being hosted by a discerning friend with impeccable taste. The teak decks, still faintly releasing their scent under morning sun, framed quiet moments with Kanawa Island’s turquoise rim just visible in the distance. As a solo traveler, I appreciated the balance — staff attentive without hovering, space to read or journal in the shade of the sail-inspired canopy. We anchored at Batu Bolong one afternoon, where the current pulsed just right for a slow drift above coral bommies thick with sweetlips and blue-ringed angelfish. The cabin, though compact, made up for it in craftsmanship: brass fixtures, linen that didn’t crease, and blackout curtains that ensured deep rest. Only critique? The Wi-Fi, predictably thin, but that became part of the reset. Returning to Jakarta, I noticed I hadn’t checked email for four days. That’s the kind of silence money rarely buys.
Henry L.
Toronto, CA
As someone who values design, the Elora Phinisi is a masterclass in understated luxury. Every joint, every rope coil — considered. We were a group of six divers, and the dive deck was kitted out with rinse tanks, gear lockers, even oxygen analyzers. Batu Bolong delivered strong currents and grey reef sharks circling the pinnacle — exhilarating, but the crew monitored us like hawks. Back on board, cold towels and cucumber-infused water waited. Evenings were spent on the upper deck, dining on tataki yellowfin under a sky so dense with stars it looked filtered. The only hiccup: one night, the generator cycled off too early, dimming lights by 9:30. Easily fixed, but noticeable. Still, waking to Komodo Island’s jagged silhouette the next morning, coffee in hand, made it all feel secondary.
Byung-Kyu Park
Jeju, KR
우리 가족(아이 둘과 함께 6명)이 Elora Phinisi에서 4박 5일의 럭셔리 크루즈를 보냈습니다. 아이들이 8세와 11세라 걱정도 있었지만, crew가 정말 섬세하게 대응해주었고, kid-friendly lunch box와 함께 넓은 deck에서의 space가 너무 완벽했어요. 특히 Pink Beach에서의 half-day stay은 진짜 highlight였어요. 아이들이 안전하게 수영할 수 있도록 shallow zone을 만들어주고, staff가 라이프 재킷까지 챙겨주니 마음이 놓였습니다. 두 번째 날, Batu Bolong으로 이동할 때 해변 근처에서 거북이도 보았고, drone shot으로 찍은 영상은 나중에 가족 영화로 만들 계획이에요. 객실은 master suite가 특히 quiet하고 private pool access가 있어서 아침마다 커피를 마시며 일출을 감상하는 데 최고였습니다. 딱 하나, wifi signal이 조금 약해서 오후에는 device-free time이 되긴 했지만, 그것도 나름의 luxury로 느껴졌어요. 조식 뷔페도 신선한 tropical fruits와 homemade kimchi가 준비되어 있어, 한국에서 온 우리 입맛에도 잘 맞았습니다. itinerary가 조금 더 길었으면 했지만, 다음엔 꼭 다시 올 계획입니다.
Avery North
Austin, US
As a solo traveler, I value silence more than luxury, and Elora Phinisi delivered both. The boat moves through the water like a thought — barely a shudder. We anchored at Batu Bolong for a dawn dive, the water glassy, the coral vibrant with fusiliers and batfish. Later, a slow sail to Nusa Kode offered hours of reading, napping, and staring at the horizon with no land in sight. The staff operated on intuition: tea appeared before I asked, sunbeds were repositioned with the sun’s arc. The master cabin’s design is superb — clean lines, deep drawers, a rain shower that never lost pressure. One note: the solar-powered fridge hummed faintly at night. Not loud, but audible in stillness. Still, I’d trade a thousand hums for that week of clarity.