Dive Trip Value- Cost Per Dive

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I can go to the Philippines for two weeks and if I include travel costs and lodgings and food my and my 3 - 4 dives a day then I would be spending around US$150 a day for everything. Same for my upcoming trip to Bali and Lombok. Resorts there can be had for US$100 - US$150 for 5 days including breakfast. At one dive center I am diving with for 5 days for 3 days we simply rent tanks and do our own dives and for two days will use their guides. Why? With guides dives times are often limited to an hour.
 
As one who likes to dive when I go on a vacation (as opposed to planning a dive vacation) here's a different type of breakdown from 7 previous trips, all 2 weeks in length with 9-11 dives, except for the last trip in which I only did 7 dives due to the weather. Total cost of trip includes everything that I spend before the trip (airfare, room) and during the trip, from the time I walk out the door until I get back home (which includes excursions, shopping, etc...) and I then divided that by 2 to take my wife out of the equation.

Waikoloa, HI - 10 dives including tip: 62.50/dive
Considering total cost of trip with miles used for airfare: 171/dive
St. Croix, USVI - 9 dives including tip: 67/dive
Considering total cost of trip: 177/dive
Grand Bahama - 10 dives including tip: 50/dive
Considering total cost of trip with miles used for airfare: 153/dive
Puerto Plata, D.R. - 11 dives including tip: 44.25/dive
Considering total cost of trip with miles used for airfare: 180/dive
Grand Cayman - 10 dives including tip: 76/dive
Considering total cost of trip with miles used for airfare: 254/dive
Cozumel - 11 dives including tip: 55.50/dive
Considering total cost of trip with miles used for airfare: 142/dive
Grand Bahama 2022 - no miles used for airfare and diving blown out most days
7 dives including tip: 52/dive
Considering total cost of trip: 333/dive

If I went on a trip just for the diving, I'd be getting a pretty bad deal!!
 
My cheapest marginal cost per dive would be at a local lake/pond that I dive with a group that is on my way home from work, basically the cost of a fill per dive. $10. The next cheapest is going to a quarry for which I dive twice per day trip because I still have other obligations so can’t stay all day or overnight on weekends. That would be $35/dive at one site, including gas and permit, and $50/dive at the other site, including gas and permit and parking.

Like others, I dive if I can during vacation, but realize that I’m spending a lot per dive, especially because that one of the family stipulations is as the lone diver in the family, that I hire a guide if I’ve not been at a site before in the recent past unless I have a partner that I trust.
 
I'll be doing the Manta Night Dive in Kona in October. A single tank dive is $150 + tax and tip. Pricey but hopefully worth it!
 
$9000 + $1000 airfare for two weeks in Galapagos. About 4 dives a day for 12 days so the cost per dive average was super high. But it was the highlight of 30 years of diving and I would spend it again in a heartbeat.

On the other hand, I dive locally on my own boat (don't get me started on how much that costs). I dive weekly and I have complete freedom to go when/where I want in my area and do what I want. The return on that investment is priceless.

If you're buying dives by the pound, you're missing the point.
 
$9000 + $1000 airfare for two weeks in Galapagos. … and I would spend it again in a heartbeat.
Kind of an American thing.

European dive mags see adverts for Galapagos land based, we do not. They enjoy 3 dives per day ay about 1/4 the cost of your Liveaboard.
 
I a wondering if $/dive is the best parameter, as opposed to $/minutes or hours diving. Time is more valuable than money. For example I go out on a dive boat in Palm Beach for two sixty foot dives vs. do a shore dive at BHB

Boat:
trip- $100.00
nitrox fill -$10.00 x 2= $20
tip-$20.0
parking $0
gas -30 miles round trip (from my home) 15mpg $3.60/gal= $7.20
total=$147.20 for 2 dives @ sixty minute/dive=$147.20/120 minutes=$1.26/minute underwater

total time of boat trip and travel 50 minute round trip(from my home) + 4 hour boat trip(including the 2 hours underwater=4hours 50 minutes=290 minutes

ratio of time invested/time underwater=290 minutes/120 minutes=2.42

Blue Heron Bridge:
trip- $0
air fill -$6= $6
tip-$0
parking-$0
gas -30 miles round trip (from my home) 15mpg $3.60/gal= $7.20
total=$13.20 for 1 dive @ 2.5 hours=$13.20/250 minutes=$0.053/minute underwater

total time of boat trip and travel 50 minute round trip(from my home) + 2.5 hours underwater + 30 minute break down and setup =3hours 50 minutes=230 minutes

ratio of time invested/time underwater=230 minutes/150 minutes=1.53

If you make this calculation for a week long vacation somewhere it could be argued that the time invested is 24 hours/day which drives the time invested/time underwater to a much higher number. Of course the difficult part of the calculation is the very subjective part of how was the dive(s). If I go on the boat and have much better dives than I do at Blue Heron, aside from the objective cost doesn't that make those dives more valuable?
 
Kind of an American thing.

European dive mags see adverts for Galapagos land based, we do not. They enjoy 3 dives per day ay about 1/4 the cost of your Liveaboard.
Many of us opt for the liveaboards for access to sites not available to land-based operations, Cabo Marshall, Darwin, Wolf, Cabo Douglas, Punta Vicente Roca Trip Report - Galapagos Aggressor III April 26-May 3, 2018
 
Cost per dive is a good metric for assessing potential trip value, as long as you factor in the fact it's not the only metric. Like height, weight or BMI for physical assessment of a person, it's a starting point you build on. Here's how I size up a trip.

1.) Consider a destination with the kind of diving I'm looking to do - tropical coral reef, big animal, kelp, etc...

2.) Find a dive op. and accommodations provider and get a package price. Factor in food and tips, if any.

3.) Find out what round trip airfare, baggage fees and other expenses are likely to run.

4.) Consider total trip cost against number of dives.

That's why my trip reports over the years have shifted into giving detailed cost analyses. Many people are budget-limited and it doesn't matter how great a Galapagos live aboard would be if you can't afford to go!

And yet...there's more. From a U.S.A.-based perspective, you might notice some Red Sea liveaboards are cheap, and wonder why many Americans head to the Caribbean instead of the Red Sea or Philippines, which reputedly have 'better' diving.

There's more to trip cost than money. Total trip time and arduousness of the journey (e.g.: multiple flights, very long flights) matter. For some people, getting nearly half-way round the world is a 2 or 3 day (each way) affair, and reaching the Caribbean is 1 day each way. No flight over 4 hours is preferable to a 12 hour flight. Being away from your family 7-days is more tolerable than 15 days (e.g.: if you do a 10-day distant liveaboard because you can't justify the 'travel pain' for just 7).

So, we've got total trip cost in money, travel time and arduousness to weigh against number of dives, and quality of those dives. People brought up dive time - # dives x average dive duration. What about that?

It depends. If you dive the deep offshore wrecks out of Morehead City, North Carolina, you may be looking at NDL-limited dive times around 35 minutes, and maybe 2 dives/day given the transit time to/from the sites, taking up a good portion of the day. But do you value diving authentic wartime sunken wrecks and at times fairly big, scary looking but relatively 'safe' (if you don't do anything stupid) sharks?

These factors can inform a general 'value for cost' sense to help compare destinations.

On that foundation, you can still add factors to discriminate by goal and destination. I went to Jupiter, FL, for close up encounters with Goliath grouper; I went back for close up encounters with lemon and tiger sharks. I went to the Galapagos and dove with scalloped hammerhead sharks and dolphins. Dove out of North Carolina for the reasons already mentioned. California for kelp, sea lions, seals and garibaldi.

I love liveaboards because the 'work flow' of the trip is so straightforward and easy; I love Bonaire for the shore diving freedom that gives me so much independence (though it's a lot more work than a liveaboard).

All this assumes I'm on a solo trip and the topside is food, sleep and surface interval. If I've got non-diving family along needing topside entertainment, that's another level.

In summary, cost-per-dive is a useful metric for comparing similar destinations in a region, and it's one of the factors that help appraise a potential trip's value. But alone it is not enough. Once you settle on a destination, it's a useful metric for weighing options and driving your trip cost down - that's what I did with my last Bonaire trip (e.g.: 2 week stay for 2 week's diving but only paid airfare once, non-oceanfront housing, avoided most sit-down restaurant meals and ate cheap).
 
Kind of an American thing.

European dive mags see adverts for Galapagos land based, we do not. They enjoy 3 dives per day ay about 1/4 the cost of your Liveaboard.
They don't go to Wolf and Darwin. No comparison.
 

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