
Captain Don's Habitat
Captain Don's Habitat is an idyllic location with great shore diving and a wide range of accommodations.
103 Kaya Gob. N. Debrot, Kralendijk, Caribbean Netherlands

Number of Rooms
56
Wifi
Yes, free
Dive Center
On-site
Swimming Pool
Bar
Air Conditioning
An idyllic location with great shore diving and a wide range of accommodations,Captain Don's was one of the original Bonaire dive operators and is still offering genuine hospitality and quality customer service today.
How To Get There
Captain Dons Habitat is located at Kaya Gobernador Debrot 103 - just 1.8 miles from downtown Kralendijk and about 6 miles from the Flamingo International Airport. The resort offers airport transportation.
Dive Overview
Bonaire hosts healthy reefs with abundant marine life. Its warm waters and range of dive sites make this area an ideal location for all levels of divers.
[Read More: Bonaire Dive Travel Guide]
Accommodation Overview
Captain Don’s Habitat offers a variety of accommodations, from comfortable Deluxe Ocean View rooms with private balconies to spacious waterfront Deluxe Junior Suites with modern amenities. For those seeking more space, bungalows range from one to three bedrooms, featuring full kitchens, living areas, and covered patios. The fully remodeled three-bedroom, four-bathroom bungalow also include upgraded furnishings and a private gear rinse area. For guests looking for the ultimate stay, the three-bedroom Ocean Front Villa provides stunning sea views, multiple bathrooms, and a full kitchen, ensuring a relaxing and well-equipped retreat.
Food & Drinks
- Rum Runners Restaurant - The experienced chefs and waiters in this idyllic setting ensure that all meals are a true pleasure. The restaurant offers an international menu, daily local specials, and the Pizza Temple with authentic Italian thin crust pizza and a wide assortment of specialty pizzas and toppings.
- Pizza Temple - Authentic Italian thin crust pizza baked to perfection in a traditional stone oven. Choose from a wide assortment of toppings, create your own or try one of the chefs creation. Great for that in between dive craving or take away for the perfect midnight snack.
- Deco Stop Bar - Whether watching your favorite football team, divers coming and going from the boats or one of our beautiful sunsetsthe Deco Stop Bar is a perfect place to review the days events or plan tomorrows all the while enjoying the company of your fellow vacationers and the wonderful drinks our friendly bartenders have come up with for that day. The Deco Stop Bar is a favorite watering hole for guests and locals alike. Happy Hour daily from 5:30 pm to 6:30 pm.
Dive Information
All the beautiful waters around Bonaire are designated as a Marine Park. The fact that anchoring, spearfishing, touching the corals, and removing anything from the reef is prohibited helps keep the reefs healthy for all to enjoy.
A $25 fee allows guest to access to the Marine Park for the calendar year as well as entrance to the Washington-Slagbaai National Park (you must show tag, paper receipt and photo I.D. at the entrance to the Park).
The Bonaire National Marine Park requires Bonaire Dive Operators to provide a brief orientation to anyone who has not been to Bonaire within the same calendar year before you are allowed to dive.
A shore warm-up dive on the house reef is also required by the Bonaire National Marine Park prior to any other diving. Habitat conducts this orientation at 9:00 AM daily.
No diving is permitted without first attending this orientation. If you arrive early in the afternoon, staffing permitting, an orientation will be provided for you so that you may dive that afternoon. Packages do not include diving on day of arrival.
Dive Center Information
Captain Dons Habitat Dive Operation is a PADI Resort and an SDI 5 Star Professional Development Center. Habitat is neither pretentious nor regimented. The multilingual, multicultural, professional staff are there to teach, assist, or advise in a relaxed and friendly manner.
Habitat is centrally located within the resort complex for easy access from all rooms. It has three 1-tank boat departures daily: at 8.30 AM, 11 AM and 2 PM. The boat dives go to over 70 moored sights on our custom built dive boats. Each mooring buoy is limited to 1 boat so youll have the reef all to yourself.
Total Diving Freedom has always been the concept behind diving at Captain Dons Habitat. Over 50 world class dives are within a 15-minute boat ride. Diving Freedom means 24 hours a day, 365 days a year with no rush or anxiety.
Photo Services are also available, provided by BonPhoto, who offers guests a full selection of the latest in photo and video equipment for rent or sale, and gives personalized instruction and private photo shoots.
Practical Information
- Electricity: 112-127V/50Hz
- Time zone: UTC-4
- Languages: Dutch & English
- Accept Credit Cards?: Yes, Master Card, Visa & American Express
Resort Features
Resort Activities
MORE Carribbean
explore even more your favourite destination
What's included when you book?

Included
- Accommodation

Excluded
- Equipment Rental
- Extra Boat Dives
- Airport Transfers
Find a Room in Captain Don's Habitat
Habitat 1/1 Bungalow
Air Con
Fan
En Suite Bathroom
Hot Water Shower
Wifi (free)
TV
Balcony or Terrace
Garden view
Towels
Safe
Kitchenette
from $2359
Habitat 2/2 Bungalow
Air Con
Fan
En Suite Bathroom
Hot Water Shower
Wifi (free)
TV
Balcony or Terrace
Garden view
Towels
Kitchenette
Mini Bar
from $2628
Deluxe Garden View
Air Con
Fan
Hot Water Shower
Wifi (free)
Balcony or Terrace
Garden view
Pool view
from $2313
Deluxe Garden View Suite
Air Con
Fan
Hot Water Shower
Wifi (free)
Balcony or Terrace
Garden view
Pool view
from $2348
Ocean Front Villa
Air Con
Fan
En Suite Bathroom
Wifi (free)
TV
Balcony or Terrace
Ocean view
Towels
Kitchenette
Mini Bar
Tea/coffee making facilities
from $3178
Deluxe Ocean View
Air Con
Fan
En Suite Bathroom
Hot Water Shower
Wifi (free)
TV
Balcony or Terrace
Ocean view
Pool view
Towels
Safe
Kitchenette
Mini Bar
Tea/coffee making facilities
from $2313
Deluxe Junior Suite
Air Con
Fan
En Suite Bathroom
Wifi (free)
TV
Balcony or Terrace
Ocean view
Towels
Safe
Kitchenette
Mini Bar
Tea/coffee making facilities
from $2425
More information about Caribbean diving
Klein Bonaire, a small uninhabited island off the coast of Bonaire, boasts superior visibility compared to the mainland, thanks to the lack of runoff. The dive sites around Klein Bonaire feature pristine coral reefs, soft corals, and sea fans. Popular dive spots include Jerry’s Reef, known for its abundance of small critters, and Forest, where black coral trees create a captivating underwater landscape. The calm waters and rich marine biodiversity make Klein Bonaire a must-visit for divers looking for tranquil yet vibrant underwater scenes.


Fellow traveler's reviews






blibecap
1164 Reviews




This place is similar to scuba club Cozumel in the fact that it is somewhat basic accommodations. The freedom to dive whenever you want and the nearness of the on site diving is great. The wall dive at the location is well worth spending some time exploring. I would also recommend that you plan some boat dives to other sites, even though you could drive there the boat rides are short and easy.
Nitroxjunkie
1164 Reviews




I stayed at Captain Don's and found it to be a perfect resort for divers. Large, clean rooms, great restaurant, fantastic pool, and amazing dive operation. I traveled with my non-diving wife so I did only boat diving, with the exception of one mandatory checkout dive on the amazing house reef. The resort staff, restaurant staff, and dive staff are all the best! My wife enjoyed the resort very much and was able to find many things to do while I was diving. This is also a great place for families. Would stay here again.
DasHurts
1164 Reviews




Good place to dive and a decent place to stay and eat. The diving was excellent for the most part. They have their own reef right out the back of the property and it's pretty decent on it's own. Large tarpon patrol right under the cliff where their restaurant sits. It's fun to watch them while you eat and if you go on night dives out there you can be treated to a show of the tarpon snagging any hapless fish that you happen to spot for them with your dive light. I dove several solo dives, including a solo night dive, at the hotel reef with no problem. I'm not sure about solo dives off the boat trips they had. Never tried it. Plenty of tarpon, midnight parrotfish, groupers and French angelfish.
ryan.kissick
1164 Reviews




I had a great experience with Captain Don's Habitat in Bonaire. Everything about Bonaire diving is easy and incredibly pleasant. Upon arriving at Captain Don's, we received a dive briefing explaining how diving would work for the week, and then the pool was open. Divers are allowed to do as many shore dives as they want, and the house reef is a gorgeous wall dive that I was happy to do over and over. You can also sign up for boat dives, which are done three times per day. Depending on the package you select at Captain Don's, these boat dives are an additional charge. However, the package that I signed up for included 10 boat dives over the course of the week without extra charge.The accommodations at Captain Don's were wonderful. My girlfriend and I stayed in a beautiful ocean view room that included more than we needed. It had ample space, a kitchenette, a television, and a nice patio for lounging. On top of that, it was about a 30 second walk to the dive lockers! Not all rooms at Captain Don's are this close to the dive lockers, but all are within a few minute walk at the most.As I mentioned before, diving is incredibly easy. All divers are given a locker to store their gear. For boat dives, your gear is automatically transferred to the boat. For shore dives, you simply gear up next to your locker, walk down some steps, and you are diving.The visibility in Bonaire is incredible, making it a great spot for photographers and new divers. At the same time, there is ample marine life to stay excited. Highlights included turtles, flounders, seahorses, tarpon, flamingo tongues, arrow crabs, moray eels, and huge sponges.Although Bonaire is a relatively quiet island, we were able to explore a few of the local restaurants and sites. We didn't leave Captain Don's many times over the course of the week, but when we did we had a lovely time. There were a bunch of cute shops in the main town, some good shopping, and some nice restaurants.Overall, I am a huge proponent of Bonaire and am excited to go back in the near future.
basilkiwan
1164 Reviews




Travel coordination:We spent a relaxing week in August 2013 at Captain Don’s, as part of a group package for our dive club. This was our second trip to the resort (our first was in 2008). We arrived in Bonaire in the late afternoon, and were greeted at the airport by the resort staff, who helped us with our luggage and shuttled us quickly to the resort. Our arrival formalities were simple: we presented our vouchers at the resort lobby and then headed to the bar, where we enjoyed the view and a complementary welcome drink (rum punch, of course).At departure, we brought our bags back to the lobby, and were taken by a shuttle bus back to the airport. It would have been a bit easier if the resort had some luggage carts available to help bring our bags from our room to the resort lobby, but everything was otherwise efficient, and very pleasant.Accommodations:We stayed in the newer Oceanfront Junior Suites, which I believe opened in 2012. Our rooms were perfectly located, a few steps away from the dive center/lockers and dive piers, making it very quick and easy to go diving anytime we wanted.Some online reviews have been more negative, stating that the rooms and the grounds need updating, but we did not find this to be case. The rooms at Captain Don’s are not overly luxurious, but the rooms are comfortable, and correctly furnished/appointed for a dive resort. Our rooms were spacious, clean, and very comfortable, with A/C, ceiling fan, a small kitchenette, and a large patio (with 2 chairs, drying rack, and table) overlooking the water. The resort faces west, so we enjoyed a gorgeous sunset view every evening, either from our patio, or at the resort bar, which overlooks the main dive pier.Resort featuresThe resort is laid out along a short stretch of Bonaire’s west coast, on 20-foot bluffs facing towards the island of Klein Bonaire. There is a pool, a day spa (where I enjoyed a very good back massage on the last day), a photo studio (BonPhoto – where I took an excellent underwater photography course), the dive center, the bar, and the restaurant (Rum Runners), which sits in the center of the resort.Restaurant/Bar/FoodRum Runners is Captain Don’s outdoor restaurant that sits on the bluffs overlooking the sea, facing towards Klein Bonaire. They serve all three meals, and our package included a full breakfast buffet (which includes an omelet station). (Note: there are other full board packages available with all 3 meals at Captain Don’s). Overall, we were happy with Rum Runners, and ate virtually every meal there, because of the outdoor ambience, as well as the convenience, since it is relatively long walk to the restaurants at neighboring resorts. The atmosphere is casual (as you would expect at a dive resort) but the food was good, though not stellar, and the menu was limited, focusing heavily on seafood options (which makes sense given what is locally available). The service was good, very friendly and casual. The bar had great rum drinks (what else of course, it is the Caribbean!). It’s certainly worthwhile to try out restaurants at the neighboring resorts, or to take a short cab ride into town (which I have done on previous trips). The Buddy Dive resort next door has a new, more upscale restaurant next door called “Ingridients” (named after their chef, Ingrid), which was excellent.Diving:My husband and I both have a preference for live-aboard dive yachts, BUT, Captain Don’s is exceptionally good when it comes to shore-based dive resorts. Our package included 12 boat dives, plus unlimited shore diving (note: there are different package options available, including car rental to try out Bonaire many shore dive sites). The heart of the resort is the dive center, where they focus on making the diving “easy”. They have been organizing diving for years, and they know how to make it both flexible and efficient for divers.We had our dive briefing on the first morning after our arrival, and began diving immediately thereafter. Captain Don’s runs a couple of boats (usually 2 at a time) off the larger main pier, offering 2 morning dives, and one afternoon dive. The dive center posts a sign up board for the boats on the outside the door. In addition, they have tanks available if you want to rent a car/pickup truck to try out the other shore diving sites around the island, and have tanks available around the clock if you want to dive on the “house reef” (La Machacca), right off the smaller 2nd dive pier (always a good and interesting dive site). There is an open-air locker room, right next to the dive piers, so you can leave your dive gear securely, if you don’t want to drag it back to your room at the end of the dive day. When you combine the boat dives with the shore diving, it is easily possible to do 3-4 dives a day (or even 5 dives a day), which is pretty good for an onshore resort.Most of the dive sites are on Bonaire’s west side (as the east side has rougher seas), or around the small island of Klein Bonaire (directly facing Captain Don’s and Buddy Dive resorts). On this most recent trip, in August 2013, water temperatures were between 80-82 F, so after the first day I dispensed with the wetsuit and just dove with a rash guard and swimsuit, which was truly liberating. Bonaire is known for easy and pleasant diving, with beautiful reefs that have been well protected by the government, but without much in term of large pelagic species. That said, I ran into a pod of dolphins and photographed them underwater when I was diving off of Klein Bonaire on my previous dive trip (in 2008), but that was a freak occurrence. On this most recent trip, I was doing wide-angle photography and videography, and I found plenty of interesting seascapes, and larger noteworthy creatures to photograph, like eels, turtles, rays, and a colorful schools of all sorts of reef fish. Macro photographers will not be disappointed, as Bonaire’s reefs have plenty of nudibranchs, lobsters and sea horses among many other things. Among the dive sites of note that I tried out this were:Hilma Hooker: This is a well-known wreck dive, in about 90 feet of water. The boat was a drug smuggling vessel that was abandoned in Bonaire’s main harbor, and “accidently” sunk while being towed away. The rudder is covered with barrel sponges and coral, and tarpon and eels are frequently seen cruising around.Joanna’s Sunchi/Klein Bonaire: This was a long beautiful dive on a pretty reef, reportedly named for one of Captain Don’s girlfriends. I saw seahorses, cowfish and barracuda.Bloodlet and Rappel: These were my favorite dive sites of this trip, they are adjacent to each other. They are both beautiful wall dives, covered with a verdant reef, and lots of sponges. I shot a lot of video and photos here, with squid, moray eels and porcupine fish.The video link below should give you an idea:https://vimeo.com/73991604Additionally, Captain Don’s is host to the BonPhoto studio, which is owned and operated by a charming young couple, Zsuzsanna & Leo. Zsuzsanna is a talented photographer and photography/videography instructor, and I took an underwater photography class with her that helped me enormously. Leo, her husband, teaches free diving, and also leads nighttime scuba dives (as a separate company, called Flow), using fluorescent lights and visors over our masks. We went on a fluorescent night dive on Captain Don’s house reef (La Macchaca), and it was the best night dive we have ever done. The fluorescent lights lit up all sorts of creatures that you would not normally see on a night dive with regular lights, like tube worms, and fire worms, and we saw brittle stars hopping around the reef in a mad dash to spawn (it was incredible – who knew they could move so fast?). In addition, we had tarpon and barracuda trailing us to hunt smaller prey lit up by our lights. It was an amazing dive!Staff:The staff are polite, laid back, and very experienced. I had a dive computer die at the beginning of the trip, and they correctly diagnosed the problem (sensor failure – confirmed when I returned) and rented me a substitute computer on the spot for the week.Tipping:We tipped a standard 15% at the restaurant for our meals that we ate at Captain Don’s (except for breakfast, which was included in our package). As for the diving center staff, we gave a modest tip to one of the boat captains (Neto – he was fantastic), and then left the bulk of our tip (around 10%) in a recycled air tank where staff collect and share tips.