Scuba Diving Ustica 2026: The Marine Protected Area, the Legendary Sites, and Why Serious Divers Make the Trip
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
Ustica is a different category of Italian dive destination from every other island in the Tyrrhenian — not better in the tourist-friendly way (the Ponziane have more dramatic scenery; Elba has more accessible wrecks) but better in the specifically aquatic way that makes marine biologists and advanced divers treat it as a reference standard. Italy's first marine protected area (established 1987), Ustica sits in isolation 67km north of Palermo on an extinct volcanic seamount whose geology — ancient lava flow columns, basalt arches, the specific dark rock that absorbs less light than limestone and therefore supports different biological communities — creates the specific habitat for the populations of grouper, dentex, amberjack, and octopus that have been recovering under protection for 37 years and now produce the most impressive large-fish sightings in Italian waters.
The specific Ustica experience for a diver: seeing a large brown grouper (cernia bruna) of 50cm+ holding territory at a specific rock — a common enough sighting at Ustica, a remarkable one at any other Italian dive site. The underwater visibility: 30-40+ meters in spring and autumn, the clearest in Italy. The water temperature: 14-16°C in winter and spring at depth (cold-water-adapted fauna including the black coral, Antipatharia, that Ustica has in unusual abundance for a Mediterranean site).
Ustica's Best Dive Sites
Secca di Colombara
The Secca di Colombara is the reference dive of Ustica — a submerged pinnacle rising from 32m depth to within 4m of the surface on the northern side of the island, in the partial reserve zone that allows guided diving. The specific Colombara experience: descending the wall at 25-32m where the black coral colonies (Antipathes subpinnata — at Ustica growing to 1-meter specimens in unusually high density for the Mediterranean) frame the basalt rock; rising through the zone at 15-20m where large groups of dentex patrol the pinnacle top; and arriving at the summit at 4-8m in the swell-affected water where the specific mix of cold deep water and warm surface water creates thermoclines visible as rippling lenses of different optical density. Duration: 45-60 minutes at a conservative air management rate. Recommended for: Open Water certified divers comfortable with mild current and 30m depth.
The Grotta Azzurra and the Tunnel System
The southern coast of Ustica has an extensive system of sea caves and lava tunnels accessible as dive and snorkel experiences depending on depth and complexity. The Grotta Azzurra (a separate formation from the Capri Grotta Azzurra — it is a sea cave with surface access where the light refraction produces the specific blue reflection) is accessible to snorkelers at surface level and to divers through a submerged entrance at 12m depth that exits into the illuminated interior. The Grotta dell'Oro (Gold Cave) and the Grotta delle Barche (Boats' Cave) extend the coastal cave diving system; the tunnel network requires guided diving in the permit system of the MPA.
The Amphora Fields
The seabed around Ustica has Roman-era amphora concentrations (principally Roman wine amphorae from the 1st century BC to 3rd century AD) distributed across several sites in the 18-35m depth range — visible evidence of the ancient shipping lanes between Rome's Ostia and the western Mediterranean passing through the waters around Ustica. The specific experience: resting on the sandy bottom between amphora sherds and intact forms, understanding that this is a live archaeological site (touching and removing amphora is absolutely prohibited in the MPA — criminal offense, not merely a fine) where active survey work has been ongoing since the 1970s.
Practical Guide to Diving Ustica
Dive centers: Barracuda Diving Center and Ustica Diving are the established operators on the island, with daily boat dives to all sites within the MPA permit system. All diving within the Ustica MPA Zone B requires a licensed dive center guide — independent diving without a licensed guide is prohibited. Average prices: guided dive €40-55 per person (boat, guide, full equipment); PADI Open Water course €350-400 on the island. Ferry from Palermo: 2.5 hours by ferry (Liberty Lines hydrofoil, departures 1-2 per day depending on season); €25-30 one way. Day trip possible but 2-3 night stay recommended for a proper diving experience.
Q&A: Scuba Diving Ustica
What certification level do I need to dive at Ustica?
The standard Ustica dive program is accessible to PADI/SSI Open Water Diver level (the entry-level certification): the principal sites are within the 18-30m recreational depth limit and do not require specialized training. The specific Ustica experience improves significantly at Advanced Open Water level, which adds the deeper sites (30-40m) and improves comfort with the mild current and the 30+ meter visibility that can be disorienting for divers accustomed to European visibility of 5-10m. The cave and tunnel dives require Cavern or Cave certification.