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Shore Vs Boat Diving the SS President Coolidge: The Surprising Truth

Should you dive one of the world’s best shore dives… by shore or by boat?

It sounds like an obvious choice at first. After all, the SS President Coolidge is legendary for being one of the most accessible wreck dives on the planet. Sitting just off the coast of Espiritu Santo, this 200-meter-long luxury liner turned WWII troop ship attracts divers from all over the world.

And yes—you can just walk off the beach to dive the SS President Coolidge. But here’s what most people don’t realize…


The Hidden Cost of Shore Diving the SS President Coolidge

What looks easy on paper quickly becomes a different story in the water.

By the time you’ve:

  • Walked your gear down
  • Entered from shore
  • And swum all the way out to the wreck

…you’ve already burned through a significant portion of your air and energy.

That’s dive time you’ll never get back.

Instead of exploring deep into the wreck or lingering over its iconic features, you’re often cutting your dive short—or rushing through it.

Dive map of the SS President Coolidge by Reef Smart Guides

SS President Coolidge dive map from Reef Smart Guides

Shore vs Boat Diving: Cost and Independence Are Similar

Many divers assume shore diving the SS President Coolidge will be cheaper or more independent, but in reality there’s very little difference in either price or freedom. Once you factor in essential guided diving, logistics, and support, shore and boat options usually end up costing almost the same.

More importantly, you’re still fully reliant on a dive operator. Even though the wreck is technically shore-accessible, it’s not a site you can dive alone. The size of the wreck, navigation complexity, and potential hazards make local expertise essential. In practice, this means you’re still tied to a dive shop schedule, dependent on experienced guides, and limited by operational logistics—removing one of the main advantages people associate with shore diving.

Shore diving on the SS President Coolidge

Even Shore Operators can’t access the full SS President Coolidge

Once you start pushing toward the midship and stern, dive planning becomes significantly more complex—and far more limiting than most divers expect.

You’re dealing with:

  • Much greater distances from your entry and exit
  • Deeper, more demanding dive profiles
  • Tighter gas management
  • And being further from immediate surface support

Even for experienced divers—and even on decompression dives—every minute spent getting to and from those sections is time you’re not actually exploring the wreck.

And that’s the trade-off most people underestimate.

In reality, shore diving the Coolidge is only truly effective for a select handful of sites and routes. Beyond that, it quickly becomes inefficient, restrictive, and in some cases, impractical.

Diver showing scale of the SS President Coolidge dive site in Espiritu Santo, Vanuatu

Why Boat Diving is the Better Choice

Here’s the twist: the less obvious option is actually the smarter one.

Boat diving the SS President Coolidge changes the entire experience.

Instead of a long surface swim, you:

  • Drop directly onto the wreck
  • Start exactly where you want
  • Spend maximum time exploring, not traveling
  • Surface and get picked up right where you finish

No wasted air. No exhausting swim. No compromises.
Just pure wreck diving.

The Coolidge also has three moorings—bow, midship, and stern, so you can choose your entry point and plan the dive around what you want to explore.

And you can still shallow up onto the reef for a relaxed safety stop before pickup.

Efficient, flexible, and focused on what matters most: time on the wreck.

Diver using mooring line on the SS President Coolidge dive site in Espiritu Santo, Vanuatu

With Triton Explorers it Gets Better

Now, we may be a little biased—but these trade-offs are real.

With Triton Explorers, the experience becomes even more streamlined because we’re based at Million Dollar View Resort—just a two-minute boat ride from the dive sites.

Between dives, you’re not stuck on a boat or dealing with rough surface conditions. Instead, you can:

  • Relax on shore with hot drinks and snacks
  • Take a break at the resort in comfort
  • Or even go for a snorkel on the nearby Million Dollar Point while you wait

No bobbing around on a boat getting seasick.
No feeling rushed into back-to-back dives.

Just a relaxed, flexible dive day designed around comfort and enjoyment.

Divers back roll from a boat onto the SS President Coolidge dive site in Espiritu Santo, Vanuatu

The Verdict

So while shore diving the Coolidge sounds iconic…

If you’re serious about getting the most out of this world-class wreck, boat diving is the clear winner.

More time on the wreck. Less effort getting there. A better overall experience.

So if the SS President Coolidge is on your bucket list (and it should be), make sure you experience it the right way.

Dive smart. Dive efficiently. And make every minute underwater count.

Or follow along for more insider tips on diving in Espiritu Santo.

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