What Is a Yacht Charter? A Broker’s Plain-English Guide

What Is a Yacht Charter? A Broker’s Plain-English Guide

Luxury catamaran anchored in turquoise Caribbean bay at sunset

Last Updated: April 9, 2026

So what is a yacht charter, exactly? A yacht charter is the private rental of a yachtβ€”captain, crew, and living quarters includedβ€”for a set period, typically one to two weeks. You’re not booking a cabin on someone else’s ship. You’re booking the entire vessel, choosing your itinerary, and traveling with only the people you invite.

The global yacht charter market hit USD 8.98 billion in 2025 and is growing at 8.19% annually (Fortune Business Insights, 2025). That growth isn’t coming from billionaires aloneβ€”first-time charterers now represent roughly 40% of all clients (Dream Yacht Sales, 2026), and the average charterer’s age has dropped to 40–50, down ten years over the past two decades (SuperYacht Times, via Dream Yacht Sales).

At Vital Charters, we broker crewed yacht charters exclusively in the Caribbean and Bahamas. This guide covers what a charter actually involves, what it costs, and how to decide if it’s the right fit for your group.

TL;DR

  • A yacht charter is a private yacht rentalβ€”typically with captain and crewβ€”used as a flexible alternative to a resort stay.
  • Crewed charters generate 61.58% of global charter revenue and are the most popular option for first-timers (Mordor Intelligence, 2025).
  • Caribbean crewed catamaran charters typically run USD 21,500–28,500 per week for groups of 6–8 guests.
  • For groups, the per-person cost often beats comparable luxury resort stays once you factor in meals, excursions, and private transfers.

What Does “Charter” Mean in Yachting?

A yacht charter is the private rental of a fully equipped yachtβ€”with cabins, galley, and deck spaceβ€”for exclusive use over a set period, typically with a professional captain and crew included (MYBA Charter Agreement, industry standard). Unlike a cruise ship cabin or hotel room, a charter gives your group sole access to the vessel and its itinerary.

Think of it this way: a cruise is a floating hotel with 3,000 strangers. A charter is your own floating villa that moves wherever you want it to go.

A yacht charter is different from:

  • A cruise β€” shared ship, fixed itinerary, thousands of passengers
  • A ferry or tour boat β€” public transport, no overnight accommodation
  • A timeshare β€” ownership or fractional ownership structure
  • A day boat rental β€” typically no crew, no overnight capability, limited range

How Does a Yacht Charter Work?

70% of cabin and crewed charter reservations now come through online channels (Mordor Intelligence, 2025). But behind every booking, there’s a straightforward five-step processβ€”whether you’re working with a charter broker or booking directly.

  1. Pick the charter style. Crewed (captain + chef + steward), skippered (captain only), or bareboat (you’re the captain). Most first-timers choose crewed.
  2. Choose your yacht. Catamaran or motor yacht? How many cabins? What layout fits your group? A broker can narrow the fleet based on your dates, budget, and destination. Browse options on our luxury yacht search.
  3. Sign a charter agreement. This contractβ€”often based on the MYBA Charter Agreementβ€”outlines the base fee, cancellation policy, APA (advance provisioning allowance), and crew responsibilities.
  4. Share your preferences. Dietary needs, drink preferences, celebrations, must-visit anchorages, water sports priorities. Your crew builds the trip around this.
  5. Embark and go. Fly in, board at the marina, unpack once. The yacht is your home for the duration.

Our observation: Most of our clients spend about 20 minutes on a preference sheet, and that single form shapes their entire week. We’ve seen groups who listed “quiet mornings” end up with sunrise yoga on the foredeck. Others who wrote “we love to snorkel” hit three different reef systems in four days. The crew reads that sheet like a playbook.

Types of Yacht Charter

Crewed yacht charters account for 61.58% of all charter revenue globally, making them the dominant type by a wide margin (Mordor Intelligence, 2025). Weekly bookings hold a 54.63% share, though day charters are the fastest-growing segment at 10.82% CAGR. For first-time guests in the Caribbean, a crewed catamaran is the most common choiceβ€”catamarans increased 15% year-on-year in 2024. Here’s how the five main categories compare.

Type Crew Included Typical Weekly Cost (Caribbean) Best For Experience Required
Crewed Captain + chef + steward $21,500–$59,000 First-timers, families, luxury travelers None
Skippered Captain only $12,000–$25,000 Budget-conscious, smaller groups None
Bareboat None (you’re captain) $5,000–$15,000 Experienced sailors ASA 104 or equivalent
Cabin Shared vessel with crew $2,000–$5,000/person Solo travelers, couples on a budget None
Day Captain + optional crew $2,500–$10,000/day Special occasions, first-time trial None

Charter catamaran interior salon with dining table and panoramic ocean views

A crewed charter comes with a full professional teamβ€”captain, chef, and one or more stewards. You don’t navigate, cook, clean, or plan logistics. This is what most people picture when they hear “luxury yacht vacation.”

In the Caribbean, crewed bookings are overwhelmingly on catamaransβ€”vessels increased 15% year-on-year in 2024. Brands like Lagoon, Leopard, and Fountaine Pajot dominate the fleet.

Skippered Charter

A skippered charter gives you a captain but not a full service crew. It’s a solid middle ground: professional navigation and local knowledge, but you might handle your own meals and basic upkeep. Lower cost than a full crew, more freedom than bareboat.

Bareboat Charter

A bareboat charter means you rent the yacht without crew. You (or someone in your group) acts as captain. Most destinations require proof of competencyβ€”an ASA 104 certification or equivalent is the typical minimum.

Bareboat suits experienced sailors who want total independence. But it’s less “vacation”β€”you’re responsible for navigation, anchoring, provisioning, and the vessel itself.

Cabin Charter

A cabin charter is more like a small-ship cruise: you book one cabin and share common areas with other guests. It’s the most affordable option, but it’s not private.

Day Charter

Day charters are the fastest-growing segment, expanding at 10.82% CAGR through 2031 (Mordor Intelligence, 2025). These are shorter experiencesβ€”4 to 8 hoursβ€”ideal for special occasions, corporate entertaining, or testing the charter lifestyle before committing to a full week.

How Much Does It Cost?

Caribbean crewed catamaran charters typically run USD 21,500–28,500 per week for a 45–50 ft yacht accommodating 6–8 guests. Larger 60–70 ft catamarans range from USD 48,900–59,000 per week (Dream Yacht Sales, 2026).

The base charter fee covers the yacht and crew. On top of that, you’ll typically pay an APA (Advance Provisioning Allowance) that covers fuel, food, drinks, and dockage. APA usually adds 30–35% to the base fee (multiple industry sources). Crew gratuityβ€”customary at 15–20% of the base feeβ€”is separate.

For a detailed breakdown of every cost line, see our guide on charter rates, APA, and add-ons.

What’s Typically Included

  • Use of the yacht and all onboard amenities for the charter period
  • Professional crew (captain, chef, steward on crewed charters)
  • Standard water toys (paddleboards, snorkel gear, kayaks, tender)
  • Linens, towels, and basic toiletries
  • Insurance and required safety equipment

What’s Usually Extra

  • Food and beverages (covered by APA)
  • Fuel and dockage fees (covered by APA)
  • Crew gratuity (15–20% of base fee, paid at trip’s end)
  • Premium water sports equipment (jet skis, diving gear)
  • Special requests (birthday cakes, floral arrangements, specific wines)

For full contract details, read our MYBA fee breakdown.

Our observation: The APA surprises a lot of first-timers, but it’s actually a transparency tool. Instead of rolling food and fuel into a higher base rate (which some operators do), the MYBA-standard APA lets you see exactly where every dollar goes. We’ve had clients get refunds of $500–1,000 when they spent less than estimated.

Aerial view of catamaran anchored near white sand beach with water toys

Charter vs. Resort: Why Groups Are Switching

Private and leisure charters represent 77.88% of global charter revenue, with corporate and MICE bookings growing fastest at 8.74% CAGR (Mordor Intelligence, 2025). The Caribbean accounts for 60% of winter bookings globally (Dream Yacht Sales, 2026), and the shift from resort vacations to private vessel rentals is acceleratingβ€”especially among groups of six or more, where per-person costs often favor chartering over comparable luxury hotel stays.

Factor Yacht Charter Luxury Resort
Per-person cost (8 guests, 7 nights) ~$450/night (chef, bar, water sports included) $500–$800/night (before excursions)
Privacy Exclusive β€” your group only Shared pools, beaches, dining
Flexibility Itinerary changes daily Fixed schedules, reservations
Logistics Unpack once, vessel moves Transfers, repacking between islands
Dining Private chef, custom menus Restaurant reservations, set hours
Activities Water toys included, new anchorage daily Excursions booked separately

The shift is driven by three factors that matter most to groups.

The Per-Person Math Often Favors Charters

A crewed catamaran at USD 25,000 per week for 8 guests works out to roughly USD 450 per person per nightβ€”and that includes a private chef, open bar, water toys, and a new anchorage every day. A comparable Caribbean luxury resort runs USD 500–800 per person per night before excursions, private dining, or boat trips. For groups of 6 or more, the vessel rental frequently costs less per head than a resort with equivalent experiences.

We broke this down in detail in our yacht charter vs. luxury resort comparison.

Real Privacy, Not “Resort Private”

A resort’s “private beach” still has 200 other guests on it. A yacht charter means your group has exclusive use of the vesselβ€”no shared pool, no lobby crowds, no fighting for lounge chairs. When you anchor in a quiet bay in the BVI or Exumas, that stretch of water is yours.

Flexibility That Resorts Can’t Match

Resorts run on set schedules: check-in at 3 PM, dinner reservations at 7, excursion bus leaves at 9. On a charter, the itinerary bends around your group’s energy. Feeling lazy? Stay anchored. Want to explore? The captain moves the yacht. It’s raining at one island? Sail 30 minutes to sunshine.

You Unpack Once

One underrated advantage: no repacking, no airport transfers between islands, no coordinating multiple hotel bookings. Your accommodations travel with you. For multi-stop Caribbean trips, that alone saves hours of logistics.

Sunset dinner setup on catamaran aft deck in the Caribbean

Who Books a Charter?

The average yacht charterer’s age has dropped to 40–50, down ten years over two decades (SuperYacht Times, via Dream Yacht Sales). Millennials are projected to account for 50% of global luxury spending by 2026 (SuperYacht Times). This isn’t your grandfather’s yacht clubβ€”here’s who we see booking.

Families

Multi-generational trips are one of the fastest-growing segments. Kids swim off the stern while grandparents read on the foredeck. Nobody has to commute anywhere. We’ve written about this trend in our guide on why families choose private yacht charters.

Friend Groups

Birthdays, milestone celebrations, reunions. A charter acts as a self-contained venue where everyone shares the same schedule without the logistical friction of coordinating across resort rooms and restaurant reservations.

Corporate Groups

Offsites, leadership retreats, client entertaining. The enclosed, distraction-light environment makes charters surprisingly effective for focused work sessions mixed with team bonding. No conference center requiredβ€”just the salon table and a whiteboard.

Our observation: Corporate clients don’t just book for “fun.” We’ve brokered retreats where the CEO used the morning sail time for one-on-ones with each exec. The vessel’s layoutβ€”private cabins for calls, shared deck for group sessionsβ€”works better than most off-site venues we’ve seen.

What to Ask Before You Book

You don’t need nautical expertise to book well. These five questions will clarify 90% of what you need to know:

  1. Is this charter crewed, skippered, or bareboat? If you’ve never chartered before, crewed is almost always the right call.
  2. How many cabins and what’s the sleeping configuration? Cabin count matters more than yacht length for group comfort.
  3. What does “all-inclusive” actually mean for this yacht? The term varies wildly. Some include everything; others only cover crew and the vessel. Get it in writing. Read our breakdown of all-inclusive yacht charters.
  4. What’s estimated separately? Fuel, food, dockage, gratuityβ€”know the APA structure upfront.
  5. What’s the cancellation policy and is travel insurance recommended? Weather, flight disruptions, and illness happen. Know the terms before you sign.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a yacht charter in simple terms?

A yacht charter is renting a private yachtβ€”usually with a captain and crewβ€”for a set period. It’s a floating vacation home where your group controls the itinerary, meals, and pace.

How much does it cost to charter a yacht?

Caribbean crewed catamarans start around USD 21,500 per week for 6–8 guests. Larger or more luxurious vessels range from USD 48,900–100,000+ per week. The base fee covers the boat and crew; food, fuel, and extras are additional.

Do you need sailing experience to charter a yacht?

Noβ€”not for a crewed or skippered charter. The captain handles all navigation and seamanship. You only need certifications (like ASA 104) for bareboat charters where you operate the yacht yourself.

Is a yacht charter worth it compared to a resort?

For groups of 6 or more, a crewed charter often costs less per person per night than a comparable luxury resortβ€”and includes a private chef, water sports, and a new destination every day. We compared the numbers in detail in our resort vs. charter cost breakdown.

What is the 10% rule for yachts?

The 10% rule is a rough guideline for yacht ownership: annual maintenance and operating costs typically run about 10% of the yacht’s purchase price. It’s one of the reasons many people choose to charter rather than buy. We explored this in yacht charter vs. ownership.

What does all-inclusive mean on a yacht charter?

It depends on the yacht and contract. Some all-inclusive charters cover meals, drinks, water sports, and fuel. Others only include the crew and vessel, with food and fuel as extras. Always confirm what’s covered in the charter agreement. Always confirm what’s covered in the charter agreement.

Ready to Explore a Caribbean Charter?

If you’re curious what a charter looks like for your group, reach out to Vital Charters. Browse the featured yacht fleet, or tell us your dates, group size, and budgetβ€”we’ll match you with the right yacht and crew.


Jason Acosta is the co-founder and principal broker of Vital Charters. He is an avid sailor and yacht charterer. Jason is also a Master Diver and certified ASA 104 sailor.

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