# Sailing & Yacht-Charter Honeymoons: Greece, BVI & Croatia

> A yacht charter turns the honeymoon itself into the destination — waking in a different anchorage each morning. We explain bareboat vs. skippered vs. crewed, compare the British Virgin Islands, Croatia and the Greek Cyclades, and lay out real 2026 costs.

*Published 2026-07-03 · By Marco Alvarez*

A sailing honeymoon inverts the usual formula: instead of choosing a single resort and staying put, you make the journey itself the destination, waking in a different turquoise anchorage each morning with total privacy and the freedom to move — or not — as the mood takes you. A yacht charter, most often a comfortable **catamaran charter**, delivers a sense of adventure and seclusion no hotel can match. The three great charter grounds — the **British Virgin Islands**, **Croatia** and the **Greek Cyclades** — each reward a different kind of couple. Here is how to choose, and how the charter models work.

## The three charter models

Every charter falls into one of three models, and picking the right one is the most important decision you'll make. A **bareboat charter** means you skipper the yacht yourselves — the cheapest option and the most freeing, but it requires demonstrable competence. Operators like **The Moorings** ask for a sailing resume, and Mediterranean countries often legally require a recognized certification (ASA, RYA or ICC) plus a VHF radio license.[[The Moorings]](https://www.moorings.com/destinations/caribbean/british-virgin-islands-yacht-charters) A **skippered charter** adds a professional captain who handles the sailing and local knowledge while you relax and help as much or as little as you like — the ideal middle path for couples without certification. A **crewed charter** goes fully all-inclusive, adding a chef and often a hostess, turning the yacht into a private floating boutique hotel with a personal crew.[[The Moorings]](https://www.moorings.com/yacht-charter/crewed-charter)

For most honeymooners, a catamaran beats a monohull: more living space, stable sunbathing trampolines, less heeling and seasickness, shallow draft for pretty anchorages, and separate ensuite cabins. The tradeoffs are a higher rate and, in the Mediterranean, a 50 to 80 percent marina supplement.

## British Virgin Islands: the beginner-friendly icon

The BVI are the gold standard for a first charter. The islands sit close together in protected, reliably breezy water, so passages are short line-of-sight hops of one to three hours, and there's a mooring ball, beach bar or snorkel site around nearly every corner — the granite grottoes of the Baths on Virgin Gorda, the wreck of the RMS Rhone, and Jost Van Dyke's legendary beach bars are all within an easy cruise. Bareboat charters start around $3,284 for a week for two; a low-season 4-cabin catamaran runs from roughly $5,700, and high-season (December to April) from about $10,000, while fully crewed charters start around $13,000 to $16,700 per week.[[Sunsail]](https://www.sunsail.com/blog/how-much-does-a-bvi-yacht-charter-cost) Sail the BVI in the dry Caribbean high season, December through April, and keep clear of the June-to-November hurricane season.

## Croatia: walled towns and a thousand islands

Croatia's Dalmatian coast offers something the Caribbean cannot: cruise between more than a thousand islands and drop anchor beneath walled medieval towns like Dubrovnik, Korcula and Hvar, with pine-scented coves and Roman ruins in between. It rewards confident sailors — passages are longer than the BVI and the strong, gusty bura wind can descend off the mountains — so less-experienced couples should take a skipper. Marina fees run higher too, from around 30 to over 300 euros a night with the catamaran supplement. The season is Mediterranean summer, with May, June and September the sweet spots for warm water, reliable breeze and thinner crowds than midsummer.

## Greek Cyclades: whitewashed drama in the Aegean

The **Greek Cyclades** — Mykonos, Paros, Naxos, Santorini and the smaller islands between — deliver the most iconic Aegean scenery: whitewashed villages spilling down volcanic hillsides, blue-domed churches and dazzling light. Charters typically start from Athens, which gives direct access to both the Saronic Gulf and the Cyclades, and Greek charter costs span an enormous range, roughly $2,634 to $36,999 for a week for two depending on yacht and season.[[The Moorings]](https://www.moorings.com/destinations/mediterranean/greece) The catch is the meltemi, the powerful northerly summer wind that peaks in July and August and can pin boats in harbor for days — which is why the Cyclades suit experienced sailors or a skippered charter, and why late May, June and September are the smarter windows.

## How the three compare
DestinationSailing difficultySignatureBest seasonBareboat week (from)British Virgin IslandsEasiest (short, protected hops)Beach bars, the Baths, calm trade windsDec–Apr~$3,284 (cat from ~$5,700)Croatia (Dalmatia)Moderate (longer legs, bura wind)Walled towns, 1,000+ islandsMay–Jun, SepVaries; skipper advisedGreek CycladesHarder (exposed to meltemi)Whitewashed island dramaLate May–Jun, Sep~$2,634 (wide range)
**The bottom line:** choose the BVI for the easiest, most beginner-friendly bareboat honeymoon in calm Caribbean water; Croatia for island variety and medieval-town romance with a skipper; and the Greek Cyclades for the most iconic Aegean scenery, best sailed in the shoulder months to dodge the meltemi. When in doubt about your sailing ability, book a skipper — it costs less than most couples expect and removes all the stress.

## Budgeting and the honest tradeoffs

The advertised charter rate is only the start. Budget an extra 25 to 50 percent for fuel, mooring and marina fees, provisioning (roughly $50 to $75 per person per day), taxes and cruising fees, and a yacht damage waiver, plus a 15 to 20 percent gratuity on crewed charters. Booking early matters: operators frequently run 20 percent early-booking discounts that meaningfully cut the total. The genuine downsides of a sailing honeymoon are worth weighing honestly. Space is finite even on a catamaran, and weather can rearrange or shorten your plans — a strong meltemi or bura day may keep you in port. Seasickness affects some travelers, so pack remedies. Bareboat sailing is real responsibility, not a theme-park ride; overestimating your skill is the classic mistake, and a grounding or damage claim can ruin the trip. Finally, a boat is close quarters — wonderful for a couple who loves being together, less so if either of you needs regular solo space. Match the model to your experience, provision well, build in a rest anchorage or two, and a charter becomes the most freeing honeymoon there is.

## Sources

1. [BVI Yacht Charters & Sailing Vacations in the Caribbean](https://www.moorings.com/destinations/caribbean/british-virgin-islands-yacht-charters)
2. [Crewed Yacht Charters | All-Inclusive Sailing Vacations](https://www.moorings.com/yacht-charter/crewed-charter)
3. [Greece Yacht Charters & Sailing Vacations](https://www.moorings.com/destinations/mediterranean/greece)
4. [How Much Does a Week-Long Charter in the British Virgin Islands Cost?](https://www.sunsail.com/blog/how-much-does-a-bvi-yacht-charter-cost)

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Source: https://eraaway.com/experiences/sailing-yacht-charter-honeymoon-guide
Index: https://eraaway.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://eraaway.com/llms-full.txt
