At fifty metres, a charter yacht stops being a comfortable vessel and becomes something closer to a private estate with the capacity to move. The distinction matters in practice. A yacht in this bracket typically accommodates twelve guests across six or seven cabins, each finished to standards that would satisfy a five-star hotel, with crew counts ranging from twelve to eighteen depending on the programme. The tender garage becomes a meaningful amenity at this scale: dedicated chambers below the waterline or within the transom carry a chase tender, jet skis, paddle boards and sometimes a sport submersible, all deployed without rearranging the main deck or inconveniencing guests at breakfast. Range extends to three thousand nautical miles or beyond on the larger examples, which means the itinerary is governed by appetite rather than logistics. What the Mediterranean offers this class of yacht is a cruising ground that rewards the size without demanding it. The season runs from mid-May to late September and operates, in practical terms, as a single continuous passage. Charters open on the French Riviera, where the infrastructure for large yachts is mature and the social calendar dense, then move east through Portofino and the Amalfi Coast as summer deepens. The first week of July typically marks the crossing to the Ionian, where the light changes and the anchorages thin out. Late August brings the quieter rhythms of Greece and Turkey, and September settles into the Cyclades or the Dalmatian coast before the season closes. Within that arc, the Balearic Islands absorb the heat of July with considerable grace. Corsica and Sardinia reward shoulder weeks when the larger crowds have not yet arrived or have already departed. Monaco in September, timed to the Grand Prix weekend, demands its own planning logic entirely. Our advisors hold relationships and local knowledge across every one of these micro-regions, which is what allows us to place charters where the experience is best, not simply where berths remain available. Berths for yachts above fifty metres are the scarcest resource in Mediterranean yachting. The advisable lead time for anything in this bracket is ten to twelve months. That window is not a formality; it is the margin between a considered itinerary and a compromised one.
| Weekly rate, from | $310k |
| Weekly rate, top of band | $980k |
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