Sable Yachts · Programmatic Index

Caribbean Yacht Charter in December

Live yacht charter fleet cruising Caribbean in December. Weekly rates, sample itineraries, inquiry response within 24 hours.

December in the Caribbean arrives with a change in the air that is immediately legible to anyone who has waited for it. The trade winds settle into a consistent northeast quarter, running at fourteen to eighteen knots through the islands and bringing the humidity down to something civilised. Sea surface temperatures hold at twenty-six or twenty-seven degrees, the Atlantic swell organises itself into a dependable metre-and-a-half rhythm, and the light that had been punishing through August takes on a quality that painters talk about. Squalls still appear on the horizon but they are brief, dramatic, and leave skies that look cleaned with a cloth. Early December is, by general consensus among professional skippers, the most underrated fortnight in the entire Caribbean calendar. The anchorages are open, the water is settled, and the Christmas circus has not yet arrived to fill the moorings at Gustavia and Road Town with nine-figure motor yachts. For a first charter, the British Virgin Islands present the most coherent argument: short passages, reliable holding, good provisioning and a forgiving sea state that allows guests without offshore experience to arrive looking rather better than they ought. A workable December itinerary starts at Road Town on Tortola, drops south to The Indians for snorkelling, picks up a mooring at the Bitter End area on Virgin Gorda, spends a morning at The Baths, and closes with sundowners at Sandy Spit on Jost Van Dyke before a simple beat back. Crews with two weeks and more experience aboard should consider positioning to Barbados and working through the Grenadines: Bequia to Mustique, across to Tobago Cays and down to Union Island, where the sailing has a rawer quality and the anchorages remain uncrowded. The December guest profile tilts toward families chartering a fifty-foot catamaran or mixed groups of couples on a crewed monohull between sixty and seventy-five feet. Expect to budget between fifteen thousand dollars and forty-five thousand dollars per week depending on vessel size and whether a professional crew is included. Reservations for Christmas week require twelve months of lead time; standard December dates are best confirmed by August.

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Frequently Asked

Practical answers.

Is December a good time to charter a yacht in the Caribbean?
December is one of the strongest months we book. The trade winds are consistent, typically 15 to 20 knots from the east, which makes passages comfortable and predictable. The rainy season has ended, humidity drops, and you get clear skies most days. The one thing to plan around is the holiday week between Christmas and New Year, which books out 12 to 18 months in advance and carries peak pricing. Outside that window, availability is solid.
Which Caribbean islands should I prioritize for a December charter?
The British Virgin Islands and St. Martin are the most requested in December, and for good reason. The BVIs offer protected anchorages and short day-sails between islands, which suits families and first-time charterers. St. Martin gives you a mix of French and Dutch culture with excellent provisioning. If you want something quieter, the Grenadines are exceptional in December, less crowded, great diving, and the wind angles work well for a southward itinerary from Grenada.
What size yacht do I need for a week-long Caribbean charter with six guests?
For six guests, I typically recommend a catamaran in the 50 to 60 foot range or a monohull from 55 feet up. Catamarans are popular in the Caribbean because the shallow draft lets you anchor closer to shore and the deck space handles group living better in warm weather. If you prefer a monohull, you need to be realistic about cabin sizing. Below 55 feet with six adults, it gets cramped fast, especially on passages that take more than a few hours.
What does a December Caribbean charter typically cost, and what is included?
For a crewed catamaran in the 50 to 60 foot range, base rates in December run roughly $25,000 to $45,000 per week before expenses. On top of that, budget an Additional Expenses Allowance of around 35 percent of the base rate, which covers fuel, provisioning, marina fees, and crew gratuity. The holiday week commands a premium, sometimes 20 to 30 percent above standard rates. Bareboat charters come in lower, but you will still need to account for provisioning and cruising permits.
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