Sable Yachts · Programmatic Index

Caribbean Yacht Charter in February

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

February in the Caribbean has a quality that even seasoned travellers consistently underestimate. The trade winds have settled into their most reliable rhythm, running at 15 to 20 knots from the east and producing the kind of beam-reach sailing that makes a skipper look effortlessly competent. The swell is manageable, rarely above 1.5 metres in sheltered passages, and the afternoons arrive warm without the punishing humidity of high summer. More importantly, the islands are themselves again. The Christmas flotilla departed weeks ago. The Carnival crowds have not yet gathered. What remains is the archipelago at its most composed: anchorages with genuine space to swing, restaurant tables available without a three-day advance reservation, and an encounter with the islands that feels earned rather than packaged. For those chartering a sailing yacht or motor yacht of 60 to 100 feet, the BVI remains the most versatile February base. A seven-night itinerary out of Tortola might open with a first night at The Bight on Norman Island, progress south to the Indians for morning snorkelling, then push across Sir Francis Drake Channel to Anegada for a lobster lunch that costs nothing like what it would on St Barths. The second half of the week rewards a slower pace through Virgin Gorda, the Baths at low tide, and a final sundowner at Saba Rock. Guests who want sharper glamour can position in Gustavia and spend the week threading through St Martin, Anguilla and St Kitts, where the music and the rum punches are reliably excellent and the dress code relaxes in direct proportion to the distance from the superyacht dock. The profile of the February charter guest is, anecdotally, more serious than December. Fewer corporate groups, more couples marking a significant anniversary, more families with older children who can actually crew. These guests tend to book earlier and research harder. Brokers consistently advise an eight-to-twelve-month lead time for crewed yachts in the 80-foot range; anything shorter in a popular size bracket means navigating what remains after the motivated buyers have selected. Base rates for a crewed 85-foot sailing catamaran in February typically sit between $42,000 and $58,000 per week, before provisioning, fuel, and port fees, which generally add 25 to 35 percent to the final invoice.

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Frequently Asked

Practical answers.

Why is February considered the best month for a Caribbean yacht charter?
February sits squarely in the heart of the dry season. You get consistent trade winds out of the northeast, typically 15 to 20 knots, which means comfortable sailing and flat seas in the lee of the islands. Rain is rare. Temperatures hold around 80 degrees Fahrenheit. The crowds that pack St. Barts for New Year's have thinned out, so anchorages are quieter and marina berths actually available. It is genuinely the sweet spot of the charter season.
Which Caribbean islands should we prioritize for a two-week February charter?
That depends on what your group wants out of the trip. The British Virgin Islands are the easiest starting point, well-protected waters and short passages, good for first-time charterers. For more variety and longer sails, the Grenadines from Grenada up to St. Vincent offer outstanding diving and fewer crowds. St. Martin down through St. Barts and Anguilla is the right move if dining and nightlife matter to the group. Most experienced brokers will ask about your priorities before recommending a route.
How far in advance do we need to book a crewed yacht for February?
For February specifically, plan on booking at least nine to twelve months out if you want real selection. The best crewed yachts in the 60 to 100 foot range get snapped up early, often by repeat clients who rebook at the end of the previous charter. If you are coming to us in October asking about February, we can still find you something good, but the top-tier options will already be gone. The earlier the conversation starts, the better the outcome.
What does the charter fee actually cover, and what should we budget beyond it?
The base charter fee covers the yacht and crew. Everything else runs on top. The standard industry estimate for expenses beyond the base rate is 30 to 35 percent. That covers fuel, provisioning, dockage, communications, and crew gratuity, which is typically 10 to 20 percent of the charter fee for a good crew. Some yachts offer an All-Inclusive package that wraps most of those costs into one number, which makes budgeting simpler. We can walk you through both structures before you sign anything.
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