By the second week of January, the Caribbean has remembered what it is. The Christmas fleets have departed, the anchorages at Gustavia and The Bight have exhaled, and the trade winds have settled into the reliable fifteen to twenty knot rhythm that makes this ocean a sailor's particular pleasure. Sea temperatures hold at 27 degrees Celsius. The sky is the particular blue that photographers call cerulean and everyone else simply calls correct. If you have been wondering when exactly to come, the answer is now. January sits in the sweet spot of the Caribbean charter season, well past the pre-Christmas rush and well before the spring influx that follows Easter. Crowd levels across the British Virgin Islands drop noticeably after the New Year: the Baths at Virgin Gorda see perhaps half the visitors they received in late December, and anchorages in the Tobago Cays can be had with only a handful of neighbouring vessels at anchor. The seas are predominantly calm, with the Atlantic swell softened by the arc of the island chain, making passages comfortable even for guests who do not consider themselves sailors. A considered January itinerary might begin in Tortola, work east through Jost Van Dyke and Virgin Gorda before crossing the Anegada Passage to St Barths for a night or two of excellent French bistro cooking and efficient shopping, then ease south via St Martin to end in Gustavia or Sint Maarten for a convenient flight home. Seven nights, roughly 200 nautical miles, with no passage exceeding five hours. Experienced charter brokers advise booking the vessel by October to secure the best inventory; the finest captained boats in the BVI fill between August and November for the following January. The guest profile in January skews toward couples and small families who have chosen the month deliberately: professionals who found December impossible to leave the office, or parents timing the trip around school terms in Europe and the Northeast. They tend to arrive knowing what they want and leave reluctant to disembark. On pricing, a well-crewed 60-foot sailing catamaran in the BVI in January runs between $18,000 and $24,000 for the week before provisioning, placing it comfortably below a comparable Mediterranean charter in high summer.
| Weekly rate, from | $165k |
| Weekly rate, top of band | $720k |
Pulled directly from our live inventory and partner network cache.