July in the Caribbean is the industry's best-kept secret. The flotillas that occupied The Bight in the BVI through April have gone north or home; the superyachts moored in Gustavia are somewhere off Sardinia. What remains is a sea of deep aquamarine under a sky that seems genuinely larger than in winter, trade winds arriving with afternoon punctuality at fifteen to twenty knots, and anchorages where you may be the only vessel for a considerable distance. Squalls build fast and clear fast, and the light that follows, that particular quality of post-rain Caribbean afternoon light, is some of the finest this ocean produces. Sea state in July runs moderate and consistent, rewarding guests who actually want to sail rather than simply be transported. The sensible July cruising window is the southern Caribbean. The Grenadines sit beneath the principal hurricane track and offer conditions that are comfortable without being tame. A seven-night itinerary might open in St Vincent for provisioning before heading south to Bequia, where the old whaling town has a boatyard culture and rum bars that keep civilised hours. From there, three nights in Mustique, then into the Tobago Cays Marine Park for the snorkelling, which is legitimately world-class, before finishing in Carriacou. It is a circuit that delivers variety without demanding heroics from crew or guests. Booking lead time in the summer window is more forgiving than December. A crewed catamaran or performance sailing yacht between forty-five and sixty feet can typically be secured eight to twelve weeks in advance. A motor yacht above seventy feet requires closer to six months, since the available fleet contracts sharply once the main season closes. The July charterer tends to arrive knowing exactly what they want. Often a second or third time on a yacht, they prioritise privacy, reliable breeze, and a week ungoverned by social obligation. Families with school-age children are well represented, drawn as much by the absence of the peak-season crowd as by anything else. On price, a crewed catamaran sleeping six in the Grenadines commands roughly twenty-two to thirty-two thousand dollars per week all-in, a discount of around thirty percent against the same vessel in high season.
| Weekly rate, from | $165k |
| Weekly rate, top of band | $720k |
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