Sable Yachts · Programmatic Index

Caribbean Yacht Charter in May

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

May arrives in the Caribbean with the particular quality of a room after a party has cleared. The trade winds have softened to a steady twelve knots, the anchorages that spent December through April shoulder-to-shoulder with white hulls now hold perhaps a third of their winter complement, and the water in the Grenadines runs a shade of turquoise that photographs refuse to render accurately. Temperatures sit in the low thirties Celsius, mornings are dry and clear, and afternoon squalls, when they arrive, are brief and warm. The Caribbean is, in short, at its most habitually pleasant. This is the shoulder season, and it rewards those who know it. The formal charter window technically closes at the end of April, but the meteorological reality is more generous. The hurricane belt does not meaningfully activate until June, and May sits in a comfortable interlude of settled seas, reliable sun, and a near-total absence of the Antigua Sailing Week crowd. Charterers who confine themselves to the southern Grenadines benefit most. A week beginning in St Vincent, heading south through Bequia (where the Frangipani bar repays an evening), continuing to Mustique for a day ashore, then through the Tobago Cays marine park to Union Island for the final night, covers roughly sixty nautical miles of some of the most rewarding sailing in the Atlantic basin. The guest profile in May skews toward the independent-minded. School calendars have not yet broken for summer, so the weeks belong to couples, small groups of professionals seizing the lull, and experienced charterers who have done the Christmas circuit and prefer quiet water to social theatre. A 60-foot sailing catamaran in the Grenadines in May, crewed and fully provisioned, typically charters in the range of $35,000 to $45,000 per week, a meaningful discount against the same vessel in February. Booking lead time is shorter than the high season demands: four to eight weeks is generally sufficient, though the best captains and the cleanest hulls still reward an early call.

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Frequently Asked

Practical answers.

Is May a good time to charter a yacht in the Caribbean?
May sits right at the transition between high season and hurricane season, which works in your favor. The crowds have thinned, prices are softer than winter rates, and the weather is generally excellent. Winds are lighter than in January, which some guests prefer. You do want to watch forecasts after mid-June, but May itself is reliably pleasant across the BVI, USVI, St. Martin, and the Grenadines.
Which Caribbean destinations work best for a May charter?
The Grenadines are outstanding in May. Bequia, Mustique, Tobago Cays, and the Tobago reef system are at their best with calm seas and good visibility. The BVI and USVI are strong choices too. I tend to steer guests away from the northern Leewards in late May if they want stability. For a first-time Caribbean charter, St. Martin as a base gives you excellent provisioning and easy access to Anguilla and St. Barths.
What size yacht do we need for a group of six adults?
A 60 to 80 foot sailing catamaran handles six adults comfortably and gives everyone their own cabin. If your group prefers power, a 70 foot motor yacht works well. I usually recommend against going smaller than 55 feet for six people on a week-long trip. You want enough deck space to actually enjoy the boat, not just sleep on it. Budget and itinerary also factor in since catamarans run more economically on fuel than comparable motor yachts.
What is typically included in a crewed charter fee in the Caribbean?
The base charter fee covers the yacht and full crew, which on most vessels means a captain and chef, sometimes a first mate on larger boats. On top of that you pay the APA, typically 30 to 35 percent of the charter fee, which covers fuel, provisioning, dockage, and crew gratuity. Flights, personal expenses, and the bar tab beyond standard provisioning are yours. I walk every client through a detailed budget so there are no surprises when the final accounting comes.
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