⚖️ Bareboat vs Crewed Charter — Quick Summary
- Bareboat: $4,000–$15,000/week · You're the captain · Sailing cert required · More affordable
- Crewed: $8,000–$30,000+/week · Captain + chef included · No experience needed · More luxurious
- Middle ground: Bareboat + hired skipper ($200–$300/day) · Best of both worlds
- Best for beginners: Crewed or bareboat + skipper
- Best for experienced sailors: Bareboat — freedom and savings
The bareboat vs crewed charter decision is the single most important choice you'll make when planning a sailing vacation. It affects your budget, your daily experience, and how relaxed (or hands-on) your trip will be. There's no universally right answer — it depends on your group. Here's the honest breakdown.
Bareboat Charter: Full Freedom, Full Responsibility
A bareboat charter means you rent the boat and nothing else. You're the captain, navigator, chef, and crew. It's the sailing equivalent of renting a car instead of hiring a driver.
What You Get
- The boat with all safety equipment, dinghy, navigation instruments
- Bed linens, towels, galley equipment
- Basic snorkel gear
- Charter company briefing and 24/7 support
What You Don't Get
- A captain or crew
- Food, drinks, or provisioning (though you can order a provisioning package)
- Someone to handle anchoring, mooring, navigation, or weather decisions
✅ Bareboat Pros
- 40–60% cheaper than crewed
- Total freedom — go where you want, when you want
- More intimate (no strangers on your boat)
- The satisfaction of sailing your own yacht
- Better for repeat charterers who know the area
- Cook what you want, eat when you want
❌ Bareboat Cons
- Requires sailing certification (ASA 104 or ICC)
- You're responsible for everything (weather, anchoring, boat safety)
- Someone has to cook and clean every day
- Security deposit liability ($2,000–$5,000; waiver available)
- Can be stressful if conditions change or things break
- Night anchoring in an unfamiliar spot can be nerve-wracking
Crewed Charter: Show Up, Relax, Repeat
A crewed charter includes a professional captain and usually a chef/hostess. On larger boats, you might have a full crew of 3–4. You show up at the boat, they handle literally everything else.
What You Get
- Everything in bareboat PLUS:
- Professional captain (navigation, sailing, local knowledge)
- Chef/hostess (meals, drinks, boat upkeep, provisioning)
- Custom itinerary based on your preferences and weather
- Often all meals and drinks included (varies by charter)
- Local insider knowledge — the crew knows the hidden spots
✅ Crewed Pros
- Zero sailing experience required
- Truly relaxing — you never lift a finger
- Incredible food (many charter chefs are exceptional)
- Local expertise — crew takes you to spots you'd never find
- Better for celebrations (birthdays, anniversaries, proposals)
- No security deposit stress
- Perfect for mixed groups (some want adventure, some want to relax)
❌ Crewed Cons
- Significantly more expensive (nearly double bareboat)
- Less privacy — crew lives on the boat with you
- Less spontaneous (crew has to plan provisioning ahead)
- Crew gratuity adds 15–20% to the charter fee
- Some groups find crew presence slightly formal
- Less personal accomplishment (you're a passenger, not a sailor)
The Middle Ground: Bareboat + Skipper
Here's the option most people don't know about: you can hire just a skipper for your bareboat charter at $200–$300/day. This gives you professional navigation and sailing expertise without the full crewed charter price.
You still handle your own cooking and provisioning, but the skipper takes care of all sailing, anchoring, and weather decisions. Many skippers are also fantastic local guides who'll recommend restaurants, hidden beaches, and the best snorkel spots.
Our recommendation for first-timers who want to save money: bareboat + skipper. You get 80% of the crewed experience at 60% of the cost.
Bareboat vs Crewed Charter: Decision Framework
Answer these questions and the right choice usually becomes obvious:
Choose Bareboat If...
- Someone in your group has ASA 104/ICC certification and sailing experience
- Budget is a primary concern
- Your group enjoys cooking together (part of the adventure)
- You've chartered before and know the destination
- You want maximum privacy and freedom
- Your group is 4–8 people (manageable size for self-crewing)
Choose Crewed If...
- Nobody in your group has sailing experience
- It's a special occasion (honeymoon, milestone birthday, proposal)
- You have a mixed group where some people don't want any responsibility
- You're traveling with young children or elderly family members
- You want a truly all-inclusive, stress-free experience
- You'd rather spend your vacation budget on experience quality than save money
- Your group is 8–12 people (larger groups benefit more from crew management)
Choose Bareboat + Skipper If...
- Nobody has sailing experience but budget matters
- It's your first charter and you want to learn
- You like cooking but don't want to worry about sailing
- You want local expertise without the full crewed price
Bareboat vs Crewed Charter: Real Cost Comparison
For a 42-foot catamaran, 4 cabins, 8 guests, 7 days in the BVI (peak season):
| Cost Item | Bareboat | Crewed |
|---|---|---|
| Charter fee | $9,000 | $20,000 |
| Provisioning | $3,000 | Included |
| Fuel | $300 | Included |
| Mooring fees | $175 | Included |
| Insurance/deposit waiver | $350 | — |
| Crew gratuity (15%) | — | $3,000 |
| Total | ~$12,825 | ~$23,000 |
| Per person (8 guests) | ~$1,600 | ~$2,875 |
The crewed charter costs about 80% more in this example — but you get all meals prepared by a chef, professional sailing, and zero work. Whether that premium is worth it depends entirely on your group's priorities.
What About Privacy?
The most common concern about crewed charters: "Isn't it weird having strangers on the boat?" Short answer: no. Crews are professionals who understand boundaries. On most catamarans, the crew sleeps in a separate crew cabin (usually in the hull), and they're experts at being present when needed and invisible when not.
That said, on a bareboat, the boat is 100% yours. If your group values total privacy (honeymoon, close friend group, family trip where you want to be yourselves), bareboat delivers that.
Still Deciding?
Let us help you choose
Tell us about your group and we'll recommend the right charter type — bareboat, crewed, or something in between.