The Indian Ocean draws a particular kind of charter guest — one who has done the Mediterranean, explored the Caribbean, and now wants something that operates on a different register entirely. Here, the water temperature rarely drops below 27C, visibility extends to 40 metres on a calm day, and the nearest other vessel may be several nautical miles away.
Where the horizon belongs to you alone, and the reef below holds more colour than any harbour town.
Two Distinct Worlds
The Indian Ocean’s principal charter grounds divide neatly into two contrasting experiences. The Maldives offers low-lying coral atolls stretching across 900 kilometres of open ocean — a seascape defined by turquoise lagoons, submerged reef systems, and some of the most productive dive sites on the planet. The Seychelles, by contrast, is built on granite: ancient islands with forested peaks, boulder-strewn beaches, and a UNESCO-listed atoll that ranks among the world’s most important marine habitats.
Both destinations reward the slow pace that only a private charter can provide. Commercial tourism concentrates around a handful of resort islands in each archipelago, leaving vast stretches of coastline, reef, and anchorage accessible only by yacht.
When to Charter
Season planning here revolves around the monsoon cycle rather than the simple summer/winter split familiar from the Mediterranean. The northeast monsoon (November to April) brings the calmest seas and clearest skies to both the Maldives and Seychelles, making it the primary charter window. The southwest monsoon (May to October) delivers stronger winds and occasional rain — conditions that suit experienced sailors and open up different marine encounters, including manta ray aggregations in the Maldives’ Baa Atoll.
Water temperatures remain between 27C and 30C year-round in both destinations. Air temperatures hold steady in the high twenties to low thirties.
What Sets It Apart
Practical Considerations
Charter yachts typically position in Male (Maldives) or Mahe (Seychelles) for embarkation. Both have international airports with direct connections to the Gulf, East Africa, and major European hubs. Cruising permits and marine park fees apply in both destinations — your charter manager will arrange these in advance.