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Western Mediterranean Yacht Charter

The French Riviera, Balearics, Sardinia, and the Amalfi Coast.

The Western Mediterranean is where European chartering began — and where it still reaches its highest expression. From the granite coves of Corsica to the volcanic silhouettes of the Aeolian Islands, this is a coastline shaped by millennia of seafaring, and it rewards those who explore it by water in ways no road trip can replicate.

Three Countries, Three Characters

Italy brings drama: the vertical villages of the Amalfi Coast, the emerald shallows off Sardinia’s Costa Smeralda, and anchorages beneath active volcanoes in the Aeolians. France offers polish — the Riviera’s harbour-front dining, Corsica’s wild interior descending to empty bays, and the quiet authority of ports like Antibes and Monaco. Spain delivers warmth and range, from the Balearic Islands’ turquoise calas to Barcelona’s architectural coastline.

The Charter Season

Peak season runs from late June through August, when the harbours of St Tropez, Porto Cervo, and Ibiza fill with the Mediterranean’s most recognisable yachts. But the shoulder months — May, early June, September, and into October — often deliver the finest cruising. Water temperatures remain swimmable into late September; marinas are less contested; restaurants more relaxed. Spring crossings from the Balearics to Sardinia or the Riviera to Corsica offer open-water passages with settled conditions.

What Sets It Apart

The Western Mediterranean compresses an extraordinary variety of experiences into short sailing distances. A week’s charter can move from a Michelin-starred portside dinner in Monaco to a solitary anchorage in Corsica’s Scandola reserve, covering barely 100 nautical miles. Provisioning is effortless — every harbour has its market, its fishmonger, its local wine. And the infrastructure for yachts of every size, from 20-metre sailing yachts to 80-metre-plus motor yachts, is the most developed anywhere in the world.

Where three coastlines converge, and every harbour has a story older than most nations.

Planning a Charter

Itineraries here are rarely linear. The density of worthwhile stops encourages a pace dictated by appetite rather than schedule — an extra night in Portofino because the light was right, a detour to Formentera because the wind allowed it. This is the Mediterranean’s most charted water, but it still keeps its best anchorages for those willing to round one more headland.

Frequently Asked Questions

Western Mediterranean Yacht Charter FAQ

Why charter a yacht in Western Mediterranean?+

The French Riviera, Balearics, Sardinia, and the Amalfi Coast.

How much does a yacht charter in Western Mediterranean cost?+

Charter rates depend on the yacht — size, builder, age, and season all drive the weekly price. For modern motor yachts built after 2015, typical weekly rates from our fleet are: 20–25 metres from €30,000 to €55,000; 25–30 metres from €50,000 to €100,000; 30–40 metres from €90,000 to €175,000; 40–50 metres from €175,000 to €350,000; and 50 metres and above from €275,000 to well over €1,000,000. Older or recently refitted yachts can be significantly less. Fuel, food, and berthing are covered separately by the APA (Advance Provisioning Allowance). Contact us with your dates and guest count for a quote tailored to Western Mediterranean.

How do I book a yacht charter in Western Mediterranean with Drivas Yachts?+

Send an enquiry through this page or contact Aris Drivas Yachting directly. As an MYBA Corporate Member with 50+ years of Greek brokerage experience, ADY arranges the entire charter — yacht selection, contracts, provisioning, crew briefing, and on-water support.

Ready to charter in Western Mediterranean?

Dates, guest count, and preferences. We will shortlist the best-matched yachts for your voyage.