Catamaran CharterCaribbean
Bareboat & crewed island fleet

Catamaran charter
Caribbean

Dates

300+

Catamarans in fleet

4

Caribbean charter regions

100%

Best-price guarantee

24/7

Local charter support

— Discover

Sail warm trade winds and clear water.

Discover hidden cays, coral reefs, and white-sand beaches with our premium fleet.

Your Dream Yacht Escape Starts Now
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Your Dream Yacht Escape Starts Now

Island-hop through steady trade winds. Snorkel with turtles, drift over sandbars, and wake to blue horizons. Share dates and crew list. We build a route, arrange skipper and hostess, book moorings, and set up transfers and provisioning. You focus on the holiday.

Request a Quote
Premium Yachts, Unmatched Experiences
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Premium Yachts, Unmatched Experiences

Modern Lagoon, Fountaine Pajot, and Bali models, including Lagoon 42 and 46, Astrea 42 and Tanna 47, Bali 4.4 and 4.6. Air-conditioning on selected yachts, generator, watermaker, and water toys on request. Professional maintenance and full safety gear.

Browse Our Fleet
Explore the Caribbean in Style
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Explore the Caribbean in Style

BVI. Short hops, line-of-sight sailing, national park moorings at The Indians and The Baths. Bahamas. Exuma Cays Land and Sea Park, tidal awareness, sandbanks, blue holes. Martinique. French-Caribbean flavour, rainforest hikes, turtles at Anse d’Arlet. Grenada and the Grenadines. Spice Island culture, Tobago Cays marine reserve, smooth reaches.

Find Your Ideal Route
— Why charter with us

Premium fleet, local expertise.

The Caribbean is a year-round catamaran charter destination shaped by steady 15-20 knot easterly trade winds, water temperatures that rarely drop below 26 °C, and an archipelago that spans 3,000 km from the Bahamas to Grenada. Our four home bases — Road Town and Nanny Cay in the BVI, Palm Cay Marina in Nassau, Le Marin in Martinique, and Port Louis in St. George's, Grenada — sit on the same trade-wind belt but cover four distinct cruising grounds. The British Virgin Islands deliver the shortest line-of-sight passages, the Exumas the longest sandbar drifts, the Grenadines the densest UNESCO-protected snorkel anchorages, and Martinique-to-Grenada the most cultural variety in a single week.

A catamaran is the right boat for these waters. Two hulls keep the boat under 5° heel under sail in the persistent trades, the wide deck handles 8-10 guests without crowding, and shallow draft (typically 1.2-1.4 m on a Lagoon 42 or Bali 4.4) lets you anchor in pale-blue lagoons that a monohull cannot reach. Bareboat charter dominates the BVI thanks to a forgiving line-of-sight navigation pattern; the Bahamas, Martinique and Grenada lean more towards skippered or fully crewed for clients who want a captain to handle longer crossings and inter-island clearance paperwork.

Catamaran Charter Caribbean is part of Boat4You Group, a yacht charter broker operating since 2013. Every yacht in our Caribbean fleet is vetted by local marina partners in Tortola, Nassau, Le Marin and St. George's. Pricing is transparent with no booking fees, every quote carries a 72-hour cooling-off window after confirmation, and every client payment is additionally insured through Wiener Insurance Group. One point of contact from the first inquiry to the last anchorage.

Transparent pricing

Clear rates. No hidden fees. Written quotes before you pay.

Flexible reservations

Hold a yacht while flights lock in. No reservation fee.

Local support

Caribbean-based team, licensed skippers, trusted marina partners.

More destinations

Sailing also in Croatia, Greece, and Italy.

Unmatched service

5 star support before, during, and after your trip. Bareboat or fully crewed.

Online booking

Live availability, secure checkout, fast confirmation.

— FAQ

General questions

The dry season runs December through April with steady 15-20 knot north-easterly trade winds, water temperatures of 26-28°C, and zero hurricane risk. Peak weeks fall January through mid-March; the Christmas Winds reinforce the trades to 20-25 knots from late December to early January. April-May and November are the shoulder months with materially lower rates and warm sea. Atlantic hurricane season is June through November (peak August-October); Grenada and Trinidad sit below 12°N — outside the main hurricane belt — and can be cruised year-round with reduced insurance restrictions.

Four home bases cover the four cruising grounds we broker: Road Town and Nanny Cay, Tortola for the British Virgin Islands; Palm Cay Marina, Nassau for the Bahamas (Exumas); Le Marin, Martinique for the northbound Grenadines and Saintes; Port Louis Marina, St. George's, Grenada for the southbound Grenadines. Round-trip charters from each base are standard. One-way options include BVI → St. Martin, Grenada ↔ St. Vincent, and Le Marin ↔ St. Lucia on request.

For a 4-cabin Lagoon 42 or Bali 4.2 expect €7,500-€11,500 per week bareboat in shoulder season (April-May, November) and €13,500-€19,500 per week in peak season (December-March). Larger 46-50 ft catamarans run €18,000-€28,000 peak. Skipper adds €220-€280/day, hostess €180-€220/day, chef €240-€300/day plus food. Variable costs paid at base: Bahamas cruising permit ($300 USD), BVI marine park fees ($15/yacht/day), Grenadines mooring fees ($30-50 USD/night), fuel, and end-cleaning — all itemised on every written quote.

Licence rules differ by country. BVI and Bahamas accept a self-declared sailing résumé at check-in — no formal licence required for bareboat; the base may insist on a co-skipper if experience reads thin. Martinique follows French rules — ICC, French Permis Hauturier, or recognised equivalent. Grenada requires ICC, RYA Day Skipper or ASA 104 minimum plus a VHF SRC certificate. Always send a scan ahead of booking — we'll confirm acceptance with the home base before contracts go out.

BVI is the easiest first-time bareboat — line-of-sight navigation between Tortola, Norman Island, Cooper, Virgin Gorda and Anegada, 25-30 mooring buoys per anchorage, all passages 5-15 nm. Bahamas (Exumas) rewards longer crossings with empty sandbars, swim-with-pigs at Big Major Cay, and Thunderball Grotto — passages run 15-30 nm with the occasional 40-50 nm jump to Eleuthera. Grenadines (Martinique → Grenada) packs the densest snorkel anchorages in the Caribbean — Tobago Cays Marine Park, Bequia, Mayreau, Mustique — with 5-12 nm hops between islands and the most cultural variety: French Creole, British, independent island states all on one week.

Plan 3-4 hours under way most days and anchor by early afternoon for swimming, snorkelling and sundowners. BVI averages 5-15 nm passages — Tortola → Norman → Cooper → Virgin Gorda → Anegada → back. Bahamas Exuma chain runs 15-30 nm between cays with the Nassau-to-Eleuthera or Nassau-to-Andros crossings stretching to 40-50 nm. Grenadines packs 5-12 nm island-hops between Bequia, Mustique, Canouan, Tobago Cays and Union. With 15-20 knot trades on the beam most passages are sailed not motored.

A one-time $300 USD permit on arrival at the port of entry (Nassau, Marsh Harbour, Bimini) covers a 12-month cruising and fishing licence for yachts up to 35 ft; vessels over 35 ft pay $500 USD. All foreign-flagged yachts entering Bahamian waters must clear in within 24 hours of arrival — fly the yellow Q flag until cleared. Departure clearance is also required. If you charter a Bahamian-flagged catamaran from Nassau or Palm Cay the boat is already permitted; no separate fee.

Caribbean trade winds blow east-north-east at 15-20 knots December through May, dropping to 10-15 knots June through November. The Christmas Winds reinforce trades to 20-25 knots from late December to early January — booking around that window is the trade-off between strong reaching conditions and busier anchorages. Atlantic hurricane season runs 1 June - 30 November (peak August-October). Most charter insurance excludes named-storm-zone cruising July-October, restricting BVI / Bahamas / northern Antilles charters. Grenada and Trinidad sit below 12°N — outside the main hurricane belt — so the southern Grenadines stay open year-round with minor insurance surcharges.

— Plan your week

Plan the week. We'll find the catamaran.

Send a brief — a Caribbean broker replies inside one working day with a costed offer and a matched catamaran.