Top All-Inclusive Yacht Charters in Greece (Food, Crew, Costs)

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Top All-Inclusive Yacht Charters in Greece (Food, Crew, Costs)

Greece is one of the strongest destinations in the world for yacht charters, and the reason is straightforward: over 6,000 islands, most of them with anchorages that genuinely cannot be reached any other way. You can sail for a week in the Cyclades and anchor every night in a different bay, cover 200 miles and feel like you have seen ten different countries in the same archipelago. That combination of accessibility, variety and weather consistency is why the Greek charter market is one of the most developed in Europe.

The all-inclusive model solves the main logistical challenge: you get the yacht, the crew, the food, the fuel and the planning in a single package. The quality difference between charter companies is real and visible in the food, the crew professionalism and the condition of the yacht. This guide covers what is actually included, what the costs look like in 2026, how to choose between the main sailing regions, and what to watch out for before you book.

About this guide. Prices and availability change by season and year. Always confirm current rates, inclusions and APA (Advance Provisioning Allowance) requirements directly with your charter broker or company before booking.

Quick answer: all-inclusive yacht charters in Greece

What you need to know before booking

Typical weekly cost (crewed)€10,000 – €30,000+ depending on yacht size
Best value seasonMay or late September – fewer crowds, lower rates
Best region for calm sailingIonian Sea – protected bays, lighter winds
Best region for island varietyCyclades – Mykonos, Santorini, Paros
APA (extra expenses budget)Typically 30-35% of base charter fee
Booking lead time (peak season)6-12 months ahead for July and August

What is actually included – and what is not

The term “all-inclusive” varies significantly between charter companies. A true all-inclusive package covers everything with no surprises at the end of the week. Many charters that use the phrase still operate on an APA (Advance Provisioning Allowance) model, where guests pay a lump sum upfront – usually 30-35% of the base charter fee – to cover fuel, port fees, food and drinks, with any remainder returned at the end of the charter.

Top All-Inclusive Yacht Charters in Greece with a luxury catamaran sailing in turquoise waters near a Greek island village

✅ What a genuine all-inclusive charter covers

  • Yacht rental – the boat, cabins, deck spaces and onboard equipment for the charter period
  • Full professional crew – captain, chef and additional crew members depending on yacht size
  • All meals and beverages – including breakfast, lunch, dinner and drinks onboard (alcoholic and non-alcoholic)
  • Fuel and port fees – marina berths, anchoring fees and fuel for the full itinerary
  • Water sports equipment – typically snorkelling gear, paddleboards and kayaks. Jet skis and diving equipment are usually extra
  • Transfers and excursions as listed in the itinerary – off-yacht excursions that are not listed are almost always additional cost

⚠️ What often costs extra – even on “all-inclusive” packages – full cautions guide →

  • Premium alcohol – wine, beer and standard spirits may be included, but premium bottles and cocktails at island bars are typically not
  • Shoreside meals and excursions – if you eat off the boat at a restaurant or book a private tour, that is rarely part of the charter package
  • Diving equipment and instruction – even when the yacht carries some water sports gear, certified dive equipment and instructors are usually booked and paid separately
  • Crew gratuity – tipping crew is standard practice (typically 10-15% of the charter fee) and not included in the base price
  • Airport transfers – some charters include these; most do not. Confirm before booking

Cyclades vs Ionian: choosing your sailing region

The two main sailing regions in Greece are different enough that the choice should be made deliberately rather than by default. The Cyclades and the Ionian Sea attract different types of sailors and offer different experiences for the same week of charter time. Both regions have their own guide: see our Cyclades yacht charter guide and Ionian yacht charter guide for full itinerary and anchorage detail.

Cyclades Ionian Sea
Islands Mykonos, Santorini, Paros, Naxos, Delos Corfu, Lefkada, Kefalonia, Zakynthos, Ithaka
Wind conditions (summer) Meltemi wind July-August: strong, consistent, can be challenging. Better in May-June and September Lighter and more predictable. Protected bays make for easier anchoring and calmer passages
Best for Experienced sailors, island-hopping variety, nightlife, iconic photography destinations Families, first-time charterers, couples, those who prefer green landscapes to white-washed villages
Crowds (peak season) Busy. Santorini and Mykonos are extremely crowded in July and August Less crowded than the Cyclades. More space at popular anchorages
Cuisine focus Cycladic seafood, fresh grilled fish, island-specific dishes (fava from Santorini, loukoumades) Ionian cooking: bourdeto (spiced fish stew), sofrito (Corfu beef), fresh olive oil, local wines
Flying into Athens, then ferry or small flight to starting island Corfu, Kefalonia or Lefkada (Preveza airport) directly
Sailing experience required Higher – Meltemi can reach Force 6-7 in summer Lower – recommended for first charters or family groups
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The Meltemi wind – what Cyclades sailors need to know

The Meltemi is a reliable north-to-north-west wind that blows across the Aegean from July through August. It can be excellent for sailing performance but makes some anchorages uncomfortable and some passages challenging for less experienced sailors or those prone to seasickness. In the central Cyclades, it typically builds from midday and drops towards evening. Planning passages for morning departures and anchoring by early afternoon is standard practice during Meltemi season. If your charter group includes non-sailors or children, the Ionian or a May/September Cyclades window is the more sensible choice.

Monohull vs catamaran: which is right for your group

⛵ Monohull – traditional sailing experience

  • Better upwind sailing performance in stronger wind conditions like the Meltemi
  • Can access smaller, shallower anchorages that catamarans cannot reach
  • Often cheaper at equivalent size and specification
  • ⚠️Heels (leans) when sailing – less comfortable for guests prone to seasickness
  • ⚠️Less outdoor deck space for groups wanting to socialise above deck
  • 👥Best for: experienced sailors, smaller groups (4-6), those prioritising the sailing experience itself

🚢 Catamaran – comfort and space

  • Stable platform – stays flat in most conditions, significantly more comfortable for non-sailors
  • Significantly more deck and cabin space for the same overall length
  • Shallower draft allows anchoring close to beaches
  • ⚠️More expensive at comparable specification
  • ⚠️Some marina berths charge by the catamaran width, adding to port costs
  • 👥Best for: families, groups of 6-10, first-time charterers, those valuing comfort over pure sailing

For a full cost comparison including charter fees, berth charges and seasonal differences between the two formats, read our detailed catamaran vs monohull charter guide.

The crew: what good looks like

On a crewed all-inclusive charter, the crew is the most significant variable in the quality of your experience. If you are still deciding whether a crewed arrangement is right for your group, our guide to why to choose a crewed catamaran in Greece covers the full case. The yacht can be beautiful and the itinerary excellent, but a poor captain or an uninspired chef will define the week more than any other factor. Knowing what to look for in a crew profile before booking saves disappointment.

The crew: what good looks like on a luxury yacht charter in Greece, with a professional captain and hostess preparing onboard service

What to look for in a charter crew

  • Captain certification – verify the captain holds a recognised commercial endorsement (Yacht Master Commercial or equivalent) not just a recreational licence. Ask directly and check the charter company’s crew documentation policy
  • Chef background – a professional chef with hospitality training will cook meaningfully differently from someone with basic cooking experience. Ask about the chef’s background specifically, not just whether one is included
  • Crew-to-guest ratio – a minimum of one crew member per four guests is a reasonable starting point for a comfortable crewed charter. Very large yachts with small crews stretch service quality
  • Local knowledge – a captain who knows the specific sailing region intimately will find anchorages, avoid weather problems and recommend shoreside options that standard itineraries miss
  • English proficiency – in remote Greek islands, the crew are often the only reliable English-speaking contact for provisioning, local advice and emergency assistance. Confirm language capability before booking
  • Previous guest reviews – ask for crew-specific reviews, not just yacht reviews. Crew changes between seasons and a positive review about a previous captain does not guarantee the current one is the same standard

Food onboard: what to expect and how to plan it

Food on an all-inclusive crewed charter varies considerably. At the top end, a professional chef will consult with guests before departure on dietary preferences, plan menus around the local market availability at each port, and produce restaurant-quality meals in a yacht galley. For a deeper look at what onboard chefs actually do and how to brief them well, see our guide to crewed charters with an onboard chef. At the lower end, meals are functional but uninspired. The culinary experience is worth asking about specifically rather than assuming the included-chef standard.

Food onboard: what to expect and how to plan it for a luxury yacht charter in Greece with fresh Mediterranean dishes served on a catamaran

🍷 Cycladic cuisine highlights

Regional dishes

Key ingredient

Fresh seafood

Wine

Assyrtiko (Santorini)

Island specialty

Santorini fava

Cycladic cooking is lighter and seafood-focused. Grilled octopus, freshly caught red mullet, Naxos cheese, tomato fritters from Santorini and the island’s renowned Assyrtiko white wine are the highlights. A chef sourcing at the Mykonos or Naxos morning market has access to exceptional ingredients.

🫒 Ionian cuisine highlights

Regional dishes

Key ingredient

Olive oil + herbs

Dish

Sofrito (Corfu)

Influence

Venetian via centuries

Ionian cooking reflects centuries of Venetian influence alongside Greek tradition. Sofrito (braised beef in white wine and garlic) from Corfu, bourdeto (spiced fish stew) from Corfu, fresh local olive oil and Robola wine from Kefalonia are the regional markers a charter chef can work with particularly well.

Cost breakdown: what you actually pay in 2026

Charter pricing in Greece runs across a wide range, but the headline figure is rarely the complete cost. Understanding the full structure before signing avoids surprises at the end of the week. For a comprehensive breakdown across yacht types and regions, see our complete guide to yacht charter costs in Greece.

Cost element Typical range Notes
Base charter fee (crewed, per week) €10,000 – €30,000+ Varies with yacht size, age, specification and season. Larger yachts (50ft+) sit at the upper range.
APA (Advance Provisioning Allowance) 30-35% of base fee Covers fuel, port fees, food and drinks. Any unspent portion is returned at charter end. APA does not equal extra profit for the operator.
Crew gratuity 10-15% of base fee Standard practice, not obligatory, but expected. To be paid directly to crew at charter end based on satisfaction.
Fuel surcharge (if applicable) €500 – €1,500 Some charters bill fuel separately from APA. Confirm whether this applies before signing.
Shoreside meals and activities Variable Restaurant meals, private tours and island activities are not covered by the charter or APA.
Total realistic budget (all-in, per week) €13,500 – €42,000+ Base fee plus APA plus gratuity. Per-person cost for a group of 8 can range from €1,700 to €5,000+ depending on yacht and season.
📅

Best times to book – and the September case – full month-by-month guide →

High season (July-August) commands peak prices and fills up 6-12 months in advance. June and September are the most recommended alternative windows among experienced charterers: the weather is excellent, the Meltemi in the Cyclades is calmer in September, the anchorages are less crowded and prices drop by 15-25% compared to peak. May is excellent for the Ionian. Winter charters (November-March) are significantly cheaper but weather reliability is lower and many island facilities are closed.

How to choose the right charter company

📋
Step 1

Define your group and priorities before contacting anyone

  • Number of guests and sleeping cabin requirements – this determines the minimum yacht size
  • Sailing experience in the group – this determines whether Cyclades or Ionian is the safer choice
  • Priority ranking: sailing performance, comfort, food quality, island nightlife, remote anchorages
  • Fixed budget including APA and gratuity, not just the base charter rate
🔍
Step 2

Work with a charter broker rather than booking direct

  • Brokers access multiple fleets and yachts and are paid by the charter company, not by the guest – their service costs you nothing directly
  • A good broker will have visited the yachts they recommend and know the specific crews, not just the yacht listings
  • They can negotiate better terms and resolve problems during the charter – direct bookings leave you without that buffer
  • MYBA (Mediterranean Yacht Brokers Association) membership is a quality indicator for brokers
📄
Step 3

Read the charter contract carefully before signing

  • Confirm what the APA covers specifically and what falls outside it
  • Check the cancellation policy – most charters have tiered refund structures depending on lead time
  • Verify the yacht’s insurance coverage and what the guest liability position is
  • Confirm crew names and qualifications are fixed in the agreement, not “captain and crew to be confirmed”
🍽
Step 4

Complete the Preference Sheet thoroughly before departure

  • Most crewed charters issue a Preference Sheet – a detailed questionnaire about food preferences, dietary restrictions, favourite drinks and activity wishes
  • Fill it in completely and honestly. The chef uses this to plan provisioning before departure
  • Include any medical dietary requirements, not just preferences – the chef needs to know what matters versus what is merely preferred
  • Specify your preferred rhythm: some guests want every meal onboard; others want flexibility for shoreside dinners on certain evenings

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between a crewed charter and a bareboat?

A bareboat charter means you rent the yacht only – no crew included. You are responsible for sailing it yourself, planning your own provisions and dealing with any technical issues. This requires sailing qualifications and experience. A crewed charter (which is what this guide covers) includes a professional captain and additional crew. An all-inclusive crewed charter adds food, drinks and fuel to that package. For most first-time charterers, a crewed arrangement is the right starting point.

What is an APA and how does it work?

APA stands for Advance Provisioning Allowance. It is an upfront payment – typically 30-35% of the base charter fee – held by the captain to cover running costs during the charter: food, drinks, fuel and port fees. The captain keeps receipts and provides a full account at the charter end. Any unspent APA is returned to you. If the charter runs over the APA amount (due to extensive motoring, for example), you pay the difference. Some genuine all-inclusive packages fix these costs in the base fee – confirm which model applies before signing.

How many guests can a charter yacht accommodate?

Smaller yachts (around 40-45ft) typically accommodate 4-6 guests in 2-3 cabins. Larger yachts (50-60ft) can host 8-10 guests in 4-5 cabins. Catamarans of similar length generally offer more cabin space than monohulls. The number of heads (bathrooms) matters as much as cabins for group comfort – confirm both before booking.

How far in advance should I book?

For July and August, particularly in the Cyclades, 6-12 months in advance is realistic for the better yachts and crews. May, June and September have more flexibility. Winter charters are almost always available with short notice. Early booking also gives you more options for itinerary discussions with the captain rather than working around whatever the previous charter’s positioning dictates.

What kind of food can I expect onboard?

On a quality all-inclusive charter, expect three meals daily with a focus on fresh local ingredients sourced at each island’s market. Breakfast is usually lighter and flexible; lunch is often simple salads, sandwiches or lighter dishes eaten at anchor; dinner is the main meal and where the chef’s capability shows. Dietary restrictions, allergies and strong preferences are communicated via the Preference Sheet before departure and accommodated by any competent charter chef. The quality of onboard food is directly linked to the chef’s training and experience – worth asking about specifically.

Top all-inclusive yacht charters in Greece

The Greek charter market is one of the most developed in the Mediterranean for a reason. Two distinct sailing regions, consistent summer weather, anchorages that are genuinely unreachable any other way, and a food culture worth building an itinerary around. The all-inclusive model removes the main planning friction – you are not calculating fuel costs mid-passage or negotiating with a marina for a berth at 6pm. The week runs on a structure that was agreed before you boarded, which is how a sailing holiday is supposed to work.

Top All-Inclusive Yacht Charters in Greece (Food, Crew, Costs) shown on a 50 foot catamaran in turquoise Greek island waters

The decisions that actually determine the quality of your charter are made before departure: which region suits your group’s sailing experience and pace, whether a catamaran or monohull fits the way you want to spend the week, what the crew’s background is and whether the chef has been briefed properly. Getting those right matters more than the yacht’s brochure photography or the headline price.

September remains the best month for most groups – calmer Meltemi in the Cyclades, less pressure on anchorages, better availability on the yachts that sell out in July. The Ionian in May is equally strong for families or first-time charterers. Neither window requires the six-month advance booking that August demands.

If you are ready to compare options, check availability or talk through which region and yacht type fits your group, Prima Charter’s planning team can advise on current fleet availability across both the Cyclades and the Ionian. For official Greek island destination information, the Greek National Tourism Organisation is a useful starting reference for travel planning.

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Peter Johnson captain of Primacharter steering a Lagoon 50 catamaran in the Mediterranean
Captain and Co-founder at  |  + posts

Peter Johnson - Captain & Co-Founder of Primacharter

Peter Johnson is the captain behind Primacharter, and the person quietly shaping the kind of journeys people talk about long after they’ve returned home.

He has spent years sailing across the Mediterranean, not just learning the routes, but understanding the rhythm of each place. When to arrive, when to leave, where to anchor when everyone else is somewhere else. It’s not something you can rush, and it shows.

Peter isn’t interested in standard itineraries or overplanned schedules. He prefers a more intuitive approach - adjusting to the wind, the mood, and the moment. The result is a charter that feels effortless, but never accidental.

Guests trust him quickly. Not because he says much, but because everything runs exactly as it should. Calm, precise, and always a step ahead, he creates an atmosphere where you can fully switch off and simply enjoy being at sea.

At Primacharter, Peter also advises clients on yacht selection and destinations, helping them choose an experience that actually fits - not just on paper, but in real life.