Catamaran charter Greece — Lagoon, Bali, Fountaine Pajot, Leopard. Bareboat or crewed across Cyclades, Ionian & Sporades. 72h free cancellation.
No exact matches
The Greek seas were made for catamarans. With over two thousand islands scattered across the Aegean and Ionian, sheltered channels between Mykonos, Paros, Naxos, and the volcanic arc of Santorini, and the dependable summer meltemi that fills in reliably from the north, Greek waters reward a stable two-hulled platform more than almost any other destination in the Mediterranean. With shallow draft you anchor close to the white-sand shore in coves that a deeper-keeled monohull has to leave further out. The flat saloon and wide cockpit turn long lunch stops at a cliffside taverna into a beach club rather than a yacht.
Our fleet of catamarans launches from Athens (Alimos), Lavrion, Mykonos, Paros, Corfu, Lefkas, Preveza, Rhodes, Kos, and Skiathos, with models from Lagoon, Fountaine Pajot, Bali, Leopard, and Privilege. Whether you are mapping a relaxed family week through the Saronic Gulf or a meltemi-led Cyclades crossing from Lavrion to Santorini, our quick boat finder narrows the choice to yachts that match your dates, group size, and sailing style.
The Cyclades are the defining Greek charter experience. Most charters depart from Lavrion, Mykonos, or Paros and thread their way through the iconic island chain. Mykonos delivers beaches, nightlife, and a superb provisioning base; the short hop to Delos for the archaeological site is a morning excursion no crew regrets. Paros and Naxos offer the best balance of services and shelter in the central chain — the protected bay at Naousa and the deep anchorage at Kalandos are catamaran favourites. Santorini's caldera is unforgettable at anchor, though berths are few and weather windows must be planned carefully.
See our Cyclades catamaran charter guide for sample 7-day routes, meltemi tactics, and what to budget per week.
The Ionian is the gentlest and most family-friendly of Greece's charter regions. Sheltered between Corfu in the north and Zakynthos in the south, the Ionian Inland Sea offers short legs (6–14 nm between anchorages), moderate Beaufort 3–5 afternoon breezes, and the calmest waters of any Greek region. Lefkada is the hub — the canal passage on the hour, the east-coast bays at Nidri and Vlycho, the deep inlets of Meganisi, and the classic hop to Kefalonia, Ithaca, and the turquoise caves of Zakynthos. From Corfu, a north Ionian week covers Paxos, Antipaxos, and the Paxi Blue Caves.
Read the Ionian catamaran charter guide for the classic Lefkas–Kefalonia–Ithaca loop, Lefkas Canal bridge times, and weekly cost ranges.
The Saronic Gulf is Athens's backyard sailing ground and the most accessible charter region in Greece. From Alimos Marina or Lavrion — both under 35 km from Athens International Airport — you can reach the pine-clad slopes of Aegina in under two hours. Aegina's Temple of Aphaia, Poros's clocktower quay, the car-free lanes of Hydra, and the wild anchorages of Spetses make a complete Saronic week on their own. The Peloponnese coast behind the islands reduces the open-Aegean meltemi by two Beaufort, making the Saronic the most forgiving region for first-time Greek crews.
See our Athens & Saronic Gulf guide for base options, permit details, and a sample one-week itinerary.
The Dodecanese string a chain of twelve islands south-east along the Turkish coast, from Rhodes in the south — with its UNESCO Old Town and medieval harbour — north through Symi, Nisyros, Kos, Kalymnos, Leros, and Patmos. Day sails into Turkish ports (Marmaris, Bozburun, Datça) are a popular addition for crews with a valid transit log. The Dodecanese Meltemi is slightly softer than the Cyclades equivalent, and the north-south orientation of the chain means most legs are beam-to or quartering — comfortable sailing for a catamaran even in a Beaufort 6.
The Sporades are the greenest and quietest of Greece's charter regions. Bases at Skiathos (one kilometre from Skiathos JSI airport) and Volos on the mainland put you within easy reach of pine-fringed bays and the Alonissos and Northern Sporades Marine Park — the largest protected marine area in the Mediterranean, home to the endangered Mediterranean monk seal. Short legs (4–14 nm), moderate summer winds, and excellent family anchorages make the Sporades the first choice for new-to-Greece crews who want a wildlife angle alongside their sailing.
See our Dodecanese charter guide for Rhodes and Kos base detail, Turkish coast crossing permits, and sample week-long routes.
Around 80% of our Greek charters go out bareboat, but the choice deserves real thought. To bareboat in Greece you need an ICC (International Certificate of Competence), RYA Day Skipper, ASA 104, or an accepted national equivalent, plus a VHF SRC certificate on board. One additional crew member with demonstrable sailing competence is required on the charter contract. Recent open-water experience on a similar-size catamaran is non-negotiable for base approval in the Cyclades and Dodecanese.
A skippered charter adds a captain (roughly €170–€220 per day plus food) and removes the licensing question entirely — the right option if your group is mostly non-sailors, if this is your first visit to Greek waters, or if you want to focus on the experience rather than navigation. A fully crewed catamaran with captain and hostess (or chef) sits at the luxury end: provisioning, meals, and routing are handled, and you step on board to a stocked galley and a planned itinerary you can adjust day by day.
Our team can switch the contract type even after you have picked the boat. If you are unsure, send us your dates and group profile and we will recommend the setup that fits.
The hottest, busiest, and most expensive weeks. Anchorages in Mykonos, Santorini, and around the Saronic fill by late morning; Skiathos Town quay is crowded by midday. Air temperatures sit at 28–35°C, sea at 25–28°C. The meltemi blows Beaufort 5–7 in the Cyclades and Dodecanese — reliable but demanding. Reserve six to nine months ahead for prime weeks (15 July – 20 August); Mykonos and Santorini base berths are often gone by January for the following summer.
Our recommended windows. Stable weather, sea warm enough for swimming (20–25°C), marinas calm, and prices typically 25–40% below peak rates. June and September give you the best balance of warm sea, manageable crowds, and dependable wind. Late May is excellent for the Ionian and Sporades. Early October brings quieter anchorages and cooler evenings — a strong choice for experienced crews happy to adapt itineraries around occasional autumn fronts in the Aegean.
Most catamarans are hauled out from late October. A handful remain available for warm weather windows or speciality charters, particularly in the Ionian where conditions are gentler year-round. Talk to us if dates are flexible and you want a quieter Greek experience.
Pricing depends on the model, the season, and whether the boat is bareboat or crewed. For a 4-cabin Lagoon 42 or Bali 4.2 in shoulder season, expect roughly €4,500–€7,500 per week bareboat depending on region (Sporades lowest, Cyclades highest); the same boat in peak season tends to land between €8,500 and €13,500. Larger 46–50 ft catamarans run €12,000–€20,000 per week peak. Skipper, hostess, fuel, marina fees, end-cleaning, transit log (€70), and marine-park access fees (Alonissos Marine Park, Meteora itineraries) are typically additional and listed transparently on every quote.
See the payment procedure page for the booking timeline (50% on confirmation, balance four weeks before departure) and a breakdown of refundable security deposits versus damage waivers. Greece is in the eurozone, so all pricing and on-the-water transactions are in EUR.
Saturday — Lavrion. Check-in from 17:00, base briefing including meltemi tactics and traffic separation schemes. First night in the marina. Sunday — Kea. Short 20 nm hop to Korissia Bay; afternoon swim at Gialiskari and a walk to the Ioulis hilltop village. Monday — Kythnos. Loutra Bay hot springs; anchor off Kolona — the tombolo spit between two beaches. Tuesday — Syros. Sail to Ermoupoli, the island capital with a Baroque opera house and marble-paved quay. Fuel and provisioning. Wednesday — Mykonos. Tourlos marina for berths and services; tender into Mykonos Town for dinner. Thursday — Delos (day trip) + Paros. Morning sail to Delos for the archaeological park, then south-east to Naousa Bay on Paros. Friday — Naxos. Naxos Town for the Portara sea gate and last-night dinner in the old market. Saturday — Lavrion by 09:00. 50 nm return leg, typically 6–7 hours downwind under meltemi.
For July and August, book six to nine months ahead — the best Mykonos, Lavrion, and Rhodes boats sell out by January for that summer. Shoulder season (May, June, September) is usually fine three to four months out. Last-minute deals appear within four to six weeks of departure on boats the bases want to fill, but Cyclades fleet selection thins quickly after May.
Yes. Greek regulations require a recognised skipper licence (ICC, RYA Day Skipper, ASA 104, or accepted national equivalent) and a VHF SRC certificate on board. Skipper documents are checked at base check-in. One additional crew member with sailing competence must appear on the charter contract. Cyclades and Dodecanese operators also expect recent open-water miles — if your experience is inland or sheltered-coast only, book a skippered charter for the first week.
On selected routes and dates, yes. Lavrion → Mykonos, Corfu → Lefkas, and Rhodes → Kos are among the most popular one-way charters. A one-way relocation fee applies (typically €400–€900 depending on the route) and is set by the base. Send us your preferred start and end ports and we will check fleet availability and the relocation cost for your week.
The base bareboat rate covers the catamaran with its standard inventory — sails, dinghy and outboard, bed linens, galley kit, and safety gear. Fuel, water, marina fees, transit log (€70), end-cleaning, marine-park access fees (Alonissos Marine Park), and optional extras (skipper, hostess, water toys, early check-in) are quoted separately so you see exactly what you pay for.
Yes — catamarans are the most family-friendly platform we charter. Stable on anchor, wide deck space, easy access to the water from the swim platforms, and separate cabin layouts for parents and children. The Saronic Gulf, the Ionian Inland Sea, and the Sporades are the most family-suited regions — the meltemi is either blocked by headlands or naturally softer here, giving calm mornings and manageable afternoon breezes even in peak season.
Yes. The Alonissos and Northern Sporades Marine Park charges approximately €15 per person per day for yachts inside the park boundary — payable at the Steni Vala quay office. There are no blanket park fees in the Cyclades, Saronic, or Dodecanese, but specific nature reserves (Cape Sounion anchorages, Zakynthos turtle zones) have local restrictions. Our team includes a briefing on protected areas with every charter handover pack.
Ready to start? Browse the fleet above, narrow by region or dates with the search bar, or send us your trip details and we will reply with matching catamarans, real photos, and a transparent price — usually within a few hours.
Send your dates, departure base and crew size. A broker replies with matching catamarans and a route that fits — usually within the same business day.