
Family Yacht Charter Guide 2026: Best Mediterranean Destinations for Kids
Best Mediterranean family yacht charter destinations for 2026 — Croatia, Greece, Italy, Türkiye. Age recommendations, kid-friendly anchorages, costs.

The azure allure of the Mediterranean, especially along the enchanting coasts of Croatia and Greece, beckons yacht enthusiasts from around the world. But a perennial question remains: to sail on a catamaran or a monohull? Both vessels offer distinct experiences and cater to varied preferences. This guide dives deep into the world of Catamaran vs. Monohull Charter, ensuring you make the most informed choice for your next nautical adventure.
At its core, a catamaran is a multi-hulled vessel, typically with two parallel hulls of equal size. This design offers stability and expansive deck space. In contrast, a monohull, with its single hull design, provides a classic, traditional sailing experience, evoking romance and nostalgia.
While the ideal size depends on the number of passengers and personal preferences, a catamaran between 40 to 50 feet often strikes the right balance. It offers ample space, privacy, and amenities without being too cumbersome to handle.
particularly. Modern catamarans are designed to handle a variety of sea conditions. While they provide stability in moderate conditions, it’s crucial to understand their behavior in rough seas (like wave slapping) and plan accordingly.
Catamarans, due to their stability and space, are popular choices for ocean crossings and long-haul trips. They offer better visibility, less rolling, and more comfort during extended journeys.
Whether you’re swayed by the allure of a catamaran or the timeless charm of a monohull, the Mediterranean coasts of Croatia and Greece await with open arms. Your choice between a Catamaran vs. Monohull Charter hinges on your sailing preferences, group dynamics, and desired experiences. Both vessels promise memories that will last a lifetime, kissed by the Mediterranean sun and cradled by its azure embrace.
Planning your trip? Explore our destinations or check our charter FAQ and request a personalized quote for your dates.
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Mediterranean weeks reward shore-side detours — a bottle of Pošip with peka in a Hvar konoba, fresh seafood and Assyrtiko on a Cyclades terrace, or a quick stop in a Sardinian trattoria before the Mistral builds. Each coastline carries its own taste.
Choose your dates and destination, browse our fleet, and use request a quote to lock in pricing. Our team confirms availability with the agency and emails the booking summary within 24 hours.
For most bareboat charters in the Mediterranean you need a recognised skipper certificate (RYA Day Skipper, ICC, or equivalent) plus a VHF licence. If you don’t hold one, we book a professional skipper alongside the boat for the week.
The base charter fee covers the boat, standard equipment, insurance, and final cleaning fee in most cases. Extras such as fuel, port fees, transit log, tourist tax and skipper service are billed separately and explained in the booking summary.
For peak weeks (mid-July to late August) we recommend booking 6–9 months ahead to lock in the boat and the early-bird discount. Shoulder seasons (May, June, September) usually have availability up to a month before departure.
The catamaran-vs-monohull debate gets simpler when you frame it around five concrete charter-week realities: stability under afternoon Maestral or Meltemi, draft for cult anchorages, accommodation density, sailing performance, and total cost.
Crossings like Split → Vis (38 nm), Dubrovnik → Korčula (50 nm), Lavrion → Tinos (80 nm) routinely involve 15–22 knots true wind on the beam. A 50-foot catamaran heels 3–7 degrees in those conditions and lets the espresso machine stay on the table. A 50-foot monohull heels 12–22 degrees, which is fine for sailors but makes lunch on the cockpit table impractical and unsettles guests new to sailing.
Catamaran draft: 1.2–1.5 m. Monohull draft (50 ft): 2.0–2.6 m. The difference is the difference between anchoring inside Stiniva (Vis, Croatia), Vinogradišće (Sv. Klement, Croatia), Voutoumi (Antipaxos, Greece), and the inner Pakleni chain — versus anchoring outside and tendering 10–25 minutes in. Over a week with 4–5 anchor stops, the time savings stack to roughly half a day.
A 50-foot catamaran: 4 double en-suite cabins (8 guests). A 50-foot monohull: 3 double cabins, 4 heads (typical 6 guests). To match catamaran capacity, you need a 60-foot monohull, which often costs more and is less manoeuvrable in marinas.
A 50-foot monohull will sail closer to the wind (35–40 degrees true) and accelerate quicker in light air than a 50-foot catamaran (45–55 degrees true, slower in under 6 knots). For sailors who want to sail rather than motor in a 5-knot Maestral morning, a monohull is the better instrument. For mixed groups where guests don’t sail, catamaran wins.
50-foot catamaran shoulder season Croatia: 9,500–13,500 EUR/week. 50-foot monohull shoulder Croatia: 5,500–8,000 EUR. The catamaran costs roughly 50–70% more for the same length but accommodates 2 more guests in equal comfort. Per-guest cost typically lands within 5–10% of each other.
The Aegean Meltemi (25–35 knots regularly) makes catamaran stability more valuable than in the Adriatic. The Cyclades crossings (Mykonos → Paros → Naxos → Santorini) are open-water 18–30 nm legs in heavy Meltemi conditions. A 47–52 foot catamaran (Lagoon 50, Bali 5.4, Saona 47) handles these conditions while keeping guests comfortable.
The Adriatic Maestral is gentler (15–22 knots typical). Catamaran’s anchoring advantage in Pakleni, Mljet, Kornati, and Vis is more decisive than the wind comfort. For a charter week with 5+ anchor nights and shore-line stern-mooring, catamarans dominate the fleet.
Are most of your guests sailors who want to sail every day, or are they swimmers and diners who want a stable platform between anchorages? If two-couple group with kids — catamaran. If a four-person sailing crew — monohull, and a 50-foot one will sail beautifully through a Croatian week.
For side-by-side cabin layouts and pricing, see our Mediterranean fleet. For routes that work with either platform, browse ready-made itineraries for Croatia and Greece. Request a quote with platform preference and we’ll match the right boat to your week.
This guide was prepared by the Europe Yachts Charter editorial team — a group of charter brokers and sailors who have been organizing yacht charters in the Mediterranean since 2007. Every itinerary, marina, and pricing range described here reflects current first-hand fleet experience and direct partnership with licensed charter agencies. Last reviewed: May 2026.
If a detail looks out of date, write us at www.europe-yachts.com/contact — we update guides quarterly.