
Caribbean vs Mediterranean vs Middle East
Charter Cost Breakdown

The weekly rate is never the whole story. Two charters aboard comparable yachts in different regions can carry the same headline figure and produce very different final costs — because where you go also determines how you’re taxed, how provisioning is structured, and how far the season stretches. Explore all charter destinations with a clearer sense of your budget: here is what the numbers actually look like across three of the world’s most sought-after cruising grounds.
Charter Cost Breakdown
What Influences Yacht Charter Costs
Every charter begins with a base rate covering the yacht and crew. What sits on top of that figure, and how much it adds, depends on where you go and how you travel.
The Advance Provisioning Allowance, or APA, is the mechanism most charters use to manage variable costs: fuel, food and drink, marina fees, and local taxes, all drawn from a pre-funded budget managed by the Captain. Fraser advises allowing around 30% of the base rate for APA, though active itineraries with long cruising distances and premium berthing will push that higher.
Crew gratuity of 15–20% of the base rate is a separate consideration, as is the timing of your charter: high season commands a premium, and in the most in-demand destinations, that difference is felt immediately in the weekly rate.
VAT is where the regions diverge most sharply, and for charters of significant value, it can reshape the budget more than any other single line.

Caribbean Charter: Rates, Seasons and Extras
December through April is high season across the Caribbean, and the concentration of Charterers it brings to St Barths, the Virgin Islands, and the Bahamas is reflected in peak rates and tighter availability. Outside this window, off-season rates ease considerably. The wet season from May onwards brings weather patterns that reward flexibility and a closer conversation with your Broker.
What sets the Caribbean apart financially is that many vessels charter on all-inclusive terms, with fuel costs, provisioning, and standard beverages built into the weekly rate. There is no APA to manage mid-voyage, which removes uncertainty from the budget and lets Charterers plan with a single figure in mind. This structure, combined with the near-absence of charter tax across most islands, gives the Caribbean a straightforwardness that more complex markets cannot easily match.

Mediterranean Charter: Rates, Seasons and Extras
The Mediterranean works on a plus-expenses basis: the weekly rate secures the yacht, and the APA funds the voyage. July and August bring peak rates to the Western Mediterranean, covering the French Riviera, Italy, and Sardinia. Meanwhile, the Eastern Mediterranean, stretching from the Greek islands through to Croatia, holds its season well into October and rewards those willing to travel beyond the height of summer.
In the most sought-after berths of Monaco, St-Tropez, and Porto Cervo, dockage fees at the height of summer can add meaningfully to an APA that fuel and provisioning are already filling.
VAT remains the variable that most distinguishes a Mediterranean charter price from its advertised rate. Charged at embarkation, it runs from 13% in Croatia to 22% in Italy, with France at 20% and Spain at 21%. Greece offers an interesting position: yachts holding a Greek charter licence qualify for a considerably lower effective rate than the standard 24%, which is one reason chartering in Greece consistently appeals to those who want the Eastern Mediterranean’s space and beauty without the Western Mediterranean’s peak-season cost structure.

Middle East Charter: Rates, Seasons and Extras
November to April is when the Middle East comes into its own as a charter destination. Across Dubai, Oman, and the Red Sea, this window offers warm temperatures and calm, navigable conditions that make the region genuinely rewarding to explore by yacht. Outside it, summer heat renders the same waters largely inhospitable for extended cruising.
The financial argument for the region is led by its tax position. At 5% in the UAE, VAT on charter fees is a fraction of what Charterers encounter anywhere in the European Mediterranean, and marina fees remain moderate as the region’s infrastructure continues to develop. The charter market itself is still maturing: fleet depth and destination variety continue to expand, and a Broker with genuine regional knowledge will give a more accurate picture of current availability and charter rate than any published range.

Side-by-Side Comparison: Which Region Offers the Best Value
No single region wins on every measure. Value depends on when you travel, what you spend on board, and how you weigh tax liability against fleet choice and experience.
| Caribbean | Mediterranean | Middle East | |
| High season | Dec–Apr | Jul–Aug | Nov–Apr |
| Charter format | All-inclusive (most vessels) | Plus expenses (APA) | Plus expenses (APA) |
| VAT / charter tax | 0% most islands | 13–22% by country | 5% (UAE) |
| Marina / berthing costs | Moderate | High at peak ports | Moderate, growing |
| Crew gratuity | 15–20% | 15–20% | 15–20% |
| Fleet depth | Established | Largest globally | Developing |
How to Choose the Right Destination for Your Budget
Season, tax position, and contract format interact in ways that can move the total cost of a charter far more than the weekly rate alone suggests. A week aboard the same yacht in Greece in September and in St-Tropez in August can produce very different final figures, from VAT treatment to berthing costs and APA demands. The Caribbean’s all-inclusive model offers something the others don’t: a single number that holds. The Middle East offers a lighter tax burden than either, in a market whose full depth is still to come.
Understanding how to charter a yacht is the first step; finding a Broker who reads the numbers as fluently as the anchorages is what makes the difference. Speak to a charter broker to build a cost plan around your preferred destination and dates.
With over 30 Charter Brokers averaging 18 years’ experience, Fraser’s team has navigated these calculations across thousands of charters — and knows that the right destination, timed well, rarely needs to compromise on experience to fit a budget. Browse yachts for charter and let us show you what that looks like in practice.
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