
Maintenance, Crew, Insurance & Refit
Hidden Costs in Yacht Ownership

The headline figure on any superyacht acquisition is, in most respects, the simplest part of the equation. It appears once. What follows are the annual operating expenses that keep a world-class vessel in world-class condition, crewed by skilled professionals, ready to sail wherever and whenever you choose. Understanding these costs before you buy is not a reason to hesitate. It is the foundation of ownership done well.
Hidden Costs in Yacht Ownership
Understanding the True Cost of Yacht Ownership
Industry benchmarks put annual running costs at between 10 and 15 percent of a yacht’s purchase value. On a vessel worth €20 million, that translates to between €2 million and €3 million a year to keep her fully operational, covering everything from crew salaries and fuel costs to berthing fees, insurance premiums, and routine maintenance. The figure shifts with age, usage, and ambition: an older yacht demands more, a heavily used one burns more fuel, and a programme that crosses oceans accumulates costs that a yacht spending the season in one region does not. The hidden costs of owning a yacht are not incidental. They are structural, and they reward planning.

Maintenance and Repair Expenses
Scheduled maintenance is the backbone of cost of ownership, from engine service intervals to antifouling, hull inspections, safety equipment certification, and the systems. These include HVAC, navigation, generators, and stabilisers that require regular attention to perform at the standard an Owner expects. Yacht maintenance alone typically accounts for 5 to 10 percent of purchase value annually, and that is before unscheduled repairs enter the picture. A failed thruster, an electrical fault, or storm damage can add materially to any year’s budget.
Most superyachts require a dry dock period every few years for work that cannot be done in the water: hull repaints, running gear inspections, and deeper mechanical access. Treating maintenance as a fixed line item rather than a contingency is what keeps a yacht in the condition that justifies owning her.
Crew Salaries, Benefits and Training
For any crewed superyacht, personnel is the largest cost category. A mid-size vessel typically carries eight to fifteen full-time crew members, with individual salaries ranging from €40,000 to well over €150,000 per year, depending on role and experience: a Captain at the top, supported by engineers, a chef, deckhands, and interior staff. Crew benefits extend beyond salary to health insurance, crew training and certification, travel expenses, and crew rotation costs between contracts. On a larger superyacht, the total crew budget can exceed €1 million annually.
Getting that team right matters as much as budgeting for it. Our crew recruitment and management subsidiary, The Crew Network, draws on a database of over 45,000 seafarers to place the right people on board and manages the administrative burden of contracts, payroll, and certification on the Owner’s behalf.
Insurance Premiums and Coverage Requirements
Comprehensive marine insurance for a superyacht typically runs between 0.5 and 2 percent of the vessel’s value per year, with the exact premium shaped by cruising area, the yacht’s age and condition, claims history, and the breadth of coverage required. A standard policy covers hull insurance against physical damage, P&I insurance for third-party liability coverage, crew insurance, and, for yachts operating in higher-risk regions, piracy and war risks extensions.
Owners should work closely with a specialist marine insurance broker rather than applying general cover to a vessel of this complexity. Inadequate liability coverage carries risks that extend well beyond the premium saved.

Refit and Upgrade Costs Over Time
Every superyacht has a refit clock, driven by regulatory survey requirements and the natural ageing of systems and interiors. A major refit, typically every five to seven years, represents one of the largest single expenditures in the ownership lifecycle, often running into the millions for larger vessels. The refit budget must account for hull and structural work, machinery overhauls, interior renovation, and technology upgrades that keep the yacht competitive for private use or charter.
Owners who build refit reserves into the annual budget from the outset, rather than confronting the cost when surveys demand it, find the process far more manageable. Fraser’s refit and new build services provide the project oversight and technical expertise to approach each yard period with a clear scope and controlled budget.

How to Plan and Manage Your Ownership Budget
Beyond the major cost categories, ownership carries administrative and regulatory expenses that accumulate quietly: berthing fees and mooring costs across multiple cruising regions, fuel that scales with passage-making ambitions, provisions, registration fees, flag state compliance, VAT obligations, and customs duties where applicable. Taken individually, none is surprising. Taken together, they demand a comprehensive annual budget.
Professional yacht management services replace ad hoc decision-making with a managed programme, covering technical operations, crew administration, regulatory compliance, and supplier relationships. Centralising these responsibilities also brings visibility over management fees and day-to-day operating expenses that would otherwise be difficult to forecast.
For Owners considering charter, a professionally managed programme offers a practical route to offset costs with charter income. The latter rarely covers all operating expenses, but the contribution to ownership economics is material.
The economics of superyacht ownership are complex but not opaque. To explore what ownership could look like for you, buy a yacht with Fraser and put our 75 years of expertise to work from day one.
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