Blue Ocean Club
Luxury yacht charter Mykonos 2026 — crewed superyacht anchored on the Mediterranean coast
Mediterranean

Yacht Charter Mykonos

Part of Greece Yacht Charter.

A Mykonos yacht charter is the only way to do the island properly — sleeping at anchor off Psarou before the day-trippers arrive, lunching at Nammos without queueing at the gate, and slipping across to Delos and Rineia in under an hour. Our Mykonos yacht charter fleet ranges from sailing catamarans for couples to 50m+ motor yachts for the Scorpios crowd.

Find Your Yacht in Mykonos
Introduction

Why charter a yacht in Mykonos.

A luxury yacht charter Mykonos rewards guests with a combination you cannot replicate from a hotel: total privacy, an itinerary that flexes around your party, and access to coves, restaurants and reefs that road-bound travellers simply never see. Blue Ocean Club curates Mykonos cruises across motor yachts, sailing yachts, catamarans and superyachts — every option live-priced against the global live availability feed and presented with our 100% best-price guarantee.

Mykonos sits at the heart of one of the world's great cruising grounds. Days unfold at the pace of the sea: long swims off the platform, lunch at a beach club where your concierge has held the best table, an afternoon cruise to a quieter anchorage, cocktails on the bow as the light softens. The captain rewrites tomorrow's plan based on tonight's weather and your party's mood.

We work with a small list of crewed yacht charter Mykonos operators we know personally — captains we have cruised with, chefs whose tasting menus we have eaten, stewardesses who know your children's names by the end of day one. The result is a charter that feels less like a booking and more like a private invitation.

What to Expect

Yacht Charter in Mykonos — What to Expect

The Mykonos charter season runs from late May through early October, with warm settled days, calm mornings and a reliable afternoon breeze. Sea temperatures climb into the mid-20s°C through high summer and the prevailing winds rarely exceed a comfortable Force 4.

Signature anchorages, swim-only coves and a handful of marquee harbours form the backbone of any Mykonos sailing itinerary — your captain rotates between them daily based on wind, swell and the rhythm of your party. A crewed catamaran in the 50–70 ft range remains the most versatile choice for Mykonos, with shallow draft for tucked-away bays and the deck space families and groups expect. Couples often prefer a sailing yacht of 50–60 ft; larger parties step up to a motor yacht or superyacht with full crew.

Typical luxury yacht charter Mykonos cost starts from around €25,000 per week for a comfortable crewed catamaran and scales to €150,000–€500,000+ for a 40 m superyacht — base rates are exclusive of APA (usually 25–35%), fuel, VAT and crew gratuity. Our charter managers run live availability against your dates and present the best three options, side by side, with a 100% best-price guarantee. Minimum charter duration is seven nights in peak season; short-week and split itineraries are available in shoulder months. Tell us your dates, party size and preferred yacht style and we will revert within the day — by email, WhatsApp or a 20-minute call with the broker who will run your charter.

Best Time to Visit

When to charter in Mykonos.

The prime window for a yacht charter Mykonos runs late May through early October. Use the table below to balance weather, value and crowds.

MonthWeatherProsConsCrowd
April18–22°C, mildQuiet anchorages, lower ratesSea still coolLow
May22–25°C, sunnyWarm sea begins, blossoming coastSome restaurants openingLow
June26–28°C, idealLong days, perfect breezeRising demandModerate
July29–32°C, hotPeak swimming, full event calendarPopular berths busyHigh
August30–33°C, hotFestivals, full nightlifeHighest rates, advance booking essentialVery High
September26–29°C, warmWarm sea, quieter portsOccasional Meltemi/Bora windsModerate
October22–25°C, mellowSoft light, value ratesShoulder-season closuresLow
Season Guide

Greek Cyclades charter season, events & booking calendar

Month-by-month weather, regatta dates, beach-club openings and the exact weeks our brokers recommend for this cruising ground.

View Season Guide →
Cruising Grounds

Top cruising areas & highlights of Mykonos.

A handful of signature experiences that define a charter on this coast.

01

Historic harbours

Step ashore into the storied old towns and waterfronts of Mykonos.

02

Hidden coves

Anchor in pine-fringed bays that road-bound travellers will never see.

03

Beach-club lunches

Reserved tables at the most coveted clubs along the coast.

04

Cellar-driven dining

Private chefs source from local vineyards and morning fish markets.


slug: mykonos-yacht-charter name: Mykonos meta_title: Mykonos Yacht Charter — Editorial Guide for 2026 | Blue Ocean Club meta_description: Mykonos is the most over-booked anchorage in the Aegean and the most rewarding one in the right window. Here is how to charter it without losing the week to the south-coast traffic. h1: Mykonos Yacht Charter

The Island That Sells the Calendar, Not the Coast

Mykonos is six miles long and four miles wide, a Cycladic rock with one significant town, one new marina (Tourlos, on the west side, opened in 2008 and recently expanded), and one of the most operationally difficult charter calendars in the Mediterranean. In the first week of August, the south coast of the island — the beach-club axis from Psarou and Ornos through Paraga, Paradise, Super Paradise, Elia, and Kalo Livadi — handles an estimated three hundred large day-charter boats simultaneously, and the dinner reservation calendar at Nammos, Scorpios, Spilia, Hippie Fish, and Principote is effectively closed to anyone who started planning later than May.

This is the central commercial fact of Mykonos and the one most first-time charters miss. The island is not selling the cruising ground. The cruising ground — half a dozen open south-facing anchorages, no significant cultural sites, no surrounding archipelago worth the day-trip — is incidental. Mykonos is selling the social calendar: a six-week peak from mid-July through the end of August where every meaningful Mediterranean party programme converges on a single twelve-square-mile island. Either you have the calendar booked and the operational logistics in place, or you do not, and the difference between the two charter outcomes is dramatic.

The Beach Club Hierarchy

The Mykonos beach-club economy is the most concentrated luxury-daytime market in the Mediterranean. The hierarchy is well-defined and the booking system is tightly controlled. The captain who delivers an effortless Mykonos week is the one whose charter manager has the table bookings confirmed by early June.

Nammos at Psarou is the institution. Founded in 2003, materially expanded since, and now the most-booked Mediterranean lunch table after Club 55 in Saint-Tropez. The crudités and the grilled lobster are the menu. The spend-per-table in peak week clears €3,000 routinely. Booking is opaque; the table priority works on relationship and spend history.

Scorpios at Paraga is the social and cultural anchor of the modern Mykonos programme. The afternoon DJ sets that build from 17:00 into the early evening are the most-attended Mediterranean late-afternoon scene of the summer. The dinner programme is a separate booking layer.

Principote at Panormos on the north coast is the contemporary alternative. Smaller, more curated, materially harder to access from the south coast anchorages, and increasingly the connoisseur's choice for the lunch that doesn't feel like a Saturday at Nikki Beach.

Spilia at Agia Anna is the dinner table. Carved into the cliff at the eastern edge of the island, accessible by tender to the small bay below, the menu is the seafood-and-mezze platform that runs through most of the better Mykonos kitchens. The reservation is the hardest in the chain after Nammos.

The second-tier programme — Kalua, Hippie Fish, Solymar, Kalo Livadi Beach — operates as the fall-back if the top-tier bookings did not land. There is no shame in the second tier; the food is often better.

The Mooring Problem

The dominant operational fact of Mykonos in peak season is that there is no comfortable overnight anchorage on the south coast. The south-facing bays — Ornos, Psarou, Paraga, Paradise, Super Paradise — are exposed to the prevailing summer Meltemi, which builds from the north and wraps around the western tip of the island into a building chop on the south anchorages by mid-afternoon. The day programme works (boats anchor for the lunch and the swim), but the overnight pattern almost always involves moving the boat — either north into Tourlos marina or the protected Ornos bay (when the Meltemi softens), or south to Delos, or further afield to the lee of Naxos, Paros, or Rinia.

The new Tourlos marina takes about ten 50-metre-plus yachts and a further forty smaller boats. Allocation in peak season is tight; the slot needs to be booked materially in advance, and the marina is twenty minutes by tender from the town's main quay and the south-coast beach clubs. A charter that needs Tourlos and doesn't have it ends up at anchor in an open roadstead with the boat rolling through the night.

The Day-Trip Anchor to Delos

The single meaningful cultural excursion from Mykonos is the day trip to Delos, the sacred island three miles southwest of Mykonos town. Delos is one of the most important archaeological sites in the Aegean — the birthplace of Apollo in Greek mythology, the cult centre of the Cycladic world, with extensive Hellenistic and Roman ruins. The site is open during the day and closed overnight (no one is permitted to sleep on Delos), and the boat can anchor in the sheltered channel between Delos and Rinia for the lunch hour while guests tour the site.

A good Mykonos week builds the Delos morning into the calendar. It is also the only stop on the island programme that does not involve a beach-club booking.

The Itinerary That Works

The standard Cycladic week with Mykonos as the centrepiece, embarking from Athens (Lavrion or Alimos):

  • Day 1: Athens to Kea or Kythnos. Two- to four-hour shakedown, gentle introduction to the cruising ground.
  • Day 2: Across to Mykonos. Arrive at Ornos in the afternoon, anchor for the night in the lee of the south coast or move to Tourlos.
  • Day 3: South coast day — Psarou and Scorpios. Lunch at Nammos, afternoon at Scorpios, dinner ashore at Spilia or aboard.
  • Day 4: Delos and the move south. Morning at Delos for the cultural day, lunch on board at anchor between Delos and Rinia, run south in the afternoon to Naxos or Paros for the night.
  • Day 5: Naxos or Paros. The two larger islands south of Mykonos are the day-off from the social density. Lunch at Apollon on Naxos or at Mario in Naoussa on Paros, anchor for the night in a sheltered bay.
  • Day 6: Back to Mykonos for the second pass. Lunch at Principote on the north coast, dinner at the second-tier table (Spilia having been done on the first pass), overnight at Tourlos or in the Ornos lee.
  • Day 7: Mykonos back to Athens. Long return run, or one-way disembark by helicopter if the budget allows it.

The Operational Realities

The Meltemi. The northerly Aegean wind builds through the morning and peaks in the late afternoon at 25 to 35 knots in peak season. It governs the entire Mykonos overnight pattern; a captain who watches the GFS model and repositions the boat for the night is the difference between a comfortable charter and a rolling one.

Tender capacity. Every beach-club run is a tender exercise. The boat that arrives in Mykonos with a single tender struggles; two driver-tenders is the operational minimum for the south-coast day programme.

Provisioning. Mykonos town and Ornos have functioning supermarkets but the supply chain is over-loaded in peak week. Most serious charters provision in Athens before departure and re-stock perishables mid-week through the local agency network.

The Greek charter framework. Greek VAT on charter is 12 percent on the base fee, with the offshore-time reduction calculated by the captain. APA is 25 to 30 percent. Greece's commercial charter regulations have tightened materially since 2014; reputable operators hold properly endorsed flags and the compliance environment is in a much better place than a decade ago.

Costs

A 30-metre motor yacht with Mykonos as the centrepiece of a Cycladic week runs €70,000 to €120,000 per week base in peak season. A 40-metre runs €140,000 to €240,000. The Mykonos premium over a neutral Cycladic week is roughly 15 to 20 percent, almost entirely absorbed by the beach-club spend rather than the yacht charter rate itself.

What Mykonos Actually Is

Mykonos is the social peak of the Greek summer and the most over-booked island in the Aegean during a six-week window each year. The charter case is the case for the calendar — Nammos, Scorpios, Spilia, the south-coast lunch programme, the late-night Mykonos town walk — and the operational machinery (tender capacity, table bookings, Tourlos slot, Delos timing) that makes the calendar work without friction. Outside the peak six weeks, Mykonos is a quieter Cycladic island with empty restaurants, available anchorages, and a different and arguably better charter proposition that very few first-time visitors ever experience. The first Mykonos charter almost always books August. The second one increasingly books late June or late September.

Sample Itineraries

Suggested routes for Mykonos.

Starting points — every itinerary is rewritten around your party, weather and the captain's local knowledge.

7 Days

The Classic Mykonos Week

Route map for The Classic Mykonos Week in Mykonos
  1. Day 1Embarkation, welcome lunch on board, short cruise to a quiet first anchorage.
  2. Day 2Morning swim, lunch at a coastal restaurant by tender, afternoon cruise.
  3. Day 3Full day at a marquee island — beach club lunch, sunset cocktails ashore.
  4. Day 4Quiet anchorage day — water toys, paddleboarding, private chef dinner.
  5. Day 5Cultural town visit, historic old harbour, dinner in a candlelit courtyard.
  6. Day 6Long swim morning, lunch under way, final marquee anchorage.
  7. Day 7Champagne breakfast, gentle return to base, disembarkation.
10 Days

Extended Mykonos Cruising

Route map for Extended Mykonos Cruising in Mykonos
  1. Day 1Embarkation, settle aboard, short repositioning.
  2. Day 2Two days exploring the most photogenic coastline.
  3. Day 3Cultural day ashore with a private guide.
  4. Day 4Diving / snorkelling day on the best reef in range.
  5. Day 5Long cruising day to a quieter archipelago.
  6. Day 6Beach-club lunch and shopping in a marquee port.
  7. Day 7Sunset crossing, chef's tasting menu on the aft deck.
  8. Day 8Final swim morning, leisurely return to base.
  9. Day 9Disembarkation after breakfast on board.
14 Days

The Grand Mykonos Voyage

Route map for The Grand Mykonos Voyage in Mykonos
  1. Day 1Embarkation and welcome dinner on board.
  2. Day 2Week one: classic seven-day route in slow motion — twin nights at the best anchorages.
  3. Day 3Repositioning across to a neighbouring cruising ground.
  4. Day 4Three days exploring a less-visited archipelago.
  5. Day 5Cultural shore day with a private historian.
  6. Day 6Return cruise via marquee ports with beach-club lunches.
  7. Day 7Final sunset crossing and farewell dinner.
Experiences

Things to do on your Mykonos charter.

From quiet anchorages to marquee beach clubs — a sample of what we routinely arrange.

  • Private beach-club lunches at the coast's most coveted tables
  • Cellar-driven dinners with the yacht's chef sourcing from local markets
  • Snorkelling, scuba diving and underwater scooter tours of nearby reefs
  • E-foiling, seabobbing, wakeboarding and paddleboarding from the swim platform
  • Private historian or sommelier-led shore excursions in old towns
  • Helicopter transfers to inland vineyards, golf courses and Michelin restaurants
  • Spa treatments and yoga on the foredeck at anchor
  • Tender picnics on hidden beaches reachable only by water
  • Sunset cocktails on the bow with the captain charting tomorrow's course
  • Stargazing nights in remote anchorages well away from coastal light
Yacht Types

Charter types suitable for Mykonos.

Motor yachts

Distance, range and interior volume — ideal for guests prioritising comfort, climate control and easy long crossings.

Sailing yachts

The most romantic way to charter — silent passages under canvas, classic teak decks and timeless aesthetics.

Catamarans

Two hulls equal stability, shallow draft and generous deck living space — a favourite for families and groups of 8–12.

Superyachts

40m and beyond: full-time chef, spa, gym, dive team, helicopter pad and water-toy hangars to rival a private resort.

Charter Cost

What does a Mykonos yacht charter cost?

Weekly base rates for a Mykonos yacht charter vary by yacht type, size and season. Below are typical ranges our clients see — exclusive of APA (Advance Provisioning Allowance, usually 25–35%), fuel, VAT and crew gratuity.

Yacht tierWeekly base (EUR)Notes
Sailing yacht (40–55 ft)€8,000 – €18,000Crewed or bareboat, ideal for couples and small families.
Catamaran (45–60 ft)€15,000 – €40,000Space and stability for 6–10 guests; the most popular choice in many regions.
Motor yacht (60–90 ft)€35,000 – €90,000Crewed, faster cruising radius, full service on board.
Superyacht (90 ft +)€100,000 – €500,000+Full crew, tenders and toys; pricing scales with length, build year and brand.
What affects the final price
  • Season — peak July / August commands a 20–40% premium over shoulder months.
  • Yacht age, refit year and brand reputation.
  • APA (Advance Provisioning Allowance) covers fuel, food, dockage and concierge extras.
  • Local VAT and cruising taxes depending on flag and itinerary.
  • Crew gratuity, customarily 5–15% of the base charter fee.
Team Pick

A personal recommendation from Mateo.

Mykonos is one of the destinations I quietly hope clients ask me about — there are corners of it most charter brochures never show. Late June and early September are my personal favourite weeks — warm water, lighter traffic, and the crews are at their sharpest. Happy to walk you through the itinerary personally — there are a few stops worth building the week around.
Mateo Ferrer, Balearics Specialist at Blue Ocean Club
Mateo Ferrer
Balearics Specialist
Questions

Mykonos yacht charter FAQs.

When is the best time to charter a yacht in Mykonos?+
The shoulder seasons of June and September are ideal. The weather is fantastic, the sea is warm, and the crowds are smaller than in the peak months of July and August. However, if you want the full, high-energy Mykonos experience, then July and August are the time to go.
What is the Meltemi wind?+
The Meltemi is a strong, dry northern wind that blows across the Aegean, primarily in July and August. It provides a welcome cooling effect, but can create choppy seas. Your experienced captain will plan your itinerary to ensure you are always in calm, comfortable anchorages.
Do I need to book beach clubs and restaurants in advance?+
Yes. For famous venues like Nammos, Scorpios, and Interni, reservations are essential, often weeks or even months in advance in high season. Your charter broker and yacht captain can assist with securing these bookings.
Is Mykonos suitable for a family charter?+
Absolutely. While famous for its nightlife, Mykonos offers plenty for families. A yacht allows you to access quiet, family-friendly beaches, enjoy a huge range of water sports, and explore historical sites like Delos. A catamaran is an especially good choice for families.
Where does my yacht charter begin?+
Most charters start and end at the Mykonos New Port in Tourlos, which is just a short drive from Mykonos International Airport (JMK).
Can we visit other islands from Mykonos?+
Yes, Mykonos is the perfect starting point for exploring the Cyclades. Paros, Naxos, Tinos, and even Santorini are all popular and highly recommended additions to a Mykonos itinerary, typically on charters of 10 days or more.
What is included in the charter fee?+
The charter fee covers the exclusive hire of the yacht and its crew. All other expenses, such as fuel, food, drinks, and marina fees, are covered by the Advance Provisioning Allowance (APA), which is typically 30-40% of the charter fee.
What type of yacht is best for Mykonos?+
Sleek motor yachts are popular for their speed and glamour, fitting the Mykonos vibe perfectly. Crewed catamarans are also an excellent choice, offering stability, space, and a more relaxed cruising style.
What is Little Venice?+
Little Venice is a famous, picturesque neighbourhood in Mykonos Town where colourful, historic houses are built right up to the sea's edge. It is one of the most popular spots on the island to watch the sunset.
Is the island of Delos worth visiting?+
Yes, it is a must-see. Delos is a UNESCO World Heritage site and one of the most important mythological and archaeological sites in Greece. Visiting from your private yacht in the quiet of the morning is an unforgettable experience.
Is it safe to swim in the bays?+
Yes, the water in Mykonos and the surrounding islands is exceptionally clear and clean. The southern beaches and the bays of Rhenia are particularly famous for their inviting turquoise water, perfect for swimming and snorkelling.
How do I get to the beach clubs from my yacht?+
Your yacht will anchor in the bay off the beach club, and the crew will take you ashore on the yacht tender (a smaller motorboat). This is the most stylish and convenient way to arrive.
Why Blue Ocean Club

Why charter Mykonos with us.

01

Real-time availability

Live availability feed across 2,000+ yachts — hold and confirm in hours, not weeks.

02

100% best-price guarantee

We do not mark up the charter fee. The price you see is the operator's price.

03

Independent advice

Our recommendations follow the boat, not a commission — owners pay us, not introducing brokers.

04

Concierge depth

Restaurants, transfers, private guides, helicopters and beach clubs handled long before you board.

Ready When You Are

Ready to charter in Mykonos?

Tell us your dates, party size and what makes a perfect day on the water. We reply within one working day with a curated shortlist and a transparent quote.

Tapping submit will open WhatsApp with your enquiry pre-filled — send the message to reach us.

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