The charter fee covers the yacht, standard equipment, and insurance. Cleaning, tourist tax, and any optional extras (skipper, paddle board, etc.) are billed at the base — we confirm the full breakdown when you request a quote.
Final figures confirmed at quote — applies any active discounts and locks the operator's per-unit rates.
Not a crewed yacht: this boat charters without a professional crew.
No crewed season rates for this yacht.
No water toys or diving listed for this yacht.
Cabin charter (book a single cabin) is not offered for this yacht.
Who It Suits. This newer catamaran works well for larger groups or families wanting comfortable, stable cruising in Greek waters without breaking the bank. The six-cabin layout means you can split costs across multiple couples or bring extended family, which pushes the per-person weekly rate down considerably.
What Stands Out. A 2024 build means modern systems and minimal maintenance hassles during your charter. The Bali 4.8 is known for its wide beam and spacious saloon, so the boat feels roomy rather than cramped despite sleeping twelve; that matters on a week-long trip when people need breathing room.
Value For Money. At under €5000 per week base rate for a six-cabin catamaran, this is genuinely solid pricing for a new vessel from a proper Mediterranean base. Alimos Marina near Athens is well-positioned for island hopping through the Cyclades or Sporades, and you avoid charter company markup by using an independent operator.
One Thing To Check. The listing shows minimal equipment detail, so confirm what's included before booking; some operators skimp on provisioning packages, navigation tools, or water sports gear, which can add unexpected costs. Also verify whether the €2000 deposit is refundable and what the damage waiver actually covers, since larger boats with more guests mean higher accident risk.
KateBot is SailChecker's AI sailing assistant, trained on Kate's real charter correspondence. Kate and the human team still review every booking — KateBot drafts, Kate decides.
Based at Alimos Marina, Greece. SEA PEARL is operated by Faux Brown Mcpy.
Alimos Marina sits just south of Athens, offering straightforward access to the Saronic Gulf's island-hopping routes; week one typically involves sailing to nearby Aegina, Poros, and Hydra, with predictable northerly winds in summer making these 15-30 nautical mile passages reliable for mixed-ability crews. The protected anchorages and short hops suit charter clients recovering from long-haul flights, while the marina's proximity to Athens airport (30 minutes by car) minimizes transfer time. Alimos itself has full facilities and is a logical base for exploring the sheltered Saronic islands before pushing further south toward the Peloponnese if conditions allow.
The nearest international airports for this base, with a quick note on which suits which marina. Final transfer arrangements are confirmed at quote time.
Saronic Gulf bases (Alimos, Kalamaki) — Athens Eleftherios Venizelos is 25 minutes from the marinas.
Ionian bases — Lefkas, Meganisi. Limited direct flights; many people connect via Athens or Corfu.
Dodecanese — Kos, Symi, Leros bases. Daily summer charters from northern Europe.
Cyclades — Mykonos and Paros bases. Pricey in peak season.
Lively — one reef worth taking by afternoon.
Sea 15°C — too cold for most swimmers.
3-year mean · Open-Meteo
Lively — one reef worth taking by afternoon.
Sea 14°C — too cold for most swimmers.
3-year mean · Open-Meteo
Lively — one reef worth taking by afternoon.
Sea 14°C — too cold for most swimmers.
3-year mean · Open-Meteo
Lively — one reef worth taking by afternoon.
Sea 16°C — too cold for most swimmers.
3-year mean · Open-Meteo
Lively — one reef worth taking by afternoon.
Sea 19°C — bracing dips, not lounging.
3-year mean · Open-Meteo
Lively — one reef worth taking by afternoon.
Sea 23°C — warm enough for long swims.
3-year mean · Open-Meteo
Lively — one reef worth taking by afternoon.
Sea 25°C — full-summer swimming.
3-year mean · Open-Meteo
Lively — one reef worth taking by afternoon.
Sea 25°C — full-summer swimming.
3-year mean · Open-Meteo
Lively — one reef worth taking by afternoon.
Sea 23°C — warm enough for long swims.
3-year mean · Open-Meteo
Ideal cruising breeze — full main, full genoa.
Sea 21°C — comfortable swimming.
3-year mean · Open-Meteo
Lively — one reef worth taking by afternoon.
Sea 19°C — bracing dips, not lounging.
3-year mean · Open-Meteo
Lively — one reef worth taking by afternoon.
Sea 17°C — too cold for most swimmers.
3-year mean · Open-Meteo
Sea above 20°C is comfortable swimming · above 22°C is full-summer · below 18°C feels brisk.
A starting point, not a script — pick one as a template and we'll tailor the dates, stops, and pace to your crew.
Short legs, reliable wind, history at every stop. Best first-charter route in Greece.
Meltemi wind July-August. Plan for one weather day — and book the marina in advance for the islands you do not want to miss.
Light, predictable winds. Easiest sailing in Greece — most-loved by families and first-timers stepping up.
We'll check live availability, apply any discounts, and come back within hours.
The seasoned-skipper's checklist — soft bag, deck shoes, and the things first-timers forget.
Read full article ›What happens at the marina on day one — and how to keep the handover smooth.
Read full article ›The cover that protects your deposit, your crew, and your kit — explained without the small print.
Read full article ›Skipper qualifications, charter types, what to expect — the honest first-time map.
Read full article ›Galley space, water tanks, what to buy local — provision like a skipper, not a tourist.
Read full article ›Empty coves you can only reach by yacht, ranked by our team.
Read full article ›Why a catamaran sails the way it does — and how to handle it differently.
Read full article ›A similar match, a premium step-up, and a different boat type — from the same waters.
Alimos Marina, Greece
Port of Lefkas, Greece
Lavrion, main port, Greece