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.
Charter pricing is famously opaque. Here's everything the operator will charge — mandatory items paid at the base, plus optional add-ons you can opt into.
Great family choice. The Lagoon 42 is a spacious catamaran that sleeps 12 across 6 cabins, making it ideal for multi-family groups or friends wanting plenty of personal space. The 2019 build year means modern systems and good reliability without being brand new.
Well-equipped vessel. You're getting solid cruising kit here, autopilot, chart plotter, solar panels, sprayhood, and a dinghy all included. The lazy jack and bimini make daily life easier, and the refrigerator is essential on longer charters with this many people.
Excellent value proposition. At €5,544 per week, you're paying roughly €463 per person if you fill all 12 berths, which is genuinely competitive for a modern, well-appointed catamaran of this size. Sightsea Yachting has a perfect 5-star rating, which suggests reliable service.
One practical note. The operator location isn't specified here, so before booking, confirm the charter base, you'll need to know airport transfers, whether English-speaking crew are standard, and flight connection times from your home airport. That detail will affect your overall trip logistics significantly.
AI-assisted insight based on yacht specifications. Our charter experts can provide personalised advice.
Based at Marina Kos, in Kos, Greece. Neverland is operated by Sightsea Yachting.
G. Papandreou Str
Marina Kos sits in the eastern Dodecanese and offers immediate access to a compact, well-protected cruising ground; you can reach Nisyros, Tilos, and Symi within day sails, with reliable northwesterly winds in summer making the return leg straightforward. The nearby Turkish coast at Marmaris lies just 40nm south, adding variety for sailors wanting to mix Greek and Turkish anchorages. First-week routes typically loop through the inner Dodecanese islands, giving you sheltered bays and short passages ideal for shake-down sailing before committing to longer distances.
We'll check live availability, apply any discounts, and come back within hours.