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.
Ideal for families and groups This 2019 Oceanis 46.1 suits 4-10 people looking for comfortable, modern sailing in the Aegean. The four-cabin layout sleeps up to ten, making it excellent value for larger groups splitting costs.
Well-equipped cruiser You're getting serious kit here: radar, chartplotter, autopilot, bow thruster, and solar panels mean this yacht handles both relaxed sailing and active navigation. Air conditioning, refrigerator, and coffee maker add genuine comfort for a week-long charter, no roughing it required.
Strong value proposition At €3,960 per week with a modest €3,000 deposit, this is competitive for a modern, four-cabin Oceanis in Greece. You're paying fair money for a well-maintained 2019 boat with the full comfort package, not cutting corners.
One practical note: The boat is listed without a specific base location, confirm exact logistics with Aegean Cruises regarding airport transfers and flight connections from your departure city, especially if you're flying long-haul from the US or northern Europe. That detail matters for your journey planning.
AI-assisted insight based on yacht specifications. Our charter experts can provide personalised advice.
Based at Alimos Marina, in Athens, Greece. Kallisti is operated by Aegean Cruises.
Poseidonos Avenue
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.
Nea Peramos, Greece
Lavrion Main Port, Greece
D-Marin Marina Gouvia, Greece
We'll check live availability, apply any discounts, and come back within hours.