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.
Perfect for groups Dima II is a spacious Oceanis 51.1 monohull that sleeps up to 12 across 6 cabins, making it ideal for families or friend groups who want to share costs and sailing time. The 2018 build is well-maintained and comes with solid cruising kit, autopilot, dual chart plotters, bow thruster, and solar panels make handling easy for mixed-ability crews.
Real value proposition At €2,688 per week with a modest €4,000 deposit, this yacht delivers strong bang for buck in the Ionian, especially when split among 8, 12 people, the nightly cost per cabin drops dramatically. The operator (Ionian Catamarans) holds a perfect 5-star rating, and the fitted sprayhood and bimini mean comfort in variable Greek summer weather.
One heads-up The base location isn't specified in your data, so confirm water access, provisioning ease, and nearest airport before booking. If it's a remote Ionian spot, budget extra time and cost for your international arrival (likely Athens or Corfu), but that's true of most Greek island charters.
Who to pick this Charter this if you're flying in from the US or northern Europe with a group ready to share watch duties and anchor-hopping without wanting a catamaran's sprawl.
AI-assisted insight based on yacht specifications. Our charter experts can provide personalised advice.
Based at Port of Lefkas, in Lefkada, Greece. Dima II is operated by Ionian Catamarans.
Port of Lefkas sits at the northern gateway to the Ionian Islands, putting you within day-sailing distance of Meganisi, Kalamos, and the Scorpios group; week one typically involves exploring these sheltered anchorages with consistent northwesterly winds that favour southbound passages. The marina itself offers good provisioning and repair facilities, essential before heading into the more remote southern Ionian. From here you can reach Ithaca and Kefalonia by mid-week, making this an ideal base for first-time visitors to Greek waters seeking a mix of established mooring fields and quieter island passages.
D-Marin Marina Lefkas, Greece
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