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.
Photos supplied by the operator. Specifications are SailChecker-Verified , but images may show a sister yacht or stock photography — especially on yachts under two years old. Confirm the actual boat with us at quote time.
Final figures confirmed at quote — applies any active discounts and locks the operator's per-unit rates.
Who This Suits. The Prestige M48 works well for couples or small families wanting a bareboat catamaran in the Mediterranean without committing to a larger vessel. At 14.8 metres with four cabins, it balances reasonable comfort against manageable handling and fuel costs.
The Standout Features. As a 2026 build, you're getting current systems and modern interior finishes; the catamaran hull means good stability and decent cabin space relative to the length. Sicily's Capo d'Orlando is a solid base for island-hopping the Tyrrhenian Sea and accessing Aeolian Islands without long passages.
Value For Money. At EUR 15,000 per week plus EUR 3,500 deposit, pricing sits mid-market for a newer catamaran of this size in the region. You'll want to clarify fuel and final cleaning costs upfront, as these often push the real outlay higher than the headline figure.
One Thing To Flag. Capo d'Orlando is a small port on the north Sicilian coast; getting there from major airports (Palermo is around 2.5 hours by car) adds logistical time for international visitors. Check whether Spartivento offers airport transfer arrangements, as this can make or break convenience for long-haul travellers.
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 Capo d'Orlando Marina, Italy. 'Nnamo - Premium line is operated by Spartivento.
Capo d'Orlando Marina sits on Sicily's north coast, offering immediate access to the Tyrrhenian Sea and the Aeolian Islands; week one typically involves motor-sailing or light reaching to Lipari, Vulcano, and Salina, with the prevailing northwesterlies allowing comfortable passages of 15-25 nautical miles between anchorages. The marina provides a practical base for exploring protected anchorages around Panarea and Stromboli before returning westward along the Sicilian coast toward the Cefalù area, giving you a mix of overnight anchorages, small harbors, and volcanic scenery without long open-water passages.
The nearest international airports for this base, with a quick note on which suits which marina. Final transfer arrangements are confirmed at quote time.
Amalfi Coast — Salerno, Capri, Procida bases. Naples is the main hub; train link to the marinas.
Sardinia north coast — Cala dei Sardi, Cannigione, Porto Cervo bases.
Sicily and the Aeolian Islands. Daily flights from London and Rome.
A starting point, not a script — pick one as a template and we'll tailor the dates, stops, and pace to your crew.
Spectacular but anchorages crowd in July-August. Book restaurant moorings ahead.
Turquoise water and granite islands. Two-country tick (Italy + Corsica/France) without long sails.
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 ›A coastline that rewards a slow week and a fast tender.
Read full article ›A similar match, a premium step-up, and a different boat type — from the same waters.