The Great Blue Hole, Lighthouse Reef Atoll, Belize

Belize Yacht Charters

Crewed catamaran charters along the Mesoamerican Barrier Reef — two routes, three atolls, UNESCO reefs, and the calmest cruising water in the Western Caribbean.

Why Belize

Why Charter a Crewed Catamaran in Belize?

Belize sits at the eastern edge of Central America, with 185 miles of coastline tracing the Mesoamerican Barrier Reef — the second-largest barrier reef on earth, after Australia's Great Barrier Reef. The reef runs continuously offshore from the Mexican border down to Guatemala, with three true atolls (Turneffe, Lighthouse, and Glover's) sitting beyond it in deep water. Inside the reef, the cruising water stays flat, the swell breaks long before it reaches your yacht, and the cayes are spaced close enough together that no day's sail demands a long open-water passage.

Two distinct charter routes operate out of Belize. The northern route runs from Belize City out to Caye Caulker, San Pedro, and Turneffe Atoll, with the Great Blue Hole reachable from Lighthouse Reef on the right week. The southern route runs from Placencia along the inner barrier — Laughing Bird Caye, the Silk Cayes, Tobacco Caye, South Water — through three UNESCO World Heritage marine reserves and the Smithsonian's Caribbean field station at Carrie Bow Caye. Guests pick one or the other; the captain shapes the week around weather, conditions, and your group's priorities.

What sets Belize apart from the better-known Caribbean charter grounds is the concentration of marine life and a less-developed character that recalls the Caribbean of thirty years ago. Whale sharks aggregate at Gladden Spit each spring around the full moons of April, May, and June. Manatees forage at Swallow Caye. Nurse sharks and southern stingrays gather in the shallows at Hol Chan and Shark Ray Alley. The cayes themselves remain small fishing villages and thatched cabanas — Tobacco Caye is five acres on top of the barrier reef; Ranguana is a six-acre private island with a handful of huts. Belize City and Placencia handle the modern logistics; everything else stays small, quiet, and local.

Crewed catamaran at sunset in Belize — placeholder pending portrait shot
Crewed catamarans at anchor inside the Belize Barrier Reef
Inside the reef — most days end in a quiet anchorage.

What Makes a Belize Yacht Charter Special

Four characteristics that distinguish Belize from other Caribbean charter grounds.

Inside the Mesoamerican Reef

Inside the Mesoamerican Reef

Belize is the rare Caribbean charter ground where the entire route stays inside a continuous barrier reef. The reef breaks the swell five to ten miles offshore; what reaches your yacht is flat, sheltered water with steady 10–20 knot easterly trades from December through May. There are no rough open-water passages on the standard itineraries — you're sailing in the lagoon between the mainland and the reef line the entire week.

Three Atolls Beyond the Reef

Three Atolls Beyond the Reef

Beyond the barrier reef sit three of the four true coral atolls in the Western Hemisphere: Turneffe (the largest), Lighthouse Reef (home to the Great Blue Hole), and Glover's Reef. On the northern route, a typical week includes a passage to Turneffe — anchoring at Rendezvous Point or Soldier Caye, snorkeling the wall on the eastern edge, exploring the mangrove channels on the western. The atolls hold the country's healthiest coral and most consistent visibility.

Whale Sharks, Manatees & Reef Wildlife

Whale Sharks, Manatees & Reef Wildlife

Belize concentrates more headline marine wildlife into a single charter week than any other Caribbean destination. Whale sharks aggregate at Gladden Spit during the full moons of April, May, and June, drawn by reef-fish spawning events — when conditions line up, guests can snorkel with forty-foot sharks in eighty feet of visibility. Manatees forage in the seagrass at Swallow Caye Wildlife Sanctuary. Nurse sharks and southern stingrays cruise the shallows at Hol Chan Marine Reserve and Shark Ray Alley. Eagle rays, reef sharks, and sea turtles are routine on outer-reef snorkels.

UNESCO Reefs & Smithsonian Waters

UNESCO Reefs & Smithsonian Waters

The southern route passes through three UNESCO World Heritage marine reserves: Laughing Bird Caye National Park, the Silk Cayes inside Gladden Spit and Silk Cayes Marine Reserve, and the South Water Caye Marine Reserve. The Smithsonian Institution has run a Caribbean reef research field station at Carrie Bow Caye since 1972 — you can't land there but you can anchor offshore and snorkel the reef they've been studying for fifty years. The protected status keeps the coral healthy and the visibility reliable in a way that's increasingly rare across the Caribbean.

Crewed catamaran at anchor off a Belize beach caye
An afternoon at anchor off a Belize beach caye.

Sample Belize Crewed Charter Itineraries

Your week is shaped around your group's interests, the season, and the conditions on the water — your captain tailors the days as they unfold. Treat these itineraries as starting points for inspiration.

Crewed Itinerary · Belize

Belize Sailing Itinerary: 7 Days from Placencia along the Barrier Reef

A crewed week out of Placencia is the most forgiving charter in the Western Caribbean. You're sailing inside the Mesoamerican Barrier Reef—the second-largest barrier reef on earth—so the water stays flat, the reef breaks the swell, and the cayes are spaced close enough together that no day ever feels like a slog. With a professional captain and private chef aboard, your only real decisions are which caye to have lunch on and how long you want to linger in the water before the next one.

The route is built around the winter trade winds—consistent 10 to 20 knot easterlies from December through May that make this the prime window for Southern Belize. You'll snorkel Laughing Bird Caye inside a UNESCO World Heritage zone, drift the coral gardens at Silk Cayes and Gladden Spit, pull up to Tobacco Caye's fishing shacks on the barrier reef itself, eat lobster and conch at Blue Marlin Lodge on South Water, nap on a hammock at Whipray, and come back into Placencia on the last night for a ginger mojito at Rumfish Y Vino. It's an itinerary designed for guests who want real snorkeling, real reef, and a week that stays at exactly the speed you set.

Duration
7 days / 8 nights
Base
Placencia
Aerial view of a palm-covered caye on the Belize Barrier Reef.
A catamaran under sail on a long Belize crossing with dramatic cloud streaks.
Catamaran sailing the color line between barrier reef shallows and deep blue.
Whipray Caye's palm-lined grounds with a thatched bar above the water.

What this Belize sailing itinerary covers

This Belize sailing itinerary runs from Placencia north along the Mesoamerican Barrier Reef — the second-largest barrier reef on earth. You're sailing inside the reef, so the water stays flat, swell breaks before it gets to you, and no day is a slog. About 95 nautical miles total over the week. Stops: Laughing Bird Caye (UNESCO World Heritage), Silk Cayes and Gladden Spit, Tobacco Caye's fishing shacks on the barrier reef itself, Blue Marlin Lodge on South Water, hammock-naps on Whipray, and back into Placencia for the last night.

Built around the winter trade winds — consistent 10–20 knot easterlies from December through May. Compared to the Northern Belize itinerary out of Belize City, this Placencia route is gentler, family-friendlier, and stays inside the reef the whole way. The Northern itinerary covers Caye Caulker, Ambergris, and the Turneffe Atoll — different vibe, more open water, better for divers.

1

Day 1 of 7 · Placencia → Laughing Bird

Placencia to Laughing Bird Caye

Anchorage: near Laughing Bird Caye

Your week begins at the Placencia town dock, a low-key village on the end of a long sandy peninsula in southern Belize. Your professional crew meets you at the slip with cold drinks and a chart briefing that frames the week ahead, then gives you time to settle into your cabin and walk the sidewalk—the narrowest main street in the world, according to the Guinness Book—before lines are off.

Around mid-morning the captain clears the pass and points the bow east for the 15-nautical-mile reach out to Laughing Bird Caye National Park. It's a gentle first leg under the trades, flat water inside the reef, the mainland dropping away and the cayes starting to spot on the bow. By lunch you're anchored off one of the most photographed little islands in Belize—a palm-fringed shelf of coral reef with exceptional snorkeling in three to fifteen feet of water right off the stern.

Laughing Bird Caye is a UNESCO World Heritage site and a protected no-take zone, which is why the reef around it is as healthy as any in the country. Spend the afternoon in the water, then move a short hop to a sheltered overnight anchorage nearby. Your private chef handles the first dinner aboard—likely fresh snapper or grouper the captain arranged off the morning's boat, rice and beans, a cold Belikin or a rum punch to set the tone for the week.

Day Highlights

  • Welcome aboard at the Placencia town dock, chart briefing with your captain.
  • Short reach out to Laughing Bird Caye under the winter trades.
  • UNESCO-protected reef snorkel straight off the stern.
  • Chef-prepared welcome dinner at anchor with Belikin or a rum punch.
2

Day 2 of 7 · Laughing Bird → Ranguana

Laughing Bird to Ranguana Caye

Anchorage: Ranguana Caye
A typical private-island lunch stop on the Southern route—a palm-covered caye, a beach deck ashore, the boat at anchor a hundred yards off the sand.
A typical private-island lunch stop on the Southern route—a palm-covered caye, a beach deck ashore, the boat at anchor a hundred yards off the sand.

A short 12-nautical-mile hop south today to Ranguana Caye—a six-acre private island with a handful of thatched cabanas, a small restaurant, and one of the better lee-side beaches on the Southern barrier. The sail itself is gentle; the captain puts you there in time for lunch and a long afternoon on the water.

Ranguana is the kind of stop that explains the appeal of crewed charter in Belize. There is almost nothing to do except swim off the beach, walk a lap of the island in fifteen minutes, and flop into a hammock with a book. The reef starts a short swim from shore and holds a remarkable amount of life for how close in it sits—nurse sharks cruising the shallows, schools of grunts working the coral heads, the occasional eagle ray. Your crew runs the tender ashore for lunch on the island if you want it, or puts out a light board of ceviche, conch fritters, and a cold bottle of rosé on deck if you'd rather stay on the boat.

In April and May, Ranguana runs a baby sea turtle release program on the beach around sunset—one of those small Belize moments that isn't on any brochure and sticks with you. Your captain knows the season and can time the afternoon around it. Otherwise it's a quiet dinner aboard at anchor, the sort of night where nobody bothers checking the time.

Day Highlights

  • Easy morning sail down to Ranguana Caye.
  • Reef snorkel a short swim off the beach—nurse sharks, grunts, eagle rays.
  • Seasonal baby sea turtle release at sunset, April through May.
  • Chef-prepared dinner at anchor, nobody checking the time.
3

Day 3 of 7 · Ranguana → Silk Cayes

Ranguana to the Silk Cayes and Gladden Spit

Anchorage: Lark Caye
The color line where the barrier reef shallows give way to open blue water—the reef-edge scenery the Southern route is built around.
The color line where the barrier reef shallows give way to open blue water—the reef-edge scenery the Southern route is built around.

Today is the snorkel day. A 10-nautical-mile morning reach east brings you to the Silk Cayes—three tiny, uninhabited sand islands sitting on the outer barrier reef inside the Gladden Spit and Silk Cayes Marine Reserve. The reef here is the real thing: coral gardens in twenty feet of water, walls that drop off into deep blue, and more fish life per square yard than anywhere else on the Southern route.

If you're sailing in April, May, or June, there's a specific reason Gladden Spit is one of the most talked-about snorkel sites in the Caribbean: it's one of the few predictable whale shark aggregation spots in the world. Around the full moon in those three months, the cubera and mutton snapper spawn on the reef wall, and whale sharks show up to feed on the spawn. When conditions line up, your captain can get you in the water with forty-foot whale sharks in roughly eighty feet of visibility. Nobody promises it—the aggregations are weather and lunar-cycle dependent, and they're protected by permit limits enforced by the reserve. But if you're here in that window, this is the single day everything else on the itinerary gets rearranged around.

Outside the whale shark window, this is still the best coral-garden snorkel on the itinerary—drifting along a healthy reef wall in gin-clear water, rays cruising the sand below, the occasional reef shark patrolling the edge. After lunch on a Silk Caye sandbar, the captain moves the boat a short way back inside the reef to Lark Caye for a protected overnight anchorage. Chef handles a dinner aboard that night—almost certainly something off the morning's fish run.

Day Highlights

  • Outer-reef snorkel at the Silk Cayes, inside Gladden Spit Marine Reserve.
  • Possible whale shark encounter in April–June, around the full moon.
  • Lunch on a Silk Cayes sandbar—coconut trees and not much else.
  • Sheltered overnight at Lark Caye, chef-prepared dinner aboard.
4

Day 4 of 7 · Lark → Tobacco Range

Lark Caye to Tobacco and Carrie Bow

Anchorage: Tobacco Caye / Carrie Bow
Day 4 is the week's longest sail—a broad reach north inside the barrier reef with breakfast on deck and the trades on the quarter.
Day 4 is the week's longest sail—a broad reach north inside the barrier reef with breakfast on deck and the trades on the quarter.

The longest sailing day of the week—25 nautical miles north along the inside of the barrier reef, from Lark Caye up to Tobacco Range. In a healthy easterly trade it's a fast broad reach on flat water, the reef line running off the starboard beam the whole way. Your crew sets a breakfast spread on deck, hands the wheel to anyone who wants it, and lets the boat sail itself for most of the morning.

Tobacco Caye is a five-acre island sitting directly on top of the barrier reef, which is rare—most Belize cayes sit inside the reef or well outside of it. Here, the reef crest breaks fifty yards off the beach, and you can snorkel straight off the sand onto an intact coral wall in water that stays ten to fifteen feet deep for a long way. There's a small fishing village on the island—wooden shacks, a handful of guesthouses, a tiny bar where locals and a few backpackers drink Belikin in the afternoon. It's a glimpse of what the whole coast looked like thirty years ago.

A short afternoon hop south puts you off Carrie Bow Caye—a one-acre sand island that serves as the Smithsonian Institution's field station for Caribbean reef research. You can't land (the station is working), but you can anchor offshore and snorkel the reef they've been studying for fifty years. The coral here is as healthy as anywhere in the country, and if the visibility is up you'll see why the Smithsonian picked this exact spot. Back aboard for a chef-prepared dinner at anchor, the reef breaking white against the dark a hundred yards off the beam.

Day Highlights

  • Week's longest reach—north inside the barrier reef to Tobacco Range.
  • Snorkel straight off the beach onto the reef crest at Tobacco Caye.
  • Short stop at Carrie Bow Caye, the Smithsonian's Caribbean reef station.
  • Dinner at anchor with the reef breaking off the beam.
5

Day 5 of 7 · Tobacco → South Water

Tobacco to South Water Caye

Anchorage: South Water Caye
Turquoise water and a barrier reef line on the horizon—exactly the scenery a day at South Water Caye runs on.
Turquoise water and a barrier reef line on the horizon—exactly the scenery a day at South Water Caye runs on.

A six-nautical-mile sail south this morning, barely enough to warm up the engine before you're there. South Water Caye is a fifteen-acre island on the barrier reef inside the South Water Caye Marine Reserve—another UNESCO-listed stretch, and arguably the single best reef position in Southern Belize. The windward side of the island drops straight off into the wall, and the snorkel off the dock is one of the few places in the country where you can roll off a pier in twelve feet of water and be over a reef edge in three fin kicks.

Spend the morning in the water. The wall here runs from ten feet down to forty in a single drop, and the visibility on a good trade-wind day is sixty to ninety feet. Eagle rays and nurse sharks are common; the occasional reef shark patrols the outer edge. After lunch aboard, the captain can move you around to the leeward side for a quieter afternoon—shallow grass flats, bonefish in the tail-up silt, a beach walk if you want one.

Dinner tonight is ashore at Blue Marlin Lodge, the long-running dive resort on the south end of the island. Blue Marlin is exactly the kind of place that works on a crewed charter: a dock you can pull up to, a dining room over the water, and a kitchen that leans on whatever the local boats brought in that morning. Your captain radios ahead, the lodge sets a table, and you walk ten steps from the dinghy to dinner. Back aboard late for a nightcap on deck with the reef glowing white in the moonlight.

Day Highlights

  • Short hop to South Water Caye inside the UNESCO-listed marine reserve.
  • Wall snorkel straight off the windward dock—ten feet to forty in one drop.
  • Shallow-water afternoon on the leeward side, eagle rays and bonefish.
  • Dinner ashore at Blue Marlin Lodge, ten steps from the dinghy.
6

Day 6 of 7 · South Water → Whipray

South Water to Coco Plum and Whipray

Anchorage: Whipray Caye
Coco Plum is on the inside of the barrier reef—quieter water, good snorkeling off the bow, and a lunch stop ashore if you want it.
Coco Plum is on the inside of the barrier reef—quieter water, good snorkeling off the bow, and a lunch stop ashore if you want it.
Whipray is the last overnight of the trip. Hammock, Sea Urchin Bar, nothing else you have to do.
Whipray is the last overnight of the trip. Hammock, Sea Urchin Bar, nothing else you have to do.

The quietest day of the week. A morning stop at Coco Plum Caye—a small, palm-fringed island on the inside of the reef with thatched cabanas and a protected lagoon—for a swim and an early lunch. Your chef handles it aboard or your captain radios ashore for a table at the resort; either way works. The snorkel off the bow is gentle, the water shallow and clear, and the crowd at Coco Plum runs to the handful of guests staying at the resort and maybe one other crewed boat.

Late afternoon, a final short hop puts you at Whipray Caye—a tiny private island a few miles off Placencia that might be the single most charming overnight on the Southern route. There's a thatched bar called Sea Urchin on the island, a hammock strung between two palm trees, and about eighteen inches of sand between the bar stools and the water. Julian Cabral and the family that runs the caye keep the place small and slow on purpose; you'll recognize the vibe within about three minutes of the tender touching the dock.

Dinner at Sea Urchin Bar is the kind of meal people remember from the trip—fresh fish off the day's boat, whatever the kitchen felt like cooking, a last good sunset over the mainland with the peninsula dropping into shadow behind Placencia. Back aboard late, nightcap on deck, last night at anchor in Belize.

Day Highlights

  • Morning stop at Coco Plum Caye—quiet lagoon snorkel off the bow.
  • Afternoon run to Whipray Caye, last overnight of the trip.
  • Dinner at Sea Urchin Bar, eighteen inches of sand from the water.
  • Last nightcap at anchor with the mainland going dark behind Placencia.
7

Day 7 of 7 · Whipray → Placencia

Whipray to Placencia

Anchorage: Placencia
Last evening at anchor on the Southern route—one more sunset on the hook before the morning run back to Placencia.
Last evening at anchor on the Southern route—one more sunset on the hook before the morning run back to Placencia.

Fifteen nautical miles back to the peninsula, a last easy reach in the morning trades. Your captain times the approach so you're dropping anchor off Placencia by early afternoon, with enough of the day left to walk the sidewalk, swim off the stern one more time, and take a tender ride ashore for dinner.

Dinner tonight is at Rumfish Y Vino, on the main strip in Placencia village. House cocktail is the ginger mojito—fresh ginger, white rum, a lot of lime—and the kitchen leans into the local catch with Mediterranean fingerprints. It's the right last-night meal: a shift back to restaurant service after a week of plates on deck, without losing the feel of being ten minutes from the water. A short walk after dinner, a nightcap at the waterfront bar of your choice, and back aboard late for the final night on anchor.

For guests who want one more adventure before the week ends, your captain can arrange a morning fly-fishing skiff trip in the lagoon behind the peninsula—bonefish, permit, and tarpon all within a short run of the mothership, with a local guide who's been pushing that water for decades. Worth doing if you've ever thought about saltwater fly-fishing; there are few easier places to start.

Day Highlights

  • Easy morning sail back to the Placencia peninsula.
  • Walk the Placencia sidewalk, world's narrowest main street.
  • Farewell dinner at Rumfish Y Vino—ginger mojito, local catch, Mediterranean kitchen.
  • Optional morning fly-fishing skiff in the lagoon behind the peninsula.
8

Day 8 · Departure

Farewell to Southern Belize

Enjoy a last slow breakfast on deck at the Placencia anchorage, a last swim off the stern if you're up for it, and the short transfer your crew arranges straight to the Placencia airstrip for a commuter flight to Belize City, or by road up the peninsula if you're extending a few nights ashore. Your captain and chef will step off the boat already talking about when you're coming back, which is usually how the good ones end.

Want to share or come back to this voyage later?

Bookmark this voyage →
Aerial of Coco Plum Caye, Southern Belize
Coco Plum Caye — a dot of sand inside the barrier reef.

Plan Your Belize Charter

When to go, what it costs, and how to get there — the practical answers guests ask before booking a Belize crewed yacht charter.

When to Charter Belize

Peak Season (Dec–Mar)

December through March is the highest-volume booking window. Steady east-southeast trade winds at 10–20 knots, low humidity, daytime highs in the low 80s, and the driest months of the year. The cruising ground is at its busiest over Christmas, New Year, Easter, and Spring Break, when the best yachts and crews book 6–12 months in advance. Cold fronts occasionally drop down from the US mainland and bring a day or two of squalls, but the barrier reef softens their impact compared to the more exposed cruising grounds further north.

Best Window (Apr–Jun)

April, May, and early June are the best window of the year for guests who can travel outside the school calendar. Trade winds remain steady, water temperatures climb into the 80s, and rates typically fall 15–25% from peak. This is also the whale shark window at Gladden Spit on the southern route — sharks aggregate around the full moons of these three months, and on the right week the captain reorders the itinerary around them. The Belize fleet stays in country year-round; summer charters in July and August are available with the trade-off of warmer days and the possibility of tracking an Atlantic storm — your captain shapes the route accordingly.

Aerial of Goff's Caye, Belize — barrier-reef sand island
Goff's Caye — a sand island on the reef line, lunch stop on a typical week.

What a Belize Crewed Charter Costs

$20,000–$40,000 per week

Crewed yacht charters in Belize typically run from $20,000 to $80,000+ per week, depending on yacht size, build year, and crew. Belize crewed inventory leans toward smaller catamarans (45–60 feet) compared to the BVI or USVI fleets — there are no superyacht-class crewed catamarans operating in Belize today. Most yachts charter all-inclusive: the base weekly rate covers yacht, crew, all meals, a standard bar, fuel for normal cruising, and customary mooring fees. Select yachts run plus-expenses with an Advance Provisioning Allowance (APA) at 25–35% of the base rate, reconciled at trip end. Crew gratuities, customary at 15–20% of the base rate, are paid directly to the captain on disembarkation.

See the full crewed charter pricing breakdown →

How to get to Belize

Gateway airports
Two gateways depending on which route you charter. Belize City (BZE) is the primary international airport with non-stop flights from Atlanta, Charlotte, Dallas, Fort Lauderdale, Houston, Miami, Newark, and a handful of seasonal gateways. Most flights from the US East Coast run three to five hours. Placencia (PLJ) on the southern coast is the regional airport for the southern route — reached by a 30-minute Tropic Air or Maya Island Air connection from BZE. Some guests fly into BZE the night before and continue to Placencia in the morning.
Embarkation ports
Embarkation depends on the route. Northern charters embark at Cucumber Beach Marina or Old Belize Marina near Belize City, both 15–25 minutes from BZE. Southern charters embark from the Placencia town dock, a five-minute walk from the PLJ airstrip. The northern route puts you closer to the Blue Hole and the atolls; the southern route puts you closer to the UNESCO reefs and Gladden Spit's whale shark window. Yacht and trip length shape which route fits — we walk through the options with you before booking.
Airport transfers
From BZE airport to Belize City marinas, taxis run on fixed government-set rates of roughly $25 USD for the 15–25 minute drive. From PLJ airstrip to the Placencia town dock, the walk is five minutes, or a golf-cart taxi covers it for under $10 USD. Private SUVs and minivans for larger groups are arranged in advance through your broker.
Customs & immigration
Every guest needs a valid passport. US, UK, EU, Canadian, and Australian passports require no visa for stays under 30 days. Belize uses both the Belize Dollar (fixed at 2 BZD = 1 USD) and the US Dollar interchangeably; cash and major credit cards are accepted everywhere. English is the official language, simplifying everything from customs forms to dinner reservations. The captain handles cruising and fishing permits as part of the standard charter setup.

Frequently asked questions

About chartering in Belize.

How long should our Belize charter be?
We recommend a week. Belize cruising-ground geography rewards seven days — long enough to settle into the rhythm of inside-the-reef sailing, hit the headline stops on either route (Hol Chan, Turneffe, and the Blue Hole on the northern route; Laughing Bird, Silk Cayes, Tobacco, and South Water on the southern), and leave room for a flexible day or two when wildlife conditions line up. Shorter trips (4–5 days) work, especially in shoulder season when guests want a focused experience. For those we typically recommend the southern route out of Placencia — a tighter loop with less repositioning. We walk through the right pacing with you before booking.
What is included in an all-inclusive Belize crewed charter?
Included: a professional crew (typically captain, chef, and stewardess on catamarans), all meals and a standard bar (beer, wine, and spirits — Belikin and Caribbean rum on most yachts), water sports equipment (paddleboards, snorkel gear, kayaks; some yachts add e-foils, jet skis, or scuba gear), fuel for normal cruising, Belize cruising and reserve permits, linens, and towels. Not included: crew gratuities (15-20% of the base charter rate), any marina or dockage fees beyond customary stops, premium drinks or specialty provisions, onshore dining (Blue Marlin Lodge, Rumfish Y Vino, etc.), Blue Hole day-trip excursion fees, and transfers to and from the yacht.
Should we charter the northern or southern route?
Both work — the right call depends on what you want from the week. The northern route runs from Belize City (BZE) out to Caye Caulker, San Pedro, Hol Chan Marine Reserve, and Turneffe Atoll. The Great Blue Hole is reachable from Lighthouse Reef on the right week. This route favors guests who want the most-recognized Belize sites — the Blue Hole, Hol Chan, Shark Ray Alley — and don't mind a longer offshore reach to Turneffe. The southern route runs from Placencia along the inner barrier reef through three UNESCO World Heritage marine reserves: Laughing Bird Caye, the Silk Cayes inside Gladden Spit, and South Water Caye. This is the better route for guests who prioritize coral-garden snorkeling, smaller cayes, and (in April–June) the whale shark window at Gladden Spit. It also tends to be a gentler week — shorter daily passages, more time at anchor, less repositioning. We walk through the trade-offs with you before booking.
When is the whale shark window at Gladden Spit?
Whale sharks aggregate at Gladden Spit on the southern route during the full moons of April, May, and June, drawn by reef-fish (cubera and mutton snapper) spawning events on the outer reef wall. The window typically runs from about three days before the full moon through three days after, with the strongest aggregations in the middle of that band. Nothing is guaranteed — encounters depend on weather, sea state, lunar timing, and Marine Reserve permit limits enforced by the rangers. But on the right week with the right captain, guests snorkel with forty-foot whale sharks in eighty feet of visibility. If you book a southern-route charter timed to one of these moons, expect the captain to reorder the itinerary around the window.
Can the chef accommodate dietary restrictions or preferences?
Yes. Your chef can accommodate virtually any dietary need — vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free, kosher, allergies, kids menus, and more. Before your charter, you will complete a preference sheet detailing every guest's dietary requirements, favorite foods, and anything to avoid. Your chef builds the menu around it. In Belize, expect plenty of fresh-caught snapper, grouper, lobster (in season — June 15 to February 15), conch (October 1 to June 30), rice and beans, and seasonal Caribbean produce alongside your preferences — it's part of what makes a Belize charter feel rooted in place.
Can we visit the Blue Hole on our charter?
Yes — the Great Blue Hole sits in the center of Lighthouse Reef Atoll, about 50 nautical miles east of Belize City. On the northern route we typically arrange the Blue Hole as a chartered day-trip rather than an overnight passage: the captain coordinates a fast-boat or scenic-flight excursion from Caye Caulker or San Pedro, returning the same day to the mothership. That keeps the catamaran in protected water and lets guests experience the Blue Hole without losing two days to a long offshore passage. For certified divers, the Blue Hole is also the most-photographed scuba site in the Caribbean — vertical wall, stalactites at 130 feet. Guests interested in diving the hole add the excursion fee separately and we coordinate with a local PADI operator.
Whipray Caye, Belize — six-acre private island grounds
Whipray Caye — six acres, a hammock, no other yachts.

How to Book Your Belize Yacht Charter

1

Share Your Vision

Fill out our quick form and we'll dive into your unique preferences — from adventure-packed itineraries to pampered escapes. Whether you're a seasoned voyager or new to charters, we'll tailor recommendations just for you.

2

Choose the Perfect Yacht

With over fifteen years of experience, we'll match you with the yacht that fits your style, group, and itinerary. We work directly with the captains and crews across our list — so the recommendation is built around the right boat-and-crew fit for your week, not whatever's easiest to book.

3

Relax While We Handle the Details

Once your yacht is booked, we'll take care of logistics: paperwork, reminders, and personalized resources to help you plan. From arrival planning to must-visit spots, we'll make your charter as seamless as it is unforgettable.

Learn More About a Private, Crewed Charter

What to Expect on a Private, Crewed Yacht Charter

Learn what makes crewed yacht charters extraordinary: personalized service, gourmet dining, and endless opportunities for adventure and relaxation.

How Does the Booking Process Work?

Our team handles every detail of your crewed yacht charter booking, ensuring a seamless experience from your first inquiry to setting sail.

Crewed Yacht Charter Pricing Explained

Understand what a crewed charter costs, the types of pricing, and what is included / not included.

Logistics: Proven Travel Plans for a Stress-Free Start

Plan your journey to your crewed yacht charter with ease. Tips on flights, transfers, and logistics for a stress-free start to your vacation.

Honeymoon Yacht Charters

Start your marriage on a private yacht. Explore secluded beaches, gourmet dining, and unforgettable sunsets in the Caribbean.

Family Yacht Charters

A crewed yacht charter is perfect for families of all ages. Safe, fun, and fully catered — your kids will never forget it.

Crewed Charter FAQ

Get answers to common questions about crewed yacht charters, from pricing and tipping to what's included and what to pack.

BVI Crewed Yacht Charters

The British Virgin Islands are the #1 crewed charter destination in the Caribbean. Short sails, protected waters, and world-class anchorages.

BVI Crewed Charter Guide

Everything you need to know before your BVI crewed catamaran charter — pricing, packing list, sample itinerary, and getting there.

Bahamas Crewed Yacht Charters

Explore the Exumas on a private crewed yacht. Swimming pigs, sandbars, and some of the clearest water on earth.

Caribbean Crewed Yacht Charters

All-inclusive crewed charters across the Caribbean — BVI, Bahamas, USVI, St. Martin, Antigua, and beyond.