Italian Riviera & Tuscany Frequently Asked Questions
Get answers to some of the most commonly asked Italian Riviera & Tuscany charter questions.
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Yes, but the answer depends on which version of the week you're booking. A Liguria-only charter can stay focused on Portofino, Cinque Terre, Portovenere, and the Gulf of La Spezia. That is the cleaner first-time Italian Riviera route. The Tuscan extension comes in when the yacht embarks or turns further south — typically La Spezia, then Elba, Giglio, or Argentario as the second half of the week. That is why the page is called Italian Riviera & Tuscany rather than just Liguria. Tuscany is part of the broader cruising ground, but it shouldn't be forced into every itinerary. We usually position it as the more repeat-guest or lower-density version of the trip: less village crowding, more anchorage rhythm, and a cleaner bridge toward longer western-Italy charters.
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A week is the right unit. The Italian Riviera works best as a seven-night charter because the coast is compact enough to move slowly without feeling repetitive: Portofino, Santa Margherita, Cinque Terre, Portovenere, and the Tuscan islands can fit into a single week without building the trip around long passages. The appeal here is the opposite of a mileage week. Shorter hops, more time ashore, more lunches that turn into late afternoons. Ten- to fourteen-night charters work when the trip is being paired with another cruising ground. The most natural combinations are the Italian Riviera with the French Riviera to the west, or the Italian Riviera with Elba and the Tuscan archipelago to the south on a longer yacht. Shorter charters are possible, but most of the inventory is still offered Saturday to Saturday.
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The Italian Riviera runs on the Mediterranean plus-expenses model. The base weekly rate covers the yacht and the professional crew. Food, beverages, fuel, marina dockage, harbor and port fees, water and electric, and any premium berthing are funded through APA — Advance Provisioning Allowance — and reconciled at the end of the week. In practice, most weeks settle into breakfast and lunch on board with the chef, and dinners ashore in the harbor towns. This is a trattoria coast more than a beach-club coast: Portofino and Santa Margherita for aperitivo, the Cinque Terre villages for anchovies and sciacchetrà, Portovenere and Lerici for long harbor dinners, Porto Ercole if the route extends into Tuscany. Crew gratuity in the Mediterranean is typically 10–15% of the base rate, paid directly to the captain at disembarkation. Italian charter VAT is 22% on the base rate.
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APA is the operating fund the captain manages on your behalf for the week. On an Italian Riviera charter it normally runs 25–35% of the base rate depending on yacht type and how the group likes to travel. Fuel is lower here than on the big-passage Mediterranean routes because the coast is compact. Harbor costs, dining ashore, and wine choices tend to matter more than mileage. The practical difference versus Amalfi or the French Riviera is that this coast usually spends less on all-out scene logistics and more on a steady cadence of harbors, lunches, and overnight stops. Portofino and Santa Margherita can still run expensive in peak season, and any Monaco-ending one-way shifts the math upward, but a standard Ligurian week usually lands below the French Riviera corridor on total operating spend.
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This is the right question. The three coasts can all look similar in photographs — cliff villages, pastel harbors, elegant hotels — but they are different weeks. The Amalfi Coast is the iconic first-time Italy charter. Bigger-name stops, more polished glamour, more Capri cachet, more people trying to have the same summer. The French Riviera is the maximum-brand-cachet corridor: Monaco, Cannes, Saint-Tropez, the megayacht scene, Michelin density, and the full visible theater of the western Med. The Italian Riviera sits between them and is quieter than both. Portofino still has polish, but the register is smaller scale. Cinque Terre is about village character and access from the water, not marina spectacle. Ligurian food is part of the identity — pesto Genovese, focaccia, anchovies, trofie, sciacchetrà — and the distances are short enough that the coast reads as a lived-in place rather than a parade of marquee arrivals. Guests who want Italian cliff villages without Amalfi's August crush usually end up here.
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June and September are the strongest weeks of the year. The sea is warm enough to swim, the ports are fully open, and the villages still feel busy without tipping into full August density. May and early October work well for guests who care more about quieter towns and lower rates than peak heat. July and August are the busiest weeks and the most expensive. Cinque Terre's train-and-ferry day traffic becomes part of the equation on shore, which is exactly why arriving by yacht early or staying into the evening matters here. Late May also needs extra attention because the Monaco Grand Prix and Cannes Film Festival tighten the wider Ligurian and Côte d'Azur motor-yacht market. If the charter is ending westbound toward Monaco, those dates need to be booked far in advance.
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