Naya
46FT · SAILING CATAMARAN
Pricing from €14,000/week
8 Guests · 4 Cabins · 2 Crew
Caribbean
Western Mediterranean
Eastern Mediterranean
South Pacific
Crewed catamaran and motor yacht charters in the Bay of Kotor and along the Montenegrin coast — Kotor's medieval walls at the bay's inner head, the Sveti Stefan silhouette offshore, and the Adriatic's only Platinum-rated superyacht marina at Tivat.
Why Montenegro
Sixty nautical miles of coast between Croatia and Albania, most of it sheltered inside the Bay of Kotor — a long flooded valley walled on both sides by mountain. The medieval city of Kotor sits at the inner head, walls and bell towers below stone fortifications that climb the rock above the Old Town. The cruising itself is slow. Short hops between anchorages. Named restaurants walked from the dock. The Sveti Stefan offshore swim day on the open coast south of the bay. There is nowhere else in the Mediterranean where the water meets the rock like this.
Two voyages run this coast cleanly. The Bay of Kotor round-trip from Tivat is the slower week — seven nights inside the bay and the open coast just south, with the Sveti Stefan offshore swim day and a marina-side dinner at Porto Montenegro as the two centerpieces. The Dubrovnik-to-Kotor one-way is the marquee — embarkation in Croatia, a single cross-border morning on day two, disembarkation at Porto Montenegro after the Sveti Stefan close. The crossing week pulls most of the repeat Adriatic guests; captains who work both coasts route it every season. For ten or fourteen nights, an extended trip chains a Dalmatian week onto the front and runs both countries on a single charter.
Two superyacht-grade marinas — Porto Montenegro at Tivat, D-Marin Portonovi at Herceg Novi — and a fleet that mostly comes south from Croatia for the booking. Touch Adriatic's catamarans, the Sail Dalmatia boats, and a small motor-yacht segment reposition into Boka on request. Mediterranean plus-expenses pricing applies (APA pre-funded at 25 to 30 percent of base, gratuity 10 to 15, Saturday-to-Saturday turnarounds). The cost difference worth knowing: Montenegro charges 0% VAT on foreign-flagged commercial charter and no duty on fuel — alone in the Mediterranean. On the same yacht at the same base rate, a Montenegro week saves the 13 percent Croatia would charge. For the cross-border week, the captain logs time in each country's waters and the broker reconciles the Croatian pro-rata at trip end.
Four reasons the Bay of Kotor isn't like the rest of the Mediterranean.
The Bay of Kotor is walled on both sides by mountain rising straight from the water. Kotor — medieval, walled, UNESCO since 1979 — sits at the foot of the inner head, walked from the dock. A stone staircase climbs the rock above the Old Town to the small Castle of St. John at the top, ninety minutes round-trip in the cooler hour before sunset. Nowhere else in the Mediterranean does the water meet the rock at this scale.
Three nautical miles apart at the bay's outer end sit the only two superyacht-grade marinas on the eastern Adriatic between Dubrovnik and Corfu. Porto Montenegro at Tivat was built on a former Yugoslav navy submarine base and now berths yachts up to 250 meters — five-time Gold Anchor Award winner, the southernmost Platinum-rated marina in the Mediterranean. D-Marin Portonovi at Herceg Novi handles boutique-tier yachts up to 120 meters with the One&Only Portonovi quayside, on-site customs and immigration, and the Chenot Espace longevity facility behind the hotel. Both quays handle the cadence — provisioning, refueling, dinner reservations — without the friction the smaller Adriatic harbors carry.
Montenegro charges zero VAT on foreign-flagged commercial charter — alone among Mediterranean cruising grounds. Croatia charges 13 percent. Greece charges 12. France and Monaco run 20. Spain charges 21. Italy charges 22. The country also charges no VAT on fuel. On a $50,000 base week, that's $6,500 Croatia would have charged; on $100,000, it's $13,000. For the cross-border week, Croatian VAT applies pro-rata for the days in Croatian water — the captain logs the time, the broker reconciles at trip end.
The fortified medieval village of Sveti Stefan sits a hundred meters offshore on its own island — terracotta roofs above ancient stone walls, connected to the mainland by a thin stone causeway. The Aman resort operated the island from 2009 through 2021 and is currently closed in a legal dispute with the Montenegrin government; the silhouette from the sea is unaffected. The offshore anchorage is the marquee swim day of the week — six meters of clean water, the island a hundred meters off the bow, the village restaurants reachable by tender from the boat.
A hand-picked selection of crewed charter yachts for Montenegro — yachts and crews we know firsthand.
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 · Montenegro
Sailing Montenegro is the Adriatic week without the customs day on the front — seven nights round-trip from Tivat through the full Bay of Kotor and out to the Sveti Stefan offshore swim day. The pace is deliberately slow. The bay is small enough that the captain anchors twice a day on most days, so the marquee stops — Kotor's medieval walls, Perast's baroque waterfront and the church on the made-island, the Sveti Stefan silhouette offshore, the marina quay at Tivat — are all within an easy run of each other. About seventy nautical miles end to end, with no leg longer than twenty-five.
The route works on any well-found yacht — sailing yacht, crewed catamaran, or motor yacht. Inside the bay is flat protected water; the mountain wall blocks the prevailing summer winds. The open coast outside Herceg Novi catches the Adriatic Maestral downwind in the afternoons. Touch Adriatic's catamarans, the Sail Dalmatia fleet, and a small motor-yacht segment work this coast regularly, repositioning south from Croatia for the booking. The captain and chef onboard handle the chart, the dinner reservations, the cruising vignette and the harbor formalities. Saturday-to-Saturday at Porto Montenegro, 0% Montenegrin charter VAT on the base rate.
Sailing Montenegro is the slower Adriatic week — seven days round-trip from Tivat through the full Bay of Kotor and out to the Sveti Stefan offshore swim day. Marquee stops on every day, no customs paperwork on the front end, and a pace deliberately set for guests who want to anchor twice a day rather than cover ground. About 70 nautical miles total. No leg longer than 25.
The bay is flat protected water and the open coast outside Herceg Novi runs downwind on the prevailing summer Maestral, so the route works cleanly on a crewed catamaran, a sailing yacht, or a motor yacht. For the cross-border version — embark in Dubrovnik, cross on day two, finish in the bay — see the Adriatic Crossing itinerary. For ten or fourteen nights covering both countries, an extended trip chains a Dalmatian week onto the front of that one and runs both countries on a single charter.
Day 1 of 7 · Tivat → Kotor
The charter begins at Porto Montenegro, a ten-minute taxi ride from Tivat (TIV) airport on the inner Bay of Kotor. Captain and chef meet guests on the dock, walk through the yacht, stow the luggage, and cover the chart for the week ahead. The marina is the southernmost superyacht infrastructure in the Mediterranean — the first Platinum-rated marina in the world, five-time Gold Anchor Award winner, capacity to 250 meters. Early afternoon to settle in. Lunch on board at the quay or ashore at Murano (Regent Porto Montenegro).
Once provisioning is squared away, lines off for the short eight-nautical-mile run through the Verige Strait narrows into the inner bay. The strait — the 340-meter gateway between the outer (Tivat) and inner (Risan + Kotor) bays — is the bay's iconic photograph, and the moment the cruising ground reveals what it is: Mt. Lovćen's wall rising seventeen-hundred meters straight out of the water on the south side, the mountain villages of Stoliv and Prčanj on the north. Anchor or stern-to off the Old Town walls at Kotor as the afternoon light comes in.
Climb the fortifications before sunset — twelve-hundred meters of wall up the mountain face, the Old Town and the bay below opening up at each switchback. Come back to the yacht for the chef's first dinner — Mediterranean plus-expenses pricing means most evenings are dinner ashore at a harbor restaurant, but tonight's the welcome aboard. Tomorrow's dinner is reserved at Galion or Bocalibre Kotor in the Old Town, walked from the quay.
Day Highlights
Day 2 of 7 · Kotor → Perast
Morning at anchor under the Kotor walls, breakfast on the aft deck, the chef putting together what comes next. Lines off mid-morning for the short four-nautical-mile run across the inner bay to Perast, the baroque town that faces the bay's two islets — Our Lady of the Rocks on the left (artificial, the church built on a foundation of sunken-ship ballast accumulated over two hundred years by Perast's mariners) and St. George on the right (natural, Benedictine monastery, closed to visitors).
Anchor off Perast, tender to the islet for a thirty-minute walk through the baroque church and the small museum upstairs — the votive paintings collected over centuries from sailors returning home, the silver hand-beaten plates that line the walls. Back to the yacht, lunch on board or ashore at Conte Restaurant on the Perast waterfront — the fish-of-the-day from the morning boats, a glass of Vranac (Montenegro's signature red), a slow afternoon by the mountain-wall light off the water.
Move the yacht to the Perast town quay for the evening or stay at anchor; both work. The town walks end to end in twenty minutes — the seventeenth-century Bujović Palace, the church of St. Nicholas with its bell tower, the small museum of Perast's maritime history (the town once produced one of the largest captains' schools in the Adriatic). Dinner ashore at Conte or Otok Bronza; the captain books either.
Day Highlights
Day 3 of 7 · Inner bay → Luštica
Out through the Verige Strait mid-morning, then west past the Stoliv villages and through the outer bay toward the Luštica peninsula at the bay's mouth. The Luštica is one of the bay's two flanking peninsulas — Vrmac to the north, Luštica to the south — and the only part of the cruising ground with anchorages in genuinely open Adriatic water rather than the bay's protected pool.
Anchor in Žanjic Bay, the cleanest swim anchorage on the peninsula. Tender to the Blue Cave (Plava Špilja) just around the headland — the sea-cave on the Luštica's outer coast, less famous than Croatia's Blue Cave at Biševo but with comparable internal light and almost no crowds outside the Croatian-day-boat hours. Swim inside or use the tender to enter; both work.
Lunch on board at anchor or tender across to Mamula Island for an early-afternoon walk through the fortress. Mamula was built by the Austro-Hungarians in the 1850s, used as a Yugoslav prison-camp in WWII, and reopened in 2023 as a Marriott Autograph Collection wellness hotel — the rebuild stabilized the buildings rather than erasing what they were, and the on-island restaurant takes lunch reservations from yacht-guests via VHF. Optional dinner ashore there in the evening, or back to anchor in Žanjic for a quieter night.
Day Highlights
Day 4 of 7 · Luštica → Sveti Stefan
Lines off Luštica in the morning for the longest day of the week — twenty-five nautical miles south down the open coast to Sveti Stefan, about three hours under power or a downwind sail in the prevailing summer Maestral. The route runs outside Herceg Novi's outer beaches, past Budva (optional old-town walk ashore for a short lunch) and Bečići, and into the offshore anchorage at Sveti Stefan.
Sveti Stefan is the Montenegro photograph — a fifteenth-century walled village on a small island a hundred meters off the mainland, connected by a thin stone causeway. The Aman Sveti Stefan resort operated the island from 2009 through 2021 and is currently closed in a legal dispute with the Montenegrin government; the silhouette remains the iconic shot of the charter and the offshore anchorage is still the best swim day of the week. Drop the swim ladder, drop the platform, drop into the water — the bottom shows clean at six meters and the island sits a hundred meters off the bow.
Lunch on board, slow afternoon at anchor, possibly tender to the village above the mainland beach for a walk before dinner. Dinner aboard tonight; the closed Aman dining room is the obvious loss, and the village restaurants (Restaurant Bar Olympia, Konoba Blaž in Pržno) are open but not at the level the captain or chef can compete with in the galley. The chef will know.
Day Highlights
Day 5 of 7 · Sveti Stefan → Portonovi
Lines off Sveti Stefan after morning swims, twenty-five-nautical-mile return north back along the open coast. Lunch on board underway or anchored briefly in Žanjic for a swim before pushing west to Herceg Novi at the bay's outer end. The seventeenth-century Forte Mare fortress sits above the town on the inbound approach.
Berth at D-Marin Portonovi for the night — the Adriatic's first One&Only on the quay, 120-meter capacity at the marina, on-site customs and immigration for guests arriving by yacht. The hotel sits directly on the marina with the Chenot Espace wellness facility behind it (the longevity-and-fitness program is the Adriatic's most serious — IV nutrition, biomarker testing, the cold-plunge / sauna / contrast cycle), and La Veranda is the dinner room.
Dinner ashore at La Veranda is the marquee meal of the charter. Reservations book a week ahead in peak season; the captain coordinates. The kitchen is Mediterranean — local seafood, slow-cooked Montenegrin lamb, an Adriatic wine list with depth on Vranac and Krstač (the white grape grown on the limestone soils of the inner bay). Optional Chenot Espace appointment in the morning for guests interested.
Day Highlights
Day 6 of 7 · Herceg Novi → Tivat
Morning at Portonovi — breakfast on the aft deck, optional Chenot Espace appointment for guests interested in the wellness facility. Lines off mid-morning for the run back through the Verige Strait to Tivat. Fourteen nautical miles, about two hours under power. The Verige passage looks different on the inbound — the inner bay opens behind the narrows rather than ahead of them, and Stoliv and Prčanj sit on the western shore at water level under Mt. Vrmac.
Berth at Porto Montenegro mid-afternoon. The marina runs along a long quay south of the village; the Heritage Collection shipyard sits along the waterfront, the Naval Museum at the south end (built from the Yugoslav submarine pens that were here before the marina), and a row of cafes and shops between. Walk the marina end-to-end in twenty minutes. Lunch on board or ashore at Murano (Regent Porto Montenegro).
Dinner ashore at Bocalibre, Murano, or One Bar. The marina-lit evening at Tivat is the cleanest concentration of crewed-yacht infrastructure on the Adriatic and the right register for the second-to-last night aboard.
Day Highlights
Day 7 of 7 · Tivat: Lipci, Catovica Mlini, Disembark
Last full day on the water. After breakfast the captain repositions the yacht across the inner bay to Risan for the Lipci petroglyphs — pre-Bronze-Age rock art on the cliff face above the village, identified in the 1960s and reached by tender ashore or by climbing up from the Risan waterfront. One of the small archaeological moments the bay is full of, with the right captain. A swim or a slow lunch at anchor in Risan Bay before repositioning west.
Late afternoon into Morinj at the bay's western shoulder. Dinner ashore at Restoran Konoba Catovica Mlini — the old water-mill restaurant with spring-fed pools at the foot of the dining terrace, a long-standing local favorite for farewell dinners. Tender across from anchor or stern-to at the small dock. The captain books the table mid-week.
Back to Porto Montenegro for the last night aboard. Saturday morning is disembarkation — gratuity envelope to the captain (Mediterranean standard 10 to 15 percent of base, split among the crew), a ten-minute taxi to TIV airport, US guests connecting through London, Frankfurt, or Istanbul on the way home. For an extra day pre- or post-charter, the captain knows the right night in Tivat (the Regent Porto Montenegro on the quay), in Kotor (the Hotel Cattaro inside the Old Town walls), or in Dubrovnik for guests routing back through DBV airport. The broker coordinates.
Day Highlights
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Bookmark this voyage →Crewed Itinerary · Montenegro
This is the Adriatic week most guests book the second time they come — embark in Dubrovnik on Saturday afternoon, cross the border into Montenegro on day two, and finish in the medieval heart of the Bay of Kotor a week later. Two countries on a single charter, the Old Town walls of Dubrovnik on one end and the Sveti Stefan offshore swim day on the other. About a hundred nautical miles end to end, including the open-Adriatic crossing the morning after embarkation.
The route is yacht-type flexible. The cross-border leg on day two (Cavtat down to Herceg Novi, about twenty-five nautical miles) runs comfortably on any well-found yacht — the prevailing summer Maestral is a downwind reach most days. Crewed catamarans fifty to sixty-five feet and motor yachts twenty-four to thirty-five meters are the standard inventory on this coast; Touch Adriatic and Sail Dalmatia run both sides routinely, with captains who've done the customs run since the Portonovi quay opened. The captain handles the paperwork; guests stay aboard. The Montenegrin portion of the week pays no charter VAT; the single Croatian day pays 13% pro-rata. Saturday-to-Saturday at both ACI Marina Dubrovnik and Porto Montenegro.
This is the Adriatic week most guests book the second time they come — embark in Dubrovnik, cross the border into Montenegro on day two, finish in the medieval heart of the Bay of Kotor. Two countries on one charter, the Dubrovnik Old Town walls on one end and the Sveti Stefan offshore swim day on the other. About 100 nautical miles end to end.
For the slower week without the customs day on the front, see the Bay of Kotor Tivat Round-Trip — same Montenegrin stops, all seven days inside the country. For 10 or 14 nights chaining a Dalmatian week with this one, the canonical extended route runs Split → Hvar → Korčula → Mljet → Dubrovnik on the front half, then this itinerary's day-by-day as the back half. That's the trip captains who work both coasts route every season.
Day 1 of 7 · Embark Dubrovnik
The charter begins at ACI Marina Dubrovnik or the Gruž port, fifteen minutes by taxi from Dubrovnik (DBV) airport on Croatia's southern coast. Captain and chef meet guests on the dock, walk through the yacht, stow the luggage, and cover the chart for the week — including tomorrow's customs day at Cavtat and the open-Adriatic crossing to Herceg Novi. The marina is deep-water capable for any size yacht and the early afternoon is settle-in time. Provisioning is squared away before arrival.
Late afternoon ashore. Tender or walk to the Old Town — the walls walk is the iconic Dubrovnik ninety-minute loop, best in the cooler hour before sundown. The walls are UNESCO-inscribed since 1979 and run two kilometers around the medieval city; the route reads better counterclockwise (start at the Pile Gate). Dinner ashore at 360° Dubrovnik (one Michelin star, built into the city walls themselves) or at one of the konobas in the Old Town (Konoba Dubrava, Restaurant Orsan). The captain books either.
Back to the yacht for a quiet first night at the marina. The captain has the morning's customs paperwork in order before breakfast.
Day Highlights
Day 2 of 7 · Dubrovnik → Cavtat
Lines off Dubrovnik mid-morning for the short twelve-nautical-mile run south to Cavtat — Croatia's last port before the Montenegrin border. The captain has the day planned around the customs paperwork; the morning is a long lunch ashore at Bugenvila (the local Cavtat room, on the harbor) while the customs office processes the clearance-out documentation. Two hours, typical. Guests stay aboard the yacht once paperwork begins; passports are presented once at the police pier.
Cavtat itself is a quiet working town — the harbor promenade walks end-to-end in fifteen minutes, the small archaeological museum holds Roman and medieval artifacts from the surrounding peninsula, and the cafe culture is real. The Račić mausoleum on the hill above the harbor (Ivan Meštrović, 1922) is a fifteen-minute walk up and worth the climb when the schedule allows before lunch.
Mid-afternoon lines off Cavtat for the open-Adriatic crossing to Herceg Novi at the mouth of the Bay of Kotor. About twenty-five nautical miles, a downwind reach on the prevailing summer NW Maestral or a quick run under power. Pass the Prevlaka peninsula (Croatia's southernmost mainland point) astern and Cape Ostro (the bay's northern entrance) ahead. Clearing into Montenegro at D-Marin Portonovi — customs and immigration on-site at the marina, another two hours but the captain handles it while guests get settled in the new country. Berth at D-Marin Portonovi for the night.
Day Highlights
Day 3 of 7 · Portonovi → Luštica
Morning at D-Marin Portonovi — breakfast on the aft deck, optional Chenot Espace appointment for guests interested in the wellness facility, then lines off for the short ten-nautical-mile run east along the Luštica peninsula. The Luštica is the outer-southern arm of the Bay of Kotor — the peninsula that defines the bay's mouth on the south side and the only stretch of the cruising ground with anchorages in genuinely open Adriatic water rather than the bay's protected pool.
Anchor in Žanjic Bay, the cleanest swim anchorage on the peninsula — sand bottom at six meters, no shore development beyond a beach restaurant and a small dock. Tender around the headland to the Blue Cave (Plava Špilja) — the sea-cave that catches the internal light at mid-day, accessible by tender or by swimmer. Less crowded than Croatia's Blue Cave at Biševo, comparable visual.
Lunch on board at anchor or tender to Mamula Island for an early-afternoon walk through the fortress. Mamula reopened in 2023 as a Marriott Autograph Collection wellness hotel; the rebuild stabilized the buildings rather than erasing the WWII Yugoslav-internment history. The on-island restaurant takes lunch and dinner reservations from yacht-guests via VHF. Stay at anchor in Žanjic for the night or move back to D-Marin Portonovi for a dinner ashore at La Veranda (One&Only Portonovi).
Day Highlights
Day 4 of 7 · Luštica → Tivat
Lines off Luštica mid-morning for the short run east to Porto Montenegro at Tivat. The route runs through the Verige Strait — the 340-meter gateway between the outer (Tivat) and inner (Risan + Kotor) bays, and the moment the Bay of Kotor reveals its inner geography. Mt. Lovćen's wall rises seventeen-hundred meters straight out of the water on the south side; the mountain villages of Stoliv and Prčanj on the north. Defending the narrows was a national priority during the Venetian and Ottoman eras and chains were strung across the channel from each side; the modern reality is a half-hour pass under power.
Berth at Porto Montenegro for the night — the bay's superyacht hub, the first Platinum-rated marina in the world, five-time Gold Anchor Award winner. The Heritage Collection shipyard runs along the southern end of the marina, the Naval Museum at the south end (built from the Yugoslav submarine pens that occupied the site before the marina), and a row of cafes and shops between. Walk the marina end-to-end in twenty minutes.
Lunch ashore at Murano (Regent Porto Montenegro) or One Bar. Dinner ashore at Bocalibre, Murano, or back to La Veranda at Portonovi if the table works the second time. Slow afternoon at the quay — the marina is the cleanest concentration of crewed-yacht infrastructure on the Adriatic.
Day Highlights
Day 5 of 7 · Tivat → Perast
Lines off Porto Montenegro mid-morning for the short five-nautical-mile run north into the inner bay and around to Perast. The route passes Stoliv and Prčanj on the western shore — the mountain villages on the north side of the Verige — and opens into the inner bay's flat protected water. Anchor off Perast or stern-to at the town quay; both work.
Tender to Our Lady of the Rocks for the thirty-minute walk through the baroque church and the small museum upstairs. The islet is artificial — built over two hundred years from sunken-ship ballast accumulated by Perast's mariners — and the church is one of the cleanest baroque interiors on the eastern Adriatic. The museum's votive paintings and silver hand-beaten plates were left over centuries by sailors returning home from voyages.
Lunch on board or ashore at Conte Restaurant on the Perast waterfront — fish-of-the-day from the morning boats, a glass of Vranac (Montenegro's signature red), a slow afternoon by the mountain-wall light off the water. Walk the Perast promenade end-to-end in twenty minutes; the seventeenth-century Bujović Palace, the church of St. Nicholas with its bell tower, and the small museum of Perast's maritime history (the town once produced one of the largest captains' schools in the Adriatic) are all walkable in an hour. Dinner ashore at Conte or back aboard for a quiet anchor night.
Day Highlights
Day 6 of 7 · Perast → Kotor
Short four-nautical-mile run from Perast around the bay's inner head to Kotor. Optional stop on the way at the Lipci petroglyphs above Risan — pre-Bronze-Age rock art on the cliff face above the village, identified in the 1960s and reached either by yacht-tender ashore or by climbing up from the Risan waterfront. One of the bay's smaller archaeological moments and one of the few that stays genuinely private on a yacht-only approach.
Anchor or stern-to off the Old Town walls at Kotor for the late morning. The Old Town walks in an hour — the cathedral of St. Tryphon (1166), the maritime museum, the small church of St. Luke. The walls walk is the marquee — twelve-hundred meters of fortification climbing the face of Mt. Lovćen above the city, the route a steady switchback up to the Castle of St. John at the top. Allow ninety minutes round-trip; the right time is the cooler hour before sunset.
Dinner ashore at Galion (the harbor restaurant on the city waterfront, the long-standing local favorite for special occasions) or at Bocalibre Kotor inside the walls. Both are walked from the quay. Anchor in the inner bay for the night, with the walls lit up behind the boat after sundown.
Day Highlights
Day 7 of 7 · Kotor → Sveti Stefan → disembark
Long day, marquee finish. Lines off Kotor early for the run back out through the Verige Strait and south along the open coast to Sveti Stefan — about twenty-five nautical miles, three hours under power or a downwind sail on the prevailing summer Maestral. The route passes Tivat to port, out past Herceg Novi, and then south along the open-Adriatic coast past Budva and Bečići to the Sveti Stefan offshore anchorage.
Sveti Stefan is the Montenegro photograph and the right swim day to close the charter. Drop the platform, drop into the water, the bottom shows clean at six meters and the island sits a hundred meters off the bow. The Aman resort is closed (legal dispute with the government, ongoing since 2021), so dinner ashore at the island itself is the obvious loss; lunch on board at anchor instead, then back north for the disembark.
Twenty-nautical-mile return north to Porto Montenegro for the last night at the quay. Dinner ashore at Murano, Bocalibre, or One Bar. Disembark the following morning — gratuity envelope to the captain (Mediterranean standard is 10 to 15 percent of the base rate, split among the crew), the small ceremony of saying goodbye, and a ten-minute taxi to TIV airport. The captain can coordinate the road transfer back to DBV (about ninety minutes, depending on the customs queue) for guests who prefer to fly home from Dubrovnik.
Day Highlights
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Bookmark this voyage →Combining with Croatia
Montenegro is the country most guests book the second time they come to the Adriatic — but a meaningful share book it together with Croatia on the front end, on a single charter. The marquee itinerary, the Dubrovnik-to-Kotor one-way, already does this in seven nights: embark in Croatia, cross the border on day two, finish at Porto Montenegro. The captain handles the customs paperwork at Cavtat on the way out and Herceg Novi on the way in; the math at the end is 0% Montenegrin VAT for six days and 13% Croatian VAT pro-rata for the one day in Croatian water. The trip works because most of the catamaran fleet that runs Montenegro is Croatian-based anyway — Touch Adriatic, Sail Dalmatia, the Sunreef segment — and the captains who do these coasts have run the route every season.
For ten or fourteen nights, the canonical extended trip runs Split or Dubrovnik through Brač, Hvar, Korčula, Mljet, the Elaphiti islands, and Dubrovnik — then south across to the Bay of Kotor and the Sveti Stefan offshore swim day. That's the trip most repeat Adriatic guests end up doing the third or fourth time back to this water. The route works in either direction; the broker plans the cross-border morning into the schedule from the start so it lands as a soft day rather than a full cruising-day cost. The marquee stops in both countries get covered without the rushed pace of a single-week one-way.
For the broader comparison — when to go for a non-charter trip, the towns and the food angles, the road-trip option, the hotels, the cost math beyond just the charter — we wrote the long version at Montenegro vs Croatia: A Comparison Read. The short version is on this page already; the long version is over there.
When to go, what it costs, and how to get there — the practical answers guests ask before booking a Montenegro crewed yacht charter.
July and August are the loud weeks. Full marinas at Tivat and Herceg Novi, the Sveti Stefan offshore anchor holding a dozen yachts on a hot Saturday, dinner waitlists at the quay-side restaurants, water in the high 70s, air in the high 80s. Rates run twenty-five to forty percent above shoulder and the best yachts and crews book nine to twelve months out. What Boka doesn't have is Hvar-harbor density — the inventory spreads across sixty nautical miles, so even at peak no single anchorage turns into a queue. For guests who want Mediterranean July energy without the Croatian-coast press, this is the answer.
June and September are the months Mediterranean regulars book here. Water's warm but not peak-hot. The marina restaurants have tables. Rates drop twenty to thirty percent off peak. The bay clears out of the day-tour traffic and the Sveti Stefan offshore anchor holds three or four yachts instead of a dozen. Late May and early October work for guests traveling before or after the European school calendar — slightly cooler water, occasional weather coming down the Adriatic, but the captain reads the forecast and routes around it. The fleet is in the water May through early October; outside those months the boats either reposition north to Croatia for refit or cross the Atlantic for the Caribbean season.
Crewed yacht charters in Montenegro run from $25,000 to $100,000+ per week base rate — the lowest floor on the Mediterranean range. The pool delivers cleanly across catamarans 50–65 ft, motor yachts 24–35 m, and into the smaller-superyacht segment up to about 45 meters. Above that — Tivat's 100-meter-plus berths — most bookings come through the direct broker channels rather than the crewed-catamaran pipeline. Montenegro operates on the Mediterranean plus-expenses model. The base rate covers the yacht and crew only. Food, beverages, fuel, marina dockage, harbor fees, water and electric, and any tourist tax are paid through an Advance Provisioning Allowance (APA), pre-funded at 25 to 30 percent of base and reconciled at trip end. Crew gratuity runs 10 to 15 percent of base, paid directly to the captain on disembarkation. The math worth knowing: charter VAT in Montenegrin waters is 0% for foreign-flagged commercial yachts — alone in the Mediterranean (Croatia 13%, Greece 12%, Spain 21%, Italy 22%, France 20%). The country also charges no VAT on fuel. For the cross-border week, Croatian VAT applies pro-rata for the days in Croatian water; the captain logs the time and the broker reconciles. Charters run Saturday to Saturday.
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We charter across the Eastern Mediterranean. Here are some other excellent alternatives.

Embark on a Greece yacht charter to experience timeless beauty, crystal-clear waters, ancient ruins, and charming islands offering endless exploration.

Stone harbors and pine-rimmed coves down the Dalmatian coast — Roman ruins inside medieval walls, cold Pošip on a stern-to quay in Hvar, the Adriatic the way it was written about.

Yalıkavak's celebrity-chef quay, Maçakizi's pontoon at sundown, Kekova where the sunken city of Simena sits below your anchor — the Mediterranean the Turks have mostly kept for themselves, and the lowest charter VAT in the Med.
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.
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.
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.
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.