Yacht charter from Mallorca · 31 vessels · Bay of Palma to the east coast calas

Private yacht rental in Mallorca — from evening cruises on the bay to multi-day routes along the coast

A fleet of 31 yachts from 20 m sport cruisers to 40 m superyachts, each quoted with transparent day-rate and APA breakdowns before you confirm.

Mallorca
Mallorca 31 yachts · from €1,700/day
Mallorca
Spain

Mallorca by water — why the island works for every kind of charter

Mallorca's coastline divides neatly into distinct sailing zones, each suited to a different pace and purpose. The Bay of Palma is broad, sheltered and close to two well-serviced marinas — Club de Mar and Puerto Portals — making it the natural starting point for short afternoon or evening departures. Head east from Porto Cristo and the coast breaks into a sequence of limestone-walled calas: Cala Mondragó, Cala Pi, Cala Figuera, each with shallow, sandy floors where families can swim off the swim platform in calm conditions. The north coast around Cap de Formentor is steeper and more exposed, best appreciated from the water on a settled day when the cliffs drop straight to the surface. These zones sit close enough together that even a three-day charter can cover two or three of them without spending half the trip in transit.

Fleet choice matters here because the route dictates the vessel. A 24 m catamaran like a Sunreef 80 draws little enough to tuck into tight east-coast anchorages and carries the deck space for paddleboards, snorkelling gear and a proper lunch spread at anchor. A 40 m Sunseeker or Riva, by contrast, handles the open Bay of Palma with authority and gives a corporate group of ten or twelve the saloon and aft-deck room to hold a working lunch without feeling crowded. Our fleet of 31 yachts — from 20 m sport cruisers up to superyachts — means we match the vessel to your guest count, itinerary length and what you actually want to do on the water, whether that is an active day with toys deployed at anchor or a quiet evening watching the light shift behind the Serra de Tramuntana.

Seasonality shapes the experience more than most clients expect. June to September delivers the longest days and warmest water, but it also brings higher demand for restricted destinations — Cabrera National Park, 30 nautical miles south of Palma, requires a permit that fills quickly in peak months. April and May reward flexibility: lighter north-west breezes make for clean sailing, the calas are uncrowded, and Cabrera permits are easier to secure. October is the calendar's quiet advantage — warm sea, low-angle golden light and anchorages where you may be the only boat in the cove. We advise on the trade-offs for each window when you enquire.

Every booking includes a transparent breakdown of the day rate and APA before you confirm, calibrated to whether the route stays within the bay or extends to the east coast or beyond. For multi-day charters, we handle provisioning — sourcing from Palma's Mercado de l'Olivar or quayside yacht provisioners — and provide stop-by-stop fuel guidance so there are no ambiguities on the final accounting. Palma Airport sits roughly ten kilometres from Club de Mar, and Puerto Portals is a short transfer from the terminal, so the gap between landing and boarding is measured in minutes rather than hours.

Itineraries & guide
Curated selection

Featured fleet

Browse rental catalogue
Riva 130
Riva

Riva 130

Riva 130 — 40m

  • 40m
  • 12 guests
  • 5 cabins
from €40,000/day Contact
Sunreef 80
Sunreef

Sunreef 80

Wide decks, open sails, eight guests aboard

  • 23.9m
  • 8 guests
  • 4 cabins
  • 14kn
from €12,500/day View →
Thumper
Sunseeker

Thumper

Thumper — 40m

  • 40m
  • 12 guests
  • 5 cabins
from €32,000/day Contact
Manhattan 65
Sunseeker

Manhattan 65

Twelve guests, four cabins, open stern, fast coast

  • 22m
  • 12 guests
  • 4 cabins
  • 28kn
from €6,500/day View →
By category

Find the right boat for the day

From quiet day-boats to staffed superyachts.

Concierge

What a booking with us actually includes

Clear pricing before you confirm

Every quote separates the day-rate from the advance provisioning allowance, with fuel estimates adjusted for whether you stay in the Bay of Palma or extend toward Cabrera or the east coast calas.

Fleet depth across five categories

Thirty-one yachts spanning day boats, catamarans, sport yachts and superyachts up to 52 metres — capacity from two guests to twelve — so the vessel matches the occasion, not the other way round.

Corporate privacy and on-board catering

For client lunches or board-level briefings, we coordinate provisioning from Mercado de l'Olivar and route the yacht into quieter stretches of Palma Bay where mobile signal holds but the setting stays discreet.

Routes that rotate for repeat clients

Departure points shift between Puerto Portals, Porto Cristo and Port de Pollença across bookings, pairing each charter with a different coastline so a second or third trip never retraces the first.

Q & A

Frequently asked questions

A quick read of what most charter clients ask before booking.

  • What does a yacht charter in Mallorca typically cost?

    Our fleet ranges from 20 m sport cruisers and catamarans to 40 m superyachts, so day rates vary considerably — from around €5,000 per day for a mid-size catamaran up to significantly more for a large motor yacht like a Sunseeker 115 or Riva 130. Every quote we send separates the base charter fee from the APA (Advance Provisioning Allowance), which covers fuel, food, port fees and other running costs. The APA varies by route: a 2–4 hour Bay of Palma cruise burns far less fuel than an east-coast cala-hopping day or a crossing toward Ibiza. We break this down stop by stop so there are no surprises at the end of the charter.

  • When is the best season to charter from Mallorca?

    June through September is peak season — warm water, long evenings and the widest fleet availability. That said, April and May offer excellent sailing conditions with lighter winds from the north-west, quieter anchorages and easier access to restricted destinations like Cabrera National Park, where permits are harder to secure in high summer. October is worth serious consideration: the sea is still warm, the light turns golden in the late afternoon, and popular east-coast calas such as Cala Mondragó and Cala Pi are far less crowded. We can advise on the trade-offs for your specific dates.

  • Do I need a licence to charter a yacht?

    If you book a crewed charter — which covers the majority of our fleet — no licence is required. The captain and crew handle navigation, mooring and all safety protocols while you enjoy the route. Bareboat options do exist for qualified sailors, typically on smaller sailing yachts or catamarans, but you will need to present a recognised skipper's licence and demonstrate relevant experience before departure.

  • Can I arrange a corporate charter with catering and privacy?

    Yes. Several yachts in the fleet accommodate groups of up to twelve day-guests comfortably — enough for a client lunch, a board meeting on the water or a product reveal. We can coordinate provisioning through Palma's Mercado de l'Olivar or specialist yacht provisioners on the quay, and departures from Puerto Portals or Club de Mar keep the logistics tight for groups arriving from central Palma or the airport. Share the guest count, format and any dietary requirements when you enquire, and we will match a vessel and route to the brief.

  • What water toys and onboard extras can be arranged?

    Available equipment depends on the yacht. Larger motor yachts and catamarans often carry jet skis, paddleboards, snorkelling gear and towable inflatables as standard; others can be fitted with extras on request before departure. If an active day with time at anchor is part of your plan — particularly in the sheltered east-coast calas where conditions suit swimming and snorkelling — let us know early so we can confirm what the chosen vessel carries and source anything additional.

  • Can I book a multi-day itinerary, and how does the route planning work?

    Absolutely. For charters beyond a single day, we build itineraries that rotate departure points — Puerto Portals one morning, Porto Cristo or Port de Pollença the next — to keep the coastline fresh, especially for repeat visitors. Routes can run south toward Cabrera National Park (a permit is required and must be secured well in advance), east along the cala coast, or north to Cap de Formentor. We provide stop-by-stop fuel guidance and handle provisioning so the onboard experience feels seamless from the first morning to the final evening.