Contessa
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik anchors yacht charter in southern Dalmatia, pairing one of the Adriatic's most dramatic backdrops — the walled UNESCO old city — with a compact, island-studded cruising ground. The fleet here leans toward bareboat sailing monohulls as the core offering, with bareboat catamarans increasingl...
Dubrovnik anchors yacht charter in southern Dalmatia, pairing one of the Adriatic's most dramatic backdrops — the walled UNESCO old city — with a compact, island-studded cruising ground. The fleet here leans toward bareboat sailing monohulls as the core offering, with bareboat catamarans increasingly popular for family and comfort cruising (roughly €1.000 a week for entry models up to €10.000 for luxury cats). Skippered charters, crewed and luxury motor yachts, gulets and per-cabin charters round out the choice. Most charters begin at ACI Marina Dubrovnik in Komolac, tucked up the sheltered Rijeka Dubrovacka inlet — 380 berths, water and power, open year-round, about 2 NM up the inlet from the Old City and Gruz port. ACI Marina Slano, some 35 km north-west, serves as a secondary base for several fleets, while Gruz and Cavtat handle some check-ins.
The cruising heart lies just north-west: the Elaphiti Islands. Kolocep, car-free Lopud with its sandy Sunj beach and botanical gardens, and Sipan with its olive and fig valleys and wine sit within an easy first hop. Beyond them, Mljet National Park rewards an overnight in Polace — a long, deep, well-sheltered bay with good mud holding in 5-14 m and restaurant moorings — the base for visiting the salt lakes and St Mary islet monastery. The Peljesac peninsula adds Trstenik, Ston and Mali Ston for oysters and wine, and Korcula town suits longer weeks. A realistic Saturday-to-Saturday loop from Komolac runs: Lopud or Sipan, then Polace on Mljet, on to Korcula, across to Peljesac, back via Kolocep, an Old City anchorage, and home — short open-water hops throughout.
The prevailing summer wind is the Maestral, a thermal north-westerly sea breeze that fills in early-to-midday and peaks mid-afternoon. Reliable and moderate, the sailor's friend, it blows notably stronger in the southern Adriatic than the north, making for ideal afternoon sailing. The Jugo (south-easterly) brings humid weather, building seas and rain, usually with warning, while the Bura (north-easterly) is a cold, gusty offshore wind with short steep waves, most common in spring and autumn and fiercest at night. In peak summer, June to early September, the predictable Maestral and short hops keep this beginner-to-intermediate friendly; open crossings past Mljet and Lastovo and shoulder-season Bura bursts push it to intermediate.
The season runs April to October. High season is June to August, but September is a connoisseur's favourite — warm sea, thinner crowds, and quieter islands. The most stable winds run from mid-June to early September. Sea temperatures around southern Dalmatia sit near 20°C in early summer, peak at 25-26°C in August, and hold at 22-26°C through September, with swimming comfortable from June into October.
Provisioning is straightforward from Komolac, Gruz and the Old City, with island konobas and restaurant moorings for evenings ashore. Bareboat charters require the skipper to hold a recognised qualification (ICC or equivalent); if you do not sail, hire a local skipper on any bareboat or step aboard a crewed yacht. Note Mljet's National Park entry fee covers anchoring, and a Montenegro leg to Kotor means clearing out at Cavtat and into Herceg Novi with written charter-company permission. Picture the walls of Dubrovnik glowing at dusk as the Maestral eases and you drop anchor off the Elaphiti.
98 boats found
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
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Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
Komolac, Croatia
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