My Greek Charter, the Athens-based yacht charter platform, has launched a dedicated over-12 passenger itinerary product for the Greek islands, targeting corporate groups and multi-generational family allocations that previously required splitting bookings across two vessels or abandoning Greek waters entirely. The move addresses a regulatory and inventory constraint: Greek-flagged crewed yachts rarely accommodate more than 12 guests under standard charter licensing, forcing groups of 14 to 20 into split-boat logistics or offshore to Croatia and Turkey.
The new service tier pairs clients with specialist brokers who coordinate multi-hull charters—typically twin catamarans or a motor yacht plus tender support vessel—across synchronized itineraries in the Cyclades and Saronic Gulf. Average weekly charter spend for the configuration runs €120,000 to €180,000 depending on vessel class and July-August peak demand, roughly 30% above the cost of two separate bookings due to coordination overhead and dual-crew premiums. My Greek Charter claims 22 active partnerships with Greek charter operators holding over-12 capacity, a figure that represents less than 8% of the country's licensed fleet but controls access to the newer catamaran inventory delivered since 2021.
The product launch follows 18 months of client feedback indicating that corporate incentive groups and family offices were defaulting to villa rentals in Mykonos and Paros rather than managing two-boat charters. Greece remains the Mediterranean's second-largest charter market by gross booking value after France, but has persistently lagged in large-group capture due to the 12-passenger regulatory ceiling and a fleet composition skewed toward monohulls under 50 meters. My Greek Charter's solution does not eliminate the underlying constraint—Greek maritime law still limits individual vessels—but monetizes the coordination arbitrage by pre-vetting dual-boat operators and embedding route synchronization into the booking process.
The timing aligns with broader Aegean infrastructure upgrades. Four new superyacht berths opened in Athens' Flisvos Marina in Q4 2024, and Mykonos is expanding its commercial harbor capacity by 18% ahead of summer 2025. Charter demand for Greece rose 11% year-over-year in 2024 according to Mediterranean Yacht Brokers Association data, with the Cyclades accounting for 63% of total Greek bookings. My Greek Charter has not disclosed unit economics, but the over-12 tier requires 21 days average lead time versus 14 days for standard charters, reflecting the narrower inventory pool and dual-crew scheduling friction.
Operators and allocators should track summer 2025 utilization rates for Greek catamarans over 50 feet, which remain the primary vessel class for the over-12 product. If My Greek Charter's coordination model proves margin-accretive, expect competing platforms to launch parallel services by Q4 2025. The secondary signal: whether villa rental platforms in Mykonos and Santorini report softer corporate group bookings in the June-August window, indicating actual channel shift rather than demand creation.
My Greek Charter's related entity, My Mallorca Charter, published a food-led itinerary this week, layering Michelin-adjacent dining into seven-day routes. The pattern—geographic platform expansion with vertical service differentiation—suggests the parent operation is testing regional replicability before raising capital or pursuing exit conversations. Greek charter season opens mid-May.