First-Time Charter Guide
The first charter comes with the most questions.
Never chartered a yacht before? This guide walks through what to expect on board, the questions first-timers always ask, and how a private charter in Indonesia actually works, drawn from more than a decade of planning these trips.
What a Charter Actually Is
A yacht charter is, at its simplest, renting a fully crewed private yacht for a set number of days. You do not drive the boat, cook the meals, or navigate the reefs. A professional crew handles all of that while you decide how to spend each day.
Think of it as a private floating villa with a dedicated staff, moving to a new location each morning. Your bedroom, dining room, lounge, and sundeck travel with you. The difference from a hotel is that you wake up in a different bay every day, with the sea outside your window and the anchorage to yourselves.
In Indonesia specifically, chartering takes place on traditional phinisi sailing yachts, handcrafted wooden vessels that are unique to this part of the world. That combination of traditional craftsmanship, warm crew culture, and remote water is particular to Indonesia.

Indonesian phinisi are handcrafted wooden sailing vessels, each one built by hand.
A Typical Day on Board
There is no fixed schedule, and that freedom is the appeal. But here is what a day might look like on a charter in Komodo or Raja Ampat, based on charters we have coordinated over more than a decade.
Early morning
Some guests rise at dawn to catch the light and the stillness. Coffee and tea are available from first light. Early risers might find the crew has already moved the yacht to a new anchorage during the night.
Breakfast
Served on deck or in the dining area, at whatever time suits your group. Fresh fruit, eggs prepared to order, pastries, granola, juices. The chef adapts to your preferences within a day or two.
Morning
A dive, a snorkel, a hike to a viewpoint, or a RIB ride through a lagoon. The cruise director suggests options based on the anchorage and conditions. Or skip the activity entirely and read on deck.
Lunch
Often the meal guests remember most. Served on board, on a beach, or at a table set up on a sandbar. Indonesian cuisine features heavily: grilled fish, satay, fresh salads, nasi goreng.
Afternoon
A second dive, paddleboarding, kayaking, fishing, or nothing at all. Some guests nap, some photograph wildlife, some jump off the upper deck. The pace is yours.
Dinner
Multi-course, often the chef's most creative meal of the day. Eaten under the stars on the upper deck or in the candlelit dining area.

Sundowners at anchor. The crew knows where to be at golden hour.
Common First-Timer Questions
Do I need to know how to sail?
No. This is a fully crewed yacht. You do not touch the rigging, the wheel, or the anchor. If the yacht sails and you want to help, the crew may invite you to participate, but it is entirely optional.
Do I need to know how to dive?
No. Many guests are snorkelers or non-swimmers who enjoy the scenery, hikes, and beach time. If you want to try diving, several yachts offer Discover Scuba experiences with certified instructors. For certified divers, your logbook and certification card are all you need.
Will I get seasick?
Indonesian charter routes primarily use sheltered waters between islands. Overnight passages across open water do occur on some itineraries, but your captain chooses routes and timing to minimize discomfort. If you are prone to motion sensitivity, we recommend itineraries with shorter crossings and can suggest appropriate medication.
Is there WiFi?
It depends on the yacht and the destination. Most yachts have satellite-based WiFi, but speeds are modest and coverage can drop in remote areas like central Raja Ampat or the Banda Sea. Many guests find the limited connectivity a welcome part of the time away. If staying connected is essential for work, let us know and we can recommend yachts with stronger satellite systems.
What about safety?
Every yacht in our fleet carries full safety equipment: life jackets, life rafts, fire extinguishers, EPIRBs, and first aid kits. Crew members are trained in emergency procedures. Captains hold appropriate licenses and know these waters intimately. We vet every yacht and crew before adding them to our fleet.

Diving and snorkeling are optional. The crew gears up anyone who wants to go.
Things People Worry About (But Shouldn't)
"It'll be too expensive."
Per person, a well-filled yacht charter can cost less than a week at a premium dive resort. The key is filling the cabins. A $70,000 per week yacht with 8 guests works out to $1,250 per person per night, including private crew, gourmet meals, and access to sites no resort can reach.
"We'll be bored."
This is the concern that vanishes fastest. Between diving, snorkeling, hiking, kayaking, fishing, wildlife encounters, village visits, beach BBQs, and the simple pleasure of watching islands pass from the deck, most guests say their charter felt too short, not too long.
"The kids will hate it."
Children tend to be the most enthusiastic guests on board. The combination of water, wildlife, and a crew that spoils them makes for natural adventure. We have seen toddlers through teenagers thrive on charters. What matters is choosing the right yacht and itinerary for your family's ages and interests.
"We're not 'yacht people'."
Neither are most of our guests. The culture on Indonesian charter yachts is relaxed, barefoot, and unpretentious. There is no dress code, no formal dining, and no expectation of yachting experience. You are there to explore, not to perform.
"We kept waiting for it to feel like a big deal. It never did. It just felt like the most natural, easy holiday we've ever taken. The crew handled everything and we had no idea how much we needed that."

The culture on board is relaxed and barefoot. No yacht experience required.
Things Worth Knowing in Advance
None of these are surprises once you're on board, but knowing them before you pack saves questions later.

Soft bags stow into cabin lockers; leave the hard cases at home.
- Pack soft bags, not hard suitcases. Cabin storage is designed for them and hard cases create problems in tight quarters.
- Reef-safe sunscreen is required in all Indonesian national parks. Bring enough for the trip or we can source it for you.
- Cash tips for the crew are customary, typically 5 to 15 percent of the charter rate. The crew works hard for it.
- Domestic flights to Labuan Bajo (LBJ) for Komodo and Sorong (SOQ) for Raja Ampat are part of the journey. We help arrange them as part of the booking process.
- Laundry service is available on most yachts, so pack light. A week's worth of clothes is genuinely enough.
- A waterproof camera or phone housing is worth having. The moments you will most want to remember are underwater.
- All marine park fees for Komodo and Raja Ampat are included in your charter cost. There is nothing extra to pay at the gate.
Your First Trip: Where to Start
For first-time charter guests, we most often recommend one of two starting points.
Komodo, 7 to 10 nights
The most accessible destination, a 90-minute flight from Bali (DPS to LBJ), with a compelling mix of dragon encounters, manta ray snorkeling, current-fed dive sites, and dramatic pink-sand landscapes. "To the Land of Dragons" is our most popular first-timer itinerary for good reason. Best from April through October.
Raja Ampat, 7 to 10 nights
For guests prioritizing diving and marine biodiversity, Raja Ampat is the clear choice. Its reefs hold the highest fish and coral diversity recorded anywhere. The access logistics are slightly more involved, requiring a domestic flight via Jakarta or Makassar to Sorong (SOQ), but the diving rewards the extra travel. Best from October through April.
Both destinations work for families, couples, and mixed groups. Both accommodate divers and non-divers. The choice usually comes down to season and travel dates.
Start the conversation with us even if you are months away from committing. The best part of our job is helping people figure out what they want from a charter. No question is too basic, and there is no obligation until you sign a contract.

Komodo and Raja Ampat both reward first-timers. The season determines which comes first.
Practical Guides
Everything you need to know before chartering in Indonesia. From costs and logistics to destination comparisons and packing lists.Continue Exploring
Dispatches from Indonesia's most extraordinary waters. Yacht features, expedition reports, and the stories behind our most memorable charters.Inspired to explore?
Our team has sailed these waters for over a decade. Let us help you plan your own Indonesian adventure.







