Bareboating

[1] Common bareboating locations are the Caribbean, the Mediterranean and the Whitsundays.

While it is always possible to add extra services to a bareboat rented vessel, it remains fundamental to understand that the term bareboat indicates that the vessel is being offered bare of crew, food and special equipment.

The charterer (i.e. the person signing the contract) will rent the sailing boat, motor boat or catamaran, with the dinghy and the fundamental equipment for safe navigation included in the price.

The charterer may then be the one responsible for navigation and supplies or ask the charter company to add services such as a skipper, hostess or cook, order also to be supplied with sets of linens, bath towels and beach towels, an outboard engine for the dinghy (which is given with paddles as standard),[2] wi-fi or satellite phone, a grill for outside and many types of water equipment like a kayak, windsurf and S.U.P., but also other services like requesting the provisions for the vacation in advance or a re-fuel service for the return (i.e. the charter company staff will be in charge of filling the fuel tanks again).

The bareboat charter market was established first in 1967 in Tortola by Jack Von Ost,[3] founder of Caribbean Sailing Yachts, who conceived the idea of a fleet made up of similar boats, with a standard for maintenance and equipment and boats especially designed for charter and not private use.