Last updated: 2026-06-18
- Bareboat hire in Croatia legally requires a recognised skipper’s certificate plus a VHF radio licence.
- A skippered charter needs nothing from you but a swimsuit.
- Our fleet is skippered-only: local knowledge, insurance simplicity and zero stress for guests.
- Bareboat suits experienced sailors on week-long trips; day charters almost always favour a skipper.
Every February the same email lands in my inbox a dozen times: “Can we hire the boat without a skipper?” It is a fair question, and the honest answer has two halves — what Croatian law says, and what actually makes for a better day at sea. I have skippered here for twenty seasons, so I have an obvious bias; I will show my working anyway.
What licence do you need to charter bareboat in Croatia?
To take charge of a hired boat in Croatian waters you must hold two documents: a certificate of competence for the vessel’s size, and a VHF radio operator’s certificate. The Croatian qualification is the Voditelj brodice (boat leader) licence issued by the Ministry of the Sea, Transport and Infrastructure, which also publishes the list of foreign certificates it recognises. For most international visitors the practical route is the International Certificate of Competence (ICC), and several national tickets — the RYA Day Skipper among them — appear on the recognised list. The radio certificate is checked separately and catches many people out: your sailing licence alone is not enough.
Charter companies verify both documents before handover, harbourmaster patrols can ask for them on the water, and operating without them voids the insurance. There is no grey area here — and no, the marina will not “sort something out”.
On top of the paperwork, most bareboat operators require a résumé of recent experience and take a security deposit of €1,000–3,000 against the hull.
Why is our fleet skippered-only?
Because on day charters a skipper makes the day better in ways a licence cannot. Every one of our eight yachts comes with a licensed local skipper, and that is a product decision, not a legal workaround:
- These are busy waters. The channel between the city and Lokrum carries ferries, kayak flotillas, taxi boats and cruise tenders all day. Our skippers read that traffic on autopilot; a visitor reads it with white knuckles.
- Local knowledge is the product. The difference between a good day and a superb one is knowing which cove is calm in today’s wind, which konoba on Šipan has the fresh catch, and when the blue cave at Koločep is safe to enter. That knowledge takes seasons, not a licence course.
- Everybody swims. On a bareboat, the qualified skipper stays sober-ish and stays aboard. On our boats, the whole group is on holiday, prosecco included.
- Insurance and deposits vanish. No security deposit, no damage anxiety, no arguments about scratches at handover.
The maths supports it too: a full-day skippered charter for up to 12 guests starts from €1,200, with skipper, insurance and safety equipment included — see the full price list — which is routinely less than a comparable bareboat once fuel, deposit insurance and mooring fees are added.
How do skippered and bareboat charters compare?
| Skippered day charter | Bareboat | |
|---|---|---|
| Paperwork | None — passport for the marina at most | Licence + VHF certificate + experience résumé |
| Upfront cost | One price, skipper and insurance included | Boat + fuel + deposit (€1,000–3,000 held) |
| Freedom | You set the route; skipper executes it | Total — within your own competence |
| Stress level | Zero; you are a guest on your own boat | You are crew, navigator and liability holder |
| Local knowledge | 20 seasons of coves, konobas and weather | Whatever you researched the night before |
| Weather calls | Made for you, conservatively | Yours alone, with your deposit at stake |
| Best for | Days and celebrations, mixed groups | Experienced sailors on week-plus itineraries |
Who should choose bareboat?
Sailors, genuinely qualified ones, on longer trips. If you hold a recognised licence, have logged real miles, and want a week or two of island-hopping where the sailing itself is the holiday, bareboat is a wonderful way to see the Croatian coast — the Croatian National Tourist Board counts over a thousand islands and islets, and a fortnight under sail barely scratches them. Croatia’s charter infrastructure for that market is among the best in the Mediterranean, mostly based in Split, Zadar and Biograd.
Be honest with yourself about the experience question, though. The Adriatic is gentle until it is not; a summer bura can go from zero to 40 knots in an hour, and the person responsible for reading the meteo.hr forecast at 06:00 is you.
Who should choose a skippered charter?
Almost everyone booking by the day, and anyone for whom the boat is the means rather than the point. Families, couples, celebration groups, colleagues — if the goal is swimming, islands, lunch and a spectacular coastline rather than the craft of seamanship, a skipper converts admin into holiday. It is also the only way to do it here: our fleet does not offer bareboat at any price, so the choice on a private charter with us is happily pre-made.
If you are weighing a day on the water this season, look at the routes, pick a date, and reserve at our booking page. Bring nothing but sunscreen and an appetite. The licences are my problem.
By Captain Marko Radić, Voditelj brodice category B, who has never once asked a guest to hold the wheel while he swam. Tempting, though.