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Charter Yachts with Jacuzzis and Hot Tubs

A Jacuzzi is one of the most common requests we see for Greece yacht charters. It makes sense: guests picture sunset drinks, kids jumping in after a swim, or a quiet warm soak after dinner on deck.

But a yacht Jacuzzi is not just a yacht Jacuzzi. It can mean a small two-person hot tub, a forward catamaran tub that gets emptied before cruising, a sundeck spa pool with bar seating, or a proper superyacht pool closer to 10 meters. The checkbox tells you the yacht has the feature. It does not tell you whether guests actually use it.

Will You Actually Use the Jacuzzi?

This is the honest bit: guests often use the Jacuzzi less than they expect. Once you are anchored in Greece, the sea itself is usually the main attraction. Most groups swim, paddleboard, float, shower off, then drift toward lunch or cocktails.

That does not mean the Jacuzzi is pointless. It can be fantastic for children, cooler evenings, romantic sunset use, or a sociable cocktail-hour setup when it sits next to a bar or big sunpad area. It is just not always the center of the charter week.

Why Catamaran Jacuzzis Are Different

Yes, you can get a Jacuzzi on a catamaran, but the setup is more technical than on a large motor yacht. Catamarans usually have tighter limits around generator power, heating load, fresh-water capacity, and watermaker output. A filled Jacuzzi is also heavy, so the crew may empty it before getting underway.

Some catamaran tubs use seawater or are treated more like a cool spa/plunge feature than a permanently heated hot tub. Others are properly heated and very comfortable at anchor. The important thing is to ask how that specific yacht operates it, not just whether the brochure says “Jacuzzi.”

Fresh Water, Salt Water, and Heating

Most guests assume every hot tub is fresh water, hot, and ready all week. On yachts, it depends. A large motor yacht can usually carry, make, heat, and manage water more easily. On smaller yachts and catamarans, the crew may be more careful with filling, draining, and reheating.

Salt water is not automatically bad, and fresh water is not automatically better. The practical questions are: how often is it filled, how quickly does it heat, how is it cleaned, and does the yacht normally keep it full during the charter? Those answers matter more than the label.

Does It Stay Full Underway?

Often, no. Water is heavy, and a full tub can spill when the yacht moves, especially if the Jacuzzi is forward or exposed. A cubic meter of water weighs roughly a metric ton, so captains do not treat this casually.

On larger motor yachts, some Jacuzzis can be used in calm cruising conditions. On smaller yachts, catamarans, and windier routes, the realistic answer is usually: enjoy it at anchor, in port, or during calm settled periods.

Where Is the Best Place for a Jacuzzi?

Bow Jacuzzis often have the best view. They feel cinematic at anchor, but they can also be windier and more exposed.

Aft deck plunge pools are often better protected from wind and easier to use casually through the day. The tradeoff is privacy in port: an aft pool can be more visible from the quay or neighboring yachts.

Flybridge or sundeck Jacuzzis are usually the most social. They often sit near a bar, sunpads, dining, or lounging areas, which makes them better for cocktail hour and group use. On yachts like ALEXANDRA, LA PELLEGRINA 1, and ZALIV III, this upper-deck lifestyle is often the part we look at first when judging whether the Jacuzzi adds real value.

Jacuzzi, Plunge Pool, or Counter-Current Pool?

The words get messy. A Jacuzzi or hot tub usually means heated soaking. A plunge pool is usually cooler and better for dipping in and out. A swimming pool is larger and generally a superyacht feature. Some plunge pools also have counter-current systems, so guests can swim against the current for exercise while the yacht is at anchor.

A few yachts have both a Jacuzzi and a plunge pool. That can be genuinely useful: one space for warm evening use, another for cooling off during the day. For a future shortlist, this is where we would compare yachts like ITOTO, PEGASUS, and other larger yachts with more serious pool infrastructure.

What We Check Before Recommending One

We do not recommend a yacht just because it passes the Jacuzzi filter. We look at the actual photos, deck position, size, wind exposure, privacy, water system, heating reality, and how the crew normally manages it.

If the Jacuzzi is a must-have, tell us that. If it is a nice-to-have, we may still recommend a yacht with a simpler spa setup if the crew, cabins, stabilizers, route fit, and deck flow are stronger. That is usually how the best charter decisions are made.

Jacuzzi Charter Questions, Answered

Do charter yachts in Greece have hot tubs?

Many do. On crewed motor yachts of 75-90ft and up, a deck Jacuzzi is essentially standard; below that size, and on catamarans, it varies boat by boat. Every listing on this page is filtered for a real onboard Jacuzzi or deck pool.

Is the yacht Jacuzzi fresh or salt water?

It depends on the yacht, and the label matters less than the practice: how often it is filled, how quickly it heats, and whether the crew keeps it full during the charter. Large motor yachts manage water most easily; on smaller yachts and catamarans the crew is more careful with filling and reheating.

Can you use the Jacuzzi while the yacht is underway?

Often not. A full tub holds roughly a metric ton of water and can spill when the yacht moves, so captains empty exposed tubs for passages. On larger motor yachts some Jacuzzis work in calm cruising conditions; realistically, plan to enjoy it at anchor or in port.

Nadja Asmus, yacht charter broker with DMA Yachting

Want the Jacuzzi, but not the wrong yacht?

Tell us your dates, group size, route ideas, and whether the Jacuzzi is a must-have or a nice-to-have. We will shortlist yachts where the deck setup, water system, crew, stabilizers, and Greece itinerary actually make sense for the way you want to use it.

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Price ranges for yacht charters in Greece

Jetskis: 2
Jacuzzi
Scuba Onboard

FRIENDSHIP

From €245,000/week
6 cabins
173 ft
Oceanco
12 guests
Refit: 2022
350 Litres/Hr

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Jacuzzi

MIZU

From €229,998/week
5 cabins
174 ft
Oceanfast
10 guests
Refit: 2023
700 Litres/Hr

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Jetskis: 2
Jacuzzi

MIRAGE

From €200,000/week
8 cabins
174 ft
Feadship
12 guests
Refit: 2020
350 Litres/Hr

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Jacuzzi

MIRAGE IV

From €175,000/week
6 cabins
131 ft
Princess, UK
12 guests
Refit: 2024
1000 Litres/Hr

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Jetskis: 2
Jacuzzi

ALALYA

From €160,000/week
6 cabins
155 ft
ISA, RODRIGUEZ GROUP ITALY
12 guests
Refit: 2020

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Jetskis: 2
Jacuzzi

OASIS

From €155,000/week
6 cabins
155 ft
International Shipyard Ancona
12 guests
Refit: 2023
300 Litres/Hr

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Jacuzzi

VETRO

From €100,000/week
5 cabins
158 ft
Custom
10 guests
Refit: 2020

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Jetski
Jacuzzi

ILLUSION 2

From €100,000/week
6 cabins
131 ft
Lloyds Ship
12 guests
Refit: 2023
300 Litres/Hr

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3 reviews
Jetski
Jacuzzi
All Included

MATTEA

From €95,000/week
4 cabins
78 ft
Sunreef Yachts
8 guests
Built: 2025

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Jetski
Jacuzzi

GALA I

From €83,000/week
5 cabins
93 ft
Benetti
10 guests
Refit: 2019
200 Litres/Hr

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Jetski
Jacuzzi

M/S AURUM SKY

From €79,660/week
6 cabins
143 ft
Odisej d.o.o.
12 guests
Refit: 2025
80 Litres/Hr

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12 reviews
Jetski
Jacuzzi

CARTOUCHE

From €70,000/week
4 cabins
95 ft
Jean-Jacque Coste
8 guests
Refit: 2021 - 2022 - 2024
20 Litres/Hr

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