Alboran Charter S.L.

Alboran Charter S.L.

Starsails - Inhaber Helge Kröger

A Toda Vela Charter

Five Seasons Yachting

IRIS Yachtcharter

Starsails - Inhaber Helge Kröger

Sailme CM Charter

Sailme CM Charter

ECC Yachtcharter

The Mistral winds can also affect the Balearic Islands in Spain, particularly during the winter months. The Mistral is a strong and cold northwesterly wind that blows from central France down to the Mediterranean Sea, affecting regions along the way including the Balearic Islands. The Mistral winds are caused by the presence of high-pressure systems over Europe that push cold air southward towards the Mediterranean Sea. As the air passes over the Pyrenees mountains and then over the Balearic Islands, it picks up speed and can reach gusts of up to 60-70 kilometers per hour.
The Bora winds do not affect the Balearic Islands. The Bora is a cold and dry northeasterly wind that blows across the Adriatic Sea, mainly affecting the eastern coast of Italy, Slovenia, and Croatia. Instead, the Balearic Islands are affected by other types of winds, such as the Tramontana that blows from the north, the Mistral that blows from the northwest, and the Levante that blows from the east. These winds play an important role in shaping the climate and environment of the Balearic Islands, and are often used by sailors and windsurfers to enjoy the region's watersports.
Tramontana winds are dry, cold and often strong winds that blow from the north or northwest in the Balearic Islands of Spain. These winds are particularly common during the winter months and can reach speeds of up to 100 km/h (62 mph) in some areas.
The Jugo winds, also known as the Levante winds, can affect the Balearic Islands in Spain, although they are not as frequent or as strong as in other parts of Spain, such as Andalusia. The Jugo winds blow from the southeast, and can bring warm and humid air to the region, often resulting in high temperatures and a muggy atmosphere.
Balearic Islands (Palma/Mallorca hub, Menorca nature, Ibiza nightlife) and mainland east coast (Costa Brava to Barcelona to Costa Blanca). Canary routes are a different flight + climate pattern — filter listings by base.
Mallorca: largest fleet/service network. Ibiza: busy summer scene + nearby Formentera calas. Menorca: quieter, UNESCO biosphere, tighter availability in peak.
Palma (PMI), Ibiza (IBZ), Mahon Menorca (MAH). Book transfers early in August.
Barcelona, Valencia, Denia, Costa Brava towns — coastal hops; crossing to Balearics is a serious passage, not the default.
Spain uses its recreational certification system (e.g. PER progression) for residents. Charter companies serving foreigners often accept ICC/RYA/ASA-equivalent — verify in writing per boat; never assume Greek acceptance equals Spanish.
Most activity April–October (Balearics/Med). Canaries can be marketed year-round with different wind patterns.
Tramontana/NW can blow hard in NW Mallorca and Menorca channels. Thermal/sea breezes build afternoons. Use local forecasts — not one wind for all Spain.
Garbi SW sea breeze, Mestral episodes; Costa Brava has its own micro-variations.
Often Menorca or shorter Mallorca bay hops in moderate weeks; avoid maiden bareboat weeks in Tramontana peaks without a skipper.
If paperwork or experience is uncertain, skippered removes friction — especially Ibiza weekends or Palma departures.
Cats popular in Balearics for groups; mono easier in some village quays — match to crew and marina plan.
Spanish official; Catalan in Balearics/Barcelona zone; English common in big charter hubs.
Euro; cards usual; small harbours may prefer cash for minor fees.
Months ahead for popular cats/weeks; use SEARADAR filters for refundable-friendly options where available.
Cleaning, outboard, skipper — vary by operator. Compare true trip cost when extras are published.
Cancellation + medical recommended; read deposit/weather clauses.
Very common for weekly fleet; day-charter exists in big cities.
Some calas need permits or regulated mooring — plan ahead; do not treat every bay as open anchorage.
Cross-operator comparison, mandatory extras visibility, support picking the right region + boat class for your dates.
Spain is Schengen — check rules for your passport.
Hypermarkets near Palma; smaller islands pricier — top up water before hot weeks.
Standard in many Spanish quays — long lines and fender plan required.
Speed/no-wake and MPA rules enforced — use official apps/charts.
Typically daylight only unless professional skipper + contract allows.
Lifejackets sized correctly, shade, shorter legs; busy Ibiza wakes need timing.
Operator-dependent; cleaning surcharges.
If berths/heads fit — verify cabin privacy layout.
Lock dinghy; busy ports attract petty theft — same as Mediterranean hotspots.
Note fuel dock hours; queue on Sunday evenings in peak season.
Sometimes offered — relocation fee common; confirm in contract.
Operator assistance line; keep VHF + phone numbers laminated.
Large cats in Palma/Ibiza; clarify max passengers vs charter licence.
Municipal water generally potable; many crews still buy bottled.
Depends on flag/contract — learn channel 16 procedures regardless.
Spanish aviation rules — crowded beaches/nature reserves often restricted.
Check port-specific paid lots — summer fills fast.
Breathable clothes, reef-safe sunscreen awareness, non-slip shoes, EU adapters.
With FDP (Free Deposit Pack), you have the chance to avoid a full security deposit and lock in your funds. Just pay 20% upfront (non-refundable), and experience a hassle-free journey. * The price of the FDP rises to 25% if booked less than 30 days before the charter.