Asterias

One boat
Corfu combines a major airport (CFU), strong yacht-service infrastructure (notably around Gouvia), and quick access to classic Ionian hops — Paxos channels, Sivota area, and south toward Lefkada on longer weeks.
Ioannis Kapodistrias (CFU) serves international flights. Pre-book taxis or arrange a base transfer in July–August; traffic from the airport into Gouvia/Town can spike at peak hours.
Typical Maistros (NW) afternoon breeze in summer. Corfu geography can bend and funnel wind between headlands — read local notes for the Paxos strait and west-coast gusts.
Popular: Corfu → Paxos (Gaios/Lakka) → Antipaxos (weather permitting) → north/south along Epirus coast or return via Sivota pockets — tailor to your comfort with cross-traffic and depth.
Often rated friendlier than Cyclades peak summer: shorter legs available, many bolt-holes. Still study charted shallows and ferry lanes — the Ionian is forgiving, not automatic.
Accepted skipper certificate, competent second crew member, originals at check-in. If your experience is borderline, hire a skipper for the first days — Corfu weekends can be busy.
Expect limited visitor berthing and premium pricing. Many crews visit by shore trip from nearby bases rather than treating the Old Harbour as a home marina for the week.
May–June and September offer balance. High season brings more flotillas and dayboats around Paxos — patience at quays helps.
Popular for families. Watch beam in tight quays and confirm marina berth dimensions — some village jetties are monohull-first.
Possible for faster crews and stable weather, but it is a packed schedule. Many prefer a tighter Corfu–Paxos loop with time ashore rather than racing miles.
A dense yacht-service cluster north of Corfu Town: chandleries, repairs, and charter fleets. Helpful for check-in/check-out logistics; evenings can be lively.
Crossing an international border by yacht is not casual: you need correct clearance procedures, flags, and papers. If unsure, stay within Greek waters and plan Albania as a future formal cruise.
Expect ferries, hydrofoils, and taxi boats. Keep a sharp radar/lookout plot and avoid cutting tight across commercial lanes.
Both work; Town offers atmosphere and specialty shops, Gouvia can be faster for yacht quantities. Stock extra water before a hot week.
Popular spots get crowded; use adequate scope and watch for chain tangles at peak times. Have a polite plan if you need to leave quickly.
Corfu Town has the widest options; smaller villages may have limited hours. Carry seasickness and basic first-aid for remote anchorages.
Practice stern-to with long lines if your week includes village quays — Corfu Ionian harbours use this style frequently.
Inventory is large — filters for cabins, air-con, deposit packs, and transparent mandatory extras (when operators publish them) save comparison time.
Default no on standard charters — plan daylight arrivals, especially with ferry lanes and unlit coast sections.
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.