Hvar Island Yacht Charter – Complete Sailing Guide

Ask ten people what they expect from Hvar and you will hear ten different pictures: a busy harbour full of yachts, a stone town glowing in the evening, lavender fields, quiet coves, and the low green shapes of the Pakleni islands just across the channel. The truth is that Hvar can be all of those things – it just depends on how you approach it by boat.

This guide is written from the skipper’s side of the quay. It explains how Hvar fits into a real one- or two-week route from Split or Trogir, how busy Hvar Town really gets, where the quieter corners are and how to combine it with neighbouring islands like Brač, Vis and Korčula. It ties into the wider Croatia itineraries hub, but here we stay mainly on this one island and the Pakleni group in front of it.

Where Hvar Sits on Your Croatia Sailing Map

Hvar is part of central Dalmatia, sitting south of Brač and west of the Makarska Riviera on the mainland. From the charter bases around Split and Trogir it is usually one good day’s sail away, often reached via a first night on Brač or Šolta. Further south and west you find Vis and then the channels leading towards Korčula and the Pelješac peninsula.

Because of this position, Hvar often appears in the middle of a week: you start around Split, spend a night or two on Brač or Šolta, reach Hvar for a busy or relaxed evening, and then either continue towards Vis/Korčula or curve gently back north towards your base.

Why Hvar Island Is So Popular With Charter Crews

Popularity brings both good and bad. The upsides of including Hvar are obvious once you arrive:

  • Beautiful stone towns: Hvar Town, Stari Grad, Jelsa and Vrboska all have classic Dalmatian stone streets and harbours, each with a different pace.
  • Variety in a small area: Within a short distance you can move from party atmosphere to quiet anchorages or sleepy villages.
  • Good shelter patterns: With the Pakleni islands in front and the mainland and other islands around, you can usually find a corner that works for the wind.
  • Food, wine & small details: Hvar has a strong food and wine tradition, with local wines, olive oil and small family restaurants in coves.

The downsides are mainly crowding and price in peak weeks. Hvar Town harbour and some Pakleni bays can feel intense in July and August after mid-afternoon. The trick is to use the island on your own terms, not chase the busiest spots on the busiest nights.

Main Harbours – Hvar Town, Stari Grad, Jelsa & Vrboska

When people say “Hvar” they often mean Hvar Town specifically. From a sailing point of view, there are four main harbour areas to think about:

  • Hvar Town: Famous, photogenic and busy. Visiting yachts usually moor stern-to along the quay or to organised moorings nearby. Expect music, bars and a late-night feel in high season. Great for one big evening if your crew enjoys that energy.
  • Stari Grad: A long, sheltered bay with a calm old town at the end. The feel is gentler – stone houses, pine trees, a relaxed waterfront. Many family crews prefer Stari Grad to Hvar Town for overnight stops.
  • Jelsa: Another north-coast town with a friendly harbour and a little more local everyday life. Good as a quieter alternative with easy walks ashore.
  • Vrboska: Sometimes called “little Venice” because of its narrow inlet and small bridges. Very protected and atmospheric, with a nice balance of calm and facilities.

Each harbour has its own mooring system, capacities and local rules. In July and August it is worth thinking about reservations where possible, or arriving earlier in the afternoon for more choice. Inside marinas and on town quays you will usually find water, electricity and showers.

Pakleni Islands – Bays, Buoys & Beach Clubs

Just across from Hvar Town lies the low chain of the Pakleni (Paklinski) islands – essentially Hvar’s front garden. For boats this is a playground of bays, mooring fields, konoba jetties and a handful of more polished venues.

Without listing every bay by name, it helps to know the general patterns:

  • Mooring fields and jetties: Many bays have organised buoys or simple jetties. Fees often include or assume dinner in the local konoba or restaurant.
  • Daytime swimming & beach clubs: Some coves are livelier during the day, with music, bars and beach clubs – great if your crew wants that energy for a few hours.
  • Quieter corners: Even here there are more peaceful spots, especially if you sail a little further from the busiest nucleus and arrive earlier.

A common pattern is to spend the day at anchor or on a buoy in the Pakleni area, swim and relax, then either stay overnight or head into Hvar Town or Stari Grad for the evening. In any case, keep an eye on wind shifts; some coves are exposed to certain directions and become rolly later.

Quiet Bays & Anchorages Around the Island

Hvar’s fame means some people imagine it as busy everywhere, all the time. Once you move away from the most obvious spots, you find a lot of space. The south shore has a string of coves with vineyards above; the north has more indented inlets and views back to Brač and the mainland.

In rough terms:

  • North side: More protected from southerly swell, with several bays and small jetties used in family and first-time itineraries.
  • South side: Dramatic cliffs, vineyards and coves, some with small restaurants or beach bars. Better in settled northerly patterns; less comfortable in strong jugo with swell.
  • Eastern and western tips: Useful stepping stones when linking Hvar with Vis, Brač or the Korčula area on longer routes.

Your skipper or charter base will suggest specific bays that match your crew and the forecast. When in doubt, treat any beautiful empty bay with respect: check charts, depths and holding carefully before switching off the engine.

One-Week Routes Including Hvar

On a standard seven-day charter from Split or Trogir, Hvar is usually part of a loop that also includes Brač, Šolta and sometimes Vis. Including too many “must-see” places in a single week is the fastest way to make the trip stressful, so the art is to pick a few highlights and enjoy them properly.

Typical patterns you will find in the itineraries section and on the Split / Trogir pages include:

  • Classic islands loop: Split–Šolta–Brač–Hvar–Pakleni–Brač–back. One or two nights involve Hvar Town or Pakleni, balanced by quieter bays.
  • Stari Grad focus: Routes that favour Stari Grad and north-coast harbours over Hvar Town, for crews who prefer calmer evenings but still want Hvar landscapes.
  • Vis option: Loops that fit one night on Vis and one on or near Hvar, with more sailing and fewer marinas.

When you tell us about your crew we usually suggest where Hvar fits best in the week – early as a first “wow”, or mid-week as a highlight after people are settled on the boat.

Two-Week Trips Linking Hvar With Other Regions

With two weeks you can let Hvar breathe. Instead of rushing in and out, you can spend time in multiple towns and a couple of different anchorages, then continue south or north without cutting corners.

Examples you will see referenced across the destination and itinerary pages:

  • Central Dalmatia deep-dive: Two-week route exploring Šolta, Brač, Hvar, Vis and maybe Biševo, with time for lay days and repeated favourite bays.
  • North–south combo: Start around Zadar or Šibenik, pass through the central islands including Hvar, and finish towards Korčula or even Dubrovnik.
  • Island chain focus: Route that almost ignores big mainland towns and spends most nights on islands, with Hvar as one of several stone-town evenings.

On these longer trips we usually plan day-by-day with a soft pencil, leaving space for weather moves and “we love it here, let’s stay” decisions.

Wind, Weather & When to Visit Hvar

Hvar enjoys a lot of sunshine and the classic summer pattern of light mornings, afternoon maestral and calm-ish evenings. That said, the details matter for mooring choices.

As a rough guide:

  • Late spring (May–June): Longer days, cooler nights, fewer crowds. Great for walking and exploring towns, water already pleasant.
  • High summer (July–August): Warm water, busy harbours, most nightlife. Advance reservations help, and you may prefer more bay nights.
  • Early autumn (September–October): Still warm sea, softer light, calmer towns. Occasional stronger systems possible – forecast watching becomes more important.

Northerly winds favour the south-coast coves; southerly patterns can send swell into open anchorages and make the north side feel more comfortable. Your skipper or base will always help match bays to the actual forecast, not just the map.

Choosing the Right Boat for Hvar

Hvar does not require a special type of yacht, but your choice does change how the week feels.

  • Catamarans: Popular in this area because of their space and stability at anchor. Great for Pakleni bays and long social evenings on deck. See our Catamarans page for examples.
  • Sailboats (monohulls): Give a classic feeling under way and can sometimes squeeze into smaller town spaces or moorings. Explore options via the Sailboats overview.
  • Motor yachts & power cats: If you charter a motor yacht or power catamaran, you can stretch the map, visiting Hvar, Vis and perhaps Korčula in a week without feeling rushed – as long as you keep fuel planning realistic.

Whichever boat you choose, think honestly about your crew: how many cabins you need, how much time you enjoy under way and how confident you feel with med-mooring in busy harbours. When you use the Boat Search or browse our fleet, mention Hvar in your enquiry so we can suggest bases and boats that fit.

Life Ashore – Food, Wine & Evenings Out

Hvar’s shore life has range. In Hvar Town you find cocktail bars, rooftop terraces, clubs and polished restaurants. In Stari Grad or Jelsa the mood is softer: families strolling, konobas with simple grilled fish, small wine bars. In tiny coves there might be one konoba with a terrace a few metres from your stern line.

Local dishes often revolve around fresh fish, octopus, lamb, vegetables and herbs like rosemary and sage. Hvar also has a serious wine culture, with local varieties you almost never see outside Croatia. If food and wine matter to your crew, build in at least one evening specifically to explore them – not just to refuel the boat.

For crews who want the “big night out” experience, one Hvar Town evening is usually enough. Plan your route so that the next day’s leg is not the longest of the week, and make sure everyone knows what time lines need to be cast off in the morning.

Practical Tips for Visiting Hvar by Yacht

A few skipper-level details help Hvar feel smooth instead of chaotic:

  • In high season, consider reservations for Hvar Town and certain Pakleni bays, or arrive early in the afternoon.
  • Have fenders and lines ready well before entering busy harbours; ferries, excursion boats and water taxis create extra movement.
  • Balance busy nights with quiet ones in bays or calmer towns like Stari Grad or Vrboska.
  • Watch depth and swing room carefully in crowded anchorages – do not be shy about asking neighbours how much chain they have out.
  • Use marinas or town quays strategically for water, power and laundry so you can enjoy more anchorage nights elsewhere.

FAQ – Hvar Island for Charter Crews

Is Hvar suitable for families with children?

Yes – if you choose the right places. Stari Grad, Jelsa, Vrboska and many bays work very well for families, with safe promenades and quieter evenings. If you want to avoid late-night noise, limit or skip overnight stays in the noisiest parts of Hvar Town in peak season.

Do we have to visit Hvar Town to “do” Hvar?

No. Hvar Town is iconic but not obligatory. Many of our favourite weeks on Hvar focus on Stari Grad, Pakleni bays and quieter coves, with maybe one short afternoon visit to Hvar Town rather than an overnight.

How many nights should we plan on Hvar?

On a one-week trip from Split, one or two nights specifically in the Hvar–Pakleni area is usually enough; on a two-week route you might add more, or split time between towns and anchorages. Remember you also want nights on Brač, Šolta, Vis or Korčula – it is all about balance.

Is Hvar too crowded in July and August?

It is busy, especially in Hvar Town and the most famous Pakleni bays after mid-afternoon. But there are still many corners where the mood is calm. Planning, flexibility and a willingness to walk a few streets away from the main square make a big difference. If you prefer more space, consider June or September instead.

How do we start planning a charter that includes Hvar?

Start by choosing the type of yacht that fits your crew from the Yacht Charter Croatia hub – catamaran, sailboat, motor yacht or power cat. Then use the Boat Search or ask us directly for a shortlist from our fleet. Tell us you want a realistic route with Hvar, not a checklist. We will reply with a calm plan that matches your dates, crew and energy level.

Ready to Charter a Yacht in Croatia?

Get personalized help from our local team in Split & Trogir. We’ll find the best yacht for your dates, budget, and sailing style.

✅ Secure booking · ✅ Local support in Croatia · ✅ Bareboat, skippered & crewed

Let us help you!

Fill out the form below, we will check all yacht availability, and send offers to your email.

In addition to the best boat offers, you will get:

Dedicated manager to help you out

More info on how to rent a boat