Cost Management

Yacht Management Software Cost Guide (2026)

February 12, 2026
22 min read
By YachtWyse Team
Yacht Management Software Cost Guide (2026)

Quick Summary

  • Yacht management software ranges from free to $315/month; pricing models include per-plan tiers, per-vessel annual, and one-time purchase
  • YachtWyse Skipper and YachtWave offer genuinely useful free tiers with maintenance tracking and AI features
  • A single prevented repair ($5K-$20K) covers years of software costs; boats with documented records sell for 10-20% more
  • Hidden costs like per-user fees, module add-ons, and training expenses can quadruple the advertised price
  • The real cost comparison is time saved (6-8 hours/month) plus prevented failures, not just subscription fees

I spent $15,847 on a transmission repair that a $99-per-month app would have prevented.

That number still stings when I think about it. But it taught me something valuable: the question is never really "how much does yacht management software cost?" The real question is "how much does it cost to NOT have it?"

Over the past year, I have tested, subscribed to, and cancelled more yacht management apps than I care to admit. I have read the fine print on pricing pages. I have discovered hidden fees buried in terms of service. I have sat through sales demos where "starting at" turned into something very different by the time they quoted me a real number.

This guide is everything I learned about what yacht management software actually costs in 2026 -- not just the sticker price, but the true cost of each option when you factor in what you get, what you don't get, and what it saves you. If you want a deep dive into features and usability, check out my full review of the best yacht management apps in 2026. This guide is laser-focused on cost and value.

The Pricing Landscape: What You Need to Know First

Before I get into specific numbers, let me explain the three pricing models you will encounter when shopping for yacht management software. Understanding these models saves you from sticker shock later.

Per-Plan Tiered Pricing

This is the most common model for modern SaaS platforms. You pick a plan tier (usually named something like Basic, Pro, Premium) and get a set of features and vessel limits. Upgrades unlock more vessels, more features, or both. YachtWyse, Quartermaster, and Vessel Vanguard use this model.

Per-Vessel Annual Pricing

Some platforms charge a flat annual rate per yacht. The more boats you manage, the more you pay -- sometimes with volume discounts, sometimes not. Seahub and YMP use this approach.

One-Time Purchase

A few solutions charge once and you own it forever. C-SHEL YMS (a Notion template) falls into this category. The upside is no recurring fees. The downside is no ongoing development, no cloud infrastructure, and you are responsible for your own backups.

The Hidden Costs Nobody Talks About

Here is where most pricing comparisons fall short. The subscription fee is only part of the picture. I have written a detailed breakdown of hidden yacht software costs that covers this in depth, but here are the common gotchas:

  • Per-user fees -- Some platforms charge extra for each crew member or family member you add. On a busy charter boat with rotating crew, this adds up fast.
  • Module add-ons -- The base price gets you in the door, but compliance reporting, advanced analytics, or inventory management might cost extra.
  • Data export fees -- Want to leave? Some platforms make it expensive to take your data with you.
  • Training and onboarding -- Enterprise platforms sometimes charge for setup and training sessions.
  • Storage limits -- Free tiers often cap document storage. Manuals, receipts, and photos eat through storage quickly.

I factored all of these into my comparison below.

Complete Pricing Comparison: Every Major App in 2026

Here is what every major yacht management platform costs as of March 2026. I verified these numbers directly from each platform's pricing page and, where possible, from my own active subscriptions.

Quick Pricing Table

Platform Free Tier Entry Paid Plan Mid Tier Top Tier Pricing Model
YachtWyse Yes (2 vessels, 50 AI queries/mo) $99/mo Captain $299/mo Charter $999/mo Fleet Per-plan, vessels included
YachtWave Yes (unlimited) N/A N/A Fleet edition (contact) Free for personal use
Quartermaster Trial only ~$2/mo Owner ~$5/mo Captain ~$25/mo Fleet Per-plan tiered
Seahub No ~$1,050/yr per yacht Custom Custom Per-vessel annual
YMP Trial only ~$700/yr (all features) N/A N/A Flat annual fee
Vessel Vanguard No ~$140/mo LTE $315/mo PRO Custom SMS Per-plan tiered
C-SHEL YMS No ~$100 one-time N/A N/A One-time purchase
TheBoatApp Yes (basic) Gold plan (varies) N/A N/A Freemium

Now let me break down each platform in detail so you can see exactly what you are paying for.


YachtWyse -- Best Value for Owner-Operators

My pick for most boat owners in the 30-75 foot range.

Plan Monthly Price Annual Price (save 15%) Vessels Included AI Queries Key Features
Skipper (Free) $0 $0 2 50/month Maintenance tracking, expense tracking, trip logs, document storage, team (10 members: Crew + Guest roles)
Captain $99 ~$1,010/yr 1 (add more at $49/mo each) 200/month Everything in Skipper + unlimited team roles, checklists, parts catalog, service providers, advanced reporting
Charter $299 ~$3,050/yr 3 (add more at $49/mo each) 500/month Everything in Captain + charter management, APA tracking, guest portals, revenue analytics
Fleet $999 ~$10,190/yr 10 (add more at $49/mo each) 2,000/month Everything in Charter + fleet dashboard, multi-vessel analytics, API access, white-label options

What I like about YachtWyse's pricing:

The free tier is genuinely useful. Two vessels, 50 AI diagnostic queries per month, full maintenance tracking, expense management, and team access. That is not a crippled demo -- it is a real product you can run your boat with. I used the Skipper tier for two months before upgrading to Captain, and it handled everything I needed during that time.

The Captain plan at $99/month is where the real value kicks in. Unlimited team members with full role-based access (Owner, Captain, Crew, Guest), the parts catalog, checklists, and 200 AI queries per month. For a single-vessel owner-operator, this is the sweet spot. If you are managing your boat seriously, $99 per month is less than what most of us spend on dock drinks in a weekend.

Additional vessels at $49/month each is fair. If you own two boats, you are looking at $148/month total on the Captain plan. Still cheaper than most competitors for equivalent features.

Where the cost adds up: If you are running a charter operation with 5+ vessels, the Charter or Fleet plans are the right fit, but you are looking at $300-$1,000+ per month. That said, if your charter boats are generating revenue, the APA tracking and guest management features alone can justify the cost by eliminating revenue leakage.

Bottom line cost: $0 to $99/month for most owner-operators. $299+ for charter and fleet operations.

For more details, visit the YachtWyse owner-operators page or the charter page to see feature breakdowns by use case.


YachtWave -- Best Free Option

If your budget is truly zero, this is where you start.

Plan Price Vessels Key Features
Personal Free forever Unlimited Maintenance tracking, task management, inventory, checklists, document storage, basic AI Mechanic, offline access
Fleet Contact for pricing Multiple Fleet management features for commercial operations

What I like about YachtWave's pricing:

You genuinely cannot beat free. YachtWave offers a surprisingly complete set of features at no cost for personal use. Maintenance tracking, task management, inventory control, checklists, document storage, and their AI Mechanic feature are all included. There are no vessel limits for personal use. The app works on iOS, Android, and web browsers.

I used YachtWave for about three months during my testing period. It does what it promises. You can track maintenance, store documents, manage tasks, and get basic AI diagnostics without spending a dime.

Where it falls short on value:

Free always comes with trade-offs. In my experience, YachtWave's interface feels dated compared to newer platforms. The AI Mechanic feature is more basic than YachtWyse's diagnostic engine -- it handles straightforward troubleshooting but struggles with complex multi-symptom problems. Reporting and analytics are limited. And the big question with any free platform is sustainability: how does the company make money, and will the product still be around in three years?

For a more detailed comparison, check out my YachtWyse vs YachtWave breakdown.

Bottom line cost: $0. The catch is you get what you pay for in terms of polish, AI depth, and long-term reliability.


Quartermaster -- Best Budget Option

For desktop users who want bare-bones tracking at the lowest possible price.

Plan Monthly Price Annual Price Yachts Users
Owner ~$2/mo ~$24/yr 1 2
Captain ~$5/mo ~$60/yr 3 5
Fleet ~$25/mo ~$300/yr 20 50
Enterprise Custom Custom 20+ Custom

What I like about Quartermaster's pricing:

It is the cheapest paid option on the market. At roughly $2 per month, you get maintenance tracking for one yacht with two users. If your needs are simple -- basic maintenance logs, some task tracking, inventory management -- and you primarily work from a desktop computer, Quartermaster gets the job done for less than the price of a coffee.

Where it falls short on value:

No mobile app. That is the dealbreaker for most owner-operators. When I am on my boat and notice a bilge pump that sounds wrong, I want to pull out my phone, log it, and check the maintenance history right there. With Quartermaster, I have to wait until I am back at my laptop. By then, I have forgotten half the details.

No AI diagnostics. No predictive maintenance. No offline mode. The mobile-responsive website is functional but not the same as a native app experience. For a full comparison, see my YachtWyse vs Quartermaster review.

Bottom line cost: $2-$25/month. Extremely cheap, but you sacrifice mobile usability and modern features.


Seahub -- Best for Large Yachts and Professional Crew

Enterprise-grade software with enterprise-grade pricing.

Plan Price Details
Per-yacht Starting ~$1,050/yr (~960 EUR) Per vessel, annual subscription
Fleet Custom pricing Volume discounts for multiple vessels
Enterprise Custom pricing Full ISM compliance suite, custom integrations

What I like about Seahub's pricing:

For what it does, Seahub is reasonably priced in the enterprise yacht management space. It is built for 100-foot-plus superyachts with professional crew, and it delivers serious capabilities: detailed work order systems, comprehensive spare parts management, planned maintenance scheduling, document management, and fleet-wide reporting.

If you are running a 120-foot motoryacht with a captain and three crew, Seahub's feature depth justifies the price. The project management module is particularly strong for coordinating refit work.

Where the cost adds up:

The starting price is just that -- a starting point. Additional modules, user seats, and premium support can push the annual cost well above $3,000 per vessel. For a single owner-operator with a 42-foot boat, paying $1,500+ per year for software designed for superyachts is like buying a commercial truck to haul groceries.

I tested Seahub for six weeks and wrote a detailed YachtWyse vs Seahub comparison. My conclusion: unless you genuinely need enterprise-grade planned maintenance systems and ISM compliance tracking, there are better options at lower price points.

Bottom line cost: $1,050-$3,000+/year per vessel. Worth it for large yachts with crew. Overkill for typical owner-operators.


YMP (Yacht Maintenance Program) -- Best Flat-Rate Option

One price, all features, no surprises.

Plan Price Details
Full Platform ~$700/yr (~650 EUR) All features, unlimited users, no add-ons

What I like about YMP's pricing:

Simplicity. You pay one annual fee and get everything. No tiered plans to compare, no module add-ons to worry about, no per-user charges. Unlimited users is a genuine differentiator -- if you have a captain, engineer, and rotating crew, everyone gets full access at no extra cost.

At roughly $700 per year, YMP sits in the mid-range. It is significantly cheaper than Seahub or Vessel Vanguard and more expensive than YachtWyse's free or Captain tiers.

Where it falls short on value:

YMP's interface feels like it was designed a decade ago. The mobile experience is functional but not pleasant. No AI features at all. No predictive maintenance. The platform is reliable and does what it says, but it is not pushing the envelope on innovation.

For European boaters who want tried-and-true maintenance tracking without bells and whistles, YMP is a solid choice. For US-based owner-operators who want a modern mobile experience and AI diagnostics, the value proposition is harder to justify versus YachtWyse Captain at $99/month ($1,188/year with similar or better features plus AI).

See my YachtWyse vs YMP comparison for a feature-by-feature breakdown.

Bottom line cost: ~$700/year. Fair price for what it offers, but lacks modern features.


Vessel Vanguard -- Most Expensive Per-Feature

Comprehensive but premium-priced for what you get.

Plan Monthly Price Annual Price Details
LTE ~$140/mo ~$1,680/yr Recreational boat maintenance program
PRO ~$315/mo ~$3,780/yr Complex operations, commercial vessels
SMS Custom Custom Safety management system

What I like about Vessel Vanguard's pricing:

Vessel Vanguard has been in the marine space for a long time. They have the largest boat systems database, which means their maintenance schedules are pre-populated with manufacturer recommendations for thousands of vessel and equipment combinations. That database has real value -- instead of manually researching service intervals, the system knows what your specific engine, generator, and AC unit need and when.

Where the cost adds up:

At $140/month for the entry-level LTE plan, Vessel Vanguard is one of the most expensive options for recreational boaters. That is $1,680 per year -- more than double YachtWyse Captain ($1,188/year annual) and more than double YMP ($700/year). The PRO plan at $315/month puts you at $3,780 annually, which is serious money.

No AI diagnostics. No predictive maintenance. The interface is functional but not modern. For the price, I expected more innovation. The systems database is genuinely useful, but once your maintenance schedules are set up (which takes a few hours on any platform), the ongoing value of that database diminishes.

Bottom line cost: $1,680-$3,780/year. Expensive for what you get compared to the competition.


C-SHEL YMS -- Best One-Time Purchase

A Notion template for DIY-minded boaters.

Plan Price Details
One-time ~$100 Notion template with maintenance, logs, projects, provisioning, documentation tracking

What I like about C-SHEL YMS's pricing:

Pay once, use forever. At roughly $100, C-SHEL YMS costs less than a single month of most paid platforms. It runs inside Notion, which has a generous free tier, so your ongoing costs are effectively zero. If you are already a Notion power user who lives in that ecosystem, C-SHEL slots right into your existing workflow.

Where it falls short on value:

It is a template, not a purpose-built application. No native mobile app. No AI diagnostics. No automatic reminders (you have to set up Notion's reminder system yourself). No real-time data from your vessel. Offline mode depends on Notion's offline capabilities, which are inconsistent in my experience. No dedicated support team -- you are on your own if something breaks.

For cruisers and liveaboards who want a DIY management system and are comfortable with Notion, C-SHEL is a creative solution at a great price. For everyone else, the lack of purpose-built features means you will spend more time managing the system than it saves you.

Bottom line cost: ~$100 one-time. Cheapest long-term option, but you get a template, not software.


TheBoatApp -- Best for Simple Checklists

Basic boat management with a limited free tier.

Plan Price Details
Free $0 Basic features, limited
Gold Varies Extended features

What I like about TheBoatApp's pricing:

The free tier lets you dip your toes in without commitment. The app focuses on simplicity -- checklists, basic logs, and straightforward tracking. If you own a small boat and your maintenance needs are minimal, TheBoatApp's free version might be all you need.

Where it falls short on value:

The feature set is thin compared to full-fledged yacht management platforms. No AI diagnostics. Limited reporting. The interface is clean but basic. For anything beyond simple checklists and logs, you will outgrow TheBoatApp quickly.

Bottom line cost: Free to low. Fine for casual boaters, insufficient for serious yacht management.


The Real Cost Comparison: Annual Spend by Owner Type

Numbers in a table are useful, but what matters is how much YOU will spend based on how you actually use your boat. Here is what a typical year looks like for three common owner profiles.

Profile 1: Weekend Warrior (One 35-45ft boat, casual use)

You take the boat out 30-50 times per year. Basic maintenance tracking and reminders are your main needs. You do not charter. You want to spend as little as possible.

Platform Annual Cost What You Get
YachtWyse Skipper $0 Full maintenance tracking, 50 AI queries/mo, expense tracking, 2 vessels
YachtWave $0 Maintenance tracking, basic AI, unlimited vessels
TheBoatApp Free $0 Basic checklists and logs
Quartermaster Owner ~$24 Basic maintenance, desktop only
C-SHEL YMS ~$100 (one-time) Notion template, DIY setup
YachtWyse Captain ~$1,188 Full features, 200 AI queries/mo, advanced reporting
YMP ~$700 Full features, unlimited users
Vessel Vanguard LTE ~$1,680 Systems database, maintenance tracking
Seahub ~$1,050+ Enterprise maintenance (overkill)

My recommendation: Start with YachtWyse Skipper (free). It gives you real maintenance tracking, AI diagnostics, and expense management without spending a penny. If you find yourself wanting more AI queries or advanced checklists after a few months, upgrade to Captain.

Profile 2: Serious Owner-Operator (One 40-60ft boat, heavy use)

You put 100+ hours on your engines per year. You want AI diagnostics, predictive maintenance alerts, detailed expense tracking, and your partner or captain to have their own access. Maintenance prevention is a priority because you have learned the hard way what deferred service costs.

Platform Annual Cost Value Assessment
YachtWyse Captain ~$1,188 Best balance of features, AI, mobile, and price
YMP ~$700 Cheaper but no AI, dated interface
Vessel Vanguard LTE ~$1,680 Systems database is useful, but pricey for no AI
Seahub ~$1,050+ Good maintenance tools, overkill complexity
Quartermaster Captain ~$60 Too basic for serious management

My recommendation: YachtWyse Captain at $99/month. The AI diagnostics alone have saved me from two potential issues in the past six months that could have cost thousands to fix. The mobile app works offline (critical when you are out on the water), and the expense tracking gives me a clear picture of where every dollar goes. For a similar perspective on why tracking expenses matters, see our guide to yacht expense tracking apps.

Profile 3: Charter Owner or Small Fleet (2-5 vessels)

You run charter operations or manage multiple vessels. You need crew management, guest portals, APA tracking, revenue analytics, and multi-vessel oversight.

Platform Annual Cost (3 vessels) Value Assessment
YachtWyse Charter ~$3,050 Charter-specific features, AI, guest portals
Seahub ~$3,150+ Strong maintenance, limited charter features
YachtWyse Fleet ~$10,190 10 vessels, fleet analytics, API access
Vessel Vanguard PRO ~$3,780 Designed for complex ops, no charter tools
Quartermaster Fleet ~$300 Basic multi-vessel, no charter features

My recommendation: YachtWyse Charter if you are running charter operations. The charter revenue waterfall and APA tracking features are purpose-built for charter profitability. For pure fleet management without charter, Seahub is a strong contender if your boats are large enough to justify the per-vessel pricing. Visit the fleet management page for more on multi-vessel capabilities.


The ROI Case: How Software Pays for Itself

Here is where the conversation shifts from "what does it cost" to "what does it save." Because yacht management software is not an expense -- it is insurance against much bigger expenses.

Prevented Repairs: The Big Savings

The average boat maintenance cost runs about 10% of the vessel's purchase price per year. For a $200,000 boat, that is $20,000 annually. But here is the thing: a huge portion of that spending goes to reactive repairs -- fixing things that broke because preventive maintenance was missed.

Let me share some real numbers from my experience and fellow owner-operators:

  • Transmission failure (missed fluid change): $8,000-$20,000
  • Engine overheating damage (missed impeller replacement): $3,000-$12,000
  • Generator failure (missed oil change intervals): $2,000-$8,000
  • Corroded through-hull fitting (missed annual inspection): $1,500-$5,000 plus haulout costs
  • AC compressor failure (missed condenser cleaning): $2,000-$6,000

A single prevented failure pays for years of software subscriptions. My own $15,847 transmission repair would have covered 13 years of YachtWyse Captain.

Software with automatic reminders and AI-driven predictive maintenance catches these issues before they become catastrophic. YachtWyse's AI diagnostic engine, for example, can analyze patterns in your maintenance logs and engine hours to flag potential problems weeks or months before they happen. I wrote about this in detail in our predictive yacht maintenance guide.

Resale Value: The Hidden Multiplier

Here is a number that surprised me when I started researching: boats with complete, well-documented maintenance records sell for 10-20% more than comparable boats without documentation.

On a $200,000 vessel, that is $20,000-$40,000 in additional resale value.

Think about that. Even if you pay for the most expensive yacht management software on this list for five years, the resale value premium alone more than covers your total software spend. And that is before you factor in the money you saved on prevented repairs.

Digital records are more credible to buyers than a shoebox full of receipts. A prospective buyer can pull up your complete maintenance history, see every oil change, every impeller replacement, every annual service -- all with dates, engine hours, photos, and receipts attached. That level of documentation commands a premium.

Time Savings: Your Hours Have Value

Before I started using dedicated software, I spent roughly 8-10 hours per month managing my boat's maintenance. Updating spreadsheets, digging through email for receipts, trying to remember when I last changed the zincs, calling the marina to confirm service dates.

With YachtWyse, that dropped to about 2-3 hours per month. Most of it is logging things in real time from my phone while I am on the boat -- which takes seconds per entry instead of the "I'll update the spreadsheet later" approach that never actually happened.

That is 6-8 hours per month saved. If you value your time at even $50/hour (and most boat owners value their leisure time much higher), that is $300-$400 per month in time savings alone -- more than the cost of any software on this list.

Insurance Benefits

Some insurance providers offer reduced premiums for boats with documented, software-tracked maintenance programs. The discount varies, but even a 5% reduction on a $3,000 annual policy saves $150 per year. Not a game-changer on its own, but it adds to the ROI stack.

The Cost of Doing Nothing

Let me frame it differently. What does it cost to NOT use yacht management software?

Over a 5-year ownership period for a $200,000 vessel:

Cost Category Without Software With Software ($99/mo) Net Savings
Preventable repairs (conservative) $15,000 $3,000 $12,000
Resale value loss (no documentation) $20,000 $0 $20,000
Time spent on manual tracking $18,000 (at $50/hr) $7,200 $10,800
Software cost over 5 years $0 $5,940 -$5,940
Net 5-Year Benefit $36,860

Even using conservative estimates, yacht management software delivers roughly a 6:1 return on investment over five years. The $5,940 you spend on a Captain-tier subscription generates nearly $43,000 in total value through prevented repairs, higher resale value, and time savings.


How to Choose the Right Price Tier

Picking the right software is not just about finding the cheapest option. It is about matching the price to your actual needs. Here is my decision framework.

Choose Free (YachtWyse Skipper or YachtWave) If:

  • You are a new boat owner still learning what you need
  • You have one or two boats with straightforward maintenance needs
  • Your budget is genuinely tight and every dollar matters
  • You want to test the waters before committing to a paid plan
  • You are comfortable with limited AI queries and basic reporting

Choose Budget ($2-$25/month) If:

  • You primarily work from a desktop computer (Quartermaster)
  • Your needs are truly basic -- maintenance logs and task lists
  • You do not need AI diagnostics or predictive maintenance
  • Mobile access on the boat is not important to you

Choose Mid-Range ($99/month) If:

  • You are a serious owner-operator who puts real hours on your vessel
  • You want AI diagnostics and predictive maintenance alerts
  • Mobile-first access matters (most management happens on the boat)
  • You value your time and want to minimize administrative overhead
  • You want one platform that handles maintenance, expenses, documents, and team access

Choose Premium ($299+/month) If:

  • You run charter operations and need APA tracking, guest portals, and revenue analytics
  • You manage multiple vessels and need fleet-wide oversight
  • You have crew who need role-based access and task assignment
  • The software needs to pay for itself through charter revenue optimization

Choose Enterprise ($1,000+/year per vessel) If:

  • You operate a yacht over 80 feet with professional crew
  • ISM compliance and safety management are requirements
  • You need deep integration with accounting and procurement systems
  • Your vessel's operating budget makes $1,000-$3,000/year software costs negligible

Money-Saving Tips When Buying Yacht Management Software

After testing all of these platforms, here are the strategies I have found for getting the most value for your money.

1. Start Free, Then Upgrade

Every platform worth considering offers either a free tier or a free trial. Use it. Spend at least two to three weeks of real boating activity with the free version before upgrading. You will quickly discover whether the platform fits your workflow -- and whether you actually use it consistently.

YachtWyse's free Skipper tier is the most generous free offering among the platforms with AI features. Two vessels, 50 AI queries per month, and full maintenance tracking gives you enough to make an informed decision.

2. Pay Annually When Possible

Most platforms offer 10-20% discounts for annual billing. On YachtWyse Captain, switching from monthly to annual saves roughly 15%, bringing your effective cost down from $1,188 to about $1,010 per year. Over five years, that is nearly $900 in savings.

3. Do Not Pay for Features You Will Never Use

If you do not charter your boat, you do not need charter management features. If you have one boat and no crew, you do not need fleet analytics. Match the tier to your actual use case, not the aspirational one.

4. Factor in the Full Cost

When comparing platforms, add up ALL the costs: subscription, per-user fees, add-on modules, storage overages, and training. A platform that looks cheaper on the surface can cost more once you add everything your situation requires. Our hidden cost of yacht software guide walks through this in detail.

5. Watch for Lock-In

Before committing to any platform, confirm that you can export your data (maintenance logs, expense records, documents) if you decide to switch later. Data portability is not a feature you think about until you need it.


What About Using Generic Tools Instead?

I get this question a lot. "Can't I just use Google Sheets, Notion, or a generic project management app?"

You can. I did. For about six months. Here is why I stopped.

Google Sheets / Excel: No automatic reminders. No mobile-friendly maintenance logging. No AI diagnostics. No document storage integrated with maintenance records. No multi-user access designed for vessel management. Every "feature" requires manual formula building and constant updating. The moment you miss one entry, the entire system becomes unreliable.

Notion: More flexible than spreadsheets, and C-SHEL YMS proves it can work as a yacht management system. But you are still maintaining a template rather than using purpose-built software. No native reminders based on engine hours. No AI troubleshooting. No integrations with marine systems. If you love building systems in Notion, this can work. If you want something that just works out of the box, purpose-built software is worth the premium.

Generic project management (Trello, Asana, Monday.com): These tools are designed for software teams and marketing departments, not boat maintenance. You can force-fit them into yacht management, but you will spend more time configuring the tool than using it. And you will never get marine-specific features like engine-hour-based maintenance intervals, AI diagnostics trained on marine systems, or documented service history exports for resale.

The math is simple: if the generic tool costs you an extra 5 hours per month in setup and manual tracking, and you value your time at $50/hour, that is $250/month in hidden cost -- more than the price of any purpose-built yacht management platform.


Frequently Asked Questions

How much does yacht management software cost per month?

Yacht management software ranges from completely free to over $250 per month. Free options include YachtWyse Skipper tier and YachtWave. Budget options like Quartermaster start at $1.99/month. Mid-range platforms like YachtWyse Captain cost $99/month. Premium solutions like Seahub and Vessel Vanguard range from $125 to $315 per month. The right price depends on your vessel size, feature needs, and whether you manage one boat or a fleet.

Is free yacht management software good enough?

Free yacht management software can be a solid starting point for new boat owners with simple needs. YachtWyse's free Skipper tier includes maintenance tracking for up to 2 vessels, 50 AI diagnostic queries per month, expense tracking, and team access for up to 10 members. YachtWave offers free maintenance tracking with basic AI features. However, free tiers typically limit the number of vessels, AI queries, advanced reporting, and integrations. Most serious owner-operators eventually upgrade to a paid plan for unlimited capabilities.

What is the ROI of yacht management software?

Most boat owners see positive ROI within 3 to 6 months. A single prevented engine failure can save $5,000 to $20,000 or more, which covers years of software subscriptions. Additional savings come from organized maintenance records that add 10 to 20 percent to resale value, reduced emergency repair frequency, better expense visibility that eliminates overspending, and time savings of 5 to 10 hours per month on administrative tasks.

Should I pay for yacht management software or use spreadsheets?

Spreadsheets work until they don't. They lack automatic reminders, mobile access on the water, multi-user synchronization, AI diagnostics, and document storage. The average owner spends 8 to 12 hours per month managing maintenance in spreadsheets versus 2 to 3 hours with dedicated software. At any reasonable value of your time, purpose-built software pays for itself quickly. Most yacht management apps offer free tiers or trials so you can test before committing.

Do yacht management apps charge per vessel or per user?

Pricing models vary significantly. YachtWyse charges per plan tier with vessels included (Skipper includes 2, Captain includes 1 with extras at $49/month each). Seahub charges per yacht per year. YMP charges a flat annual fee. Quartermaster charges per plan tier based on number of yachts. Some platforms also charge per user or per module. Always check whether the quoted price includes all users and features or if there are hidden add-on costs.


The Bottom Line: What Should You Spend?

After testing every major platform and crunching the numbers, here is my honest advice:

If you own one boat and want the best value: YachtWyse Captain at $99/month. The AI diagnostics, mobile-first design, offline capability, and comprehensive feature set make it the clear winner for owner-operators. The free Skipper tier is a legitimate starting point if you want to try before you buy.

If your budget is zero: YachtWyse Skipper (free) gives you the most complete free experience with AI included. YachtWave is a solid free alternative if you want unlimited vessels.

If you run charter operations: YachtWyse Charter at $299/month. The charter-specific tools pay for themselves through better revenue tracking and guest management.

If you operate a large yacht with professional crew: Seahub starting at ~$1,050/year per vessel, or Vessel Vanguard if you value their systems database.

The most expensive option is always the same: doing nothing and hoping your memory and a notebook are enough to keep your vessel maintained. They are not. I have the $15,847 receipt to prove it.


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Sources

#yacht management software cost#pricing comparison#boat software#ROI#YachtWyse#Seahub#YachtWave#Quartermaster
YachtWyse Team

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YachtWyse Team

Maritime Technology Experts

The YachtWyse team brings decades of combined experience in maritime operations, marine engineering, and software development. We write from real-world experience managing vessels from 30ft cruisers to 100m+ superyachts.

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