Berthon International Yacht Brokers
Berthon International Yacht Brokers Podcast
Brought to you by Berthon International – because every yacht has a story, and we’re here to tell it.
Berthon is recognised internationally for its expertise across every facet of the yacht market. From brokerage and new yacht sales to refits and long-term support, our reputation has been built on knowledge, trust, and attention to detail. The Berthon International Podcast carries this same ethos forward, giving listeners direct access to our insight and perspective on the world of yachting.
Through our podcasts we share our take on the yacht market, exploring current trends, ownership journeys, and the evolution of design and technology. Our fleet of cruising yachts will feature regularly, alongside interviews with the Berthon Team and industry experts. From bluewater cruising to the intricacies of VAT and compliance to stories of performance sailing, we will cover the subjects which we hope will interest you.
The Berthon International Podcast is designed to inform, inspire, and connect, delivering engaging content for those who enjoy our sport and for those who might like to get involved. With every episode, we aim to bring clarity, context, and colour to the world of yachting, strengthening our relationships and celebrating the passion that drives us. A closely knit team, we invite you to join our family.
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Berthon International Yacht Brokers
6. Inside the Market - Yacht Sales Insights & Trends for October 2025 - Berthon International Yacht Brokerage
In this October Market Insights episode, Sue is joined by Andrew Fairbrass from Berthon Spain to discuss the global yacht market as the team returns from the Annapolis Boat Show. Across all Berthon offices, activity remains steady, but the way buyers are engaging, researching, and making decisions continues to evolve. The conversation explores changing buyer behaviour, the challenges facing yacht manufacturers, and what’s driving momentum across new yacht sales, brokerage, and refit sectors as 2025 heads toward its final quarter.
This month’s insights:
1. The day of the boat show is waning. With more localised events, digital walkthroughs, and access to detailed online specifications, most buyers are viewing, assessing, and deciding outside traditional exhibition settings. The autumn shows have seen busy docks and halls, but fewer committed buyers as organisers prioritise visitor numbers over qualified clients.
2. Multihulls are hot. Interest continues to rise, led by production models linked to charter opportunities. Alongside these, there is strong demand for semi-custom, well-engineered, high-quality designs offering performance, comfort, and long-range capability. These are yachts that combine speed, seakeeping, and liveability, true bluewater cruisers appealing to experienced sailors and newcomers alike.
3. New yacht sales remain challenging. Long-standing American builder Catalina announced the suspension of production – a significant indicator of wider pressures in the sector. Rising costs, cautious buyers, and stock overhangs have slowed the pace of new orders. More announcements of this kind are expected into 2026.
4. Production yacht and motor yacht builders are struggling to reduce stock levels. As 2025 draws to a close, unsold stock remains high, a concern as unsold boats cross into a new model year. Many manufacturers are expected to delay or scale back production rather than discount heavily, in order to preserve pricing integrity.
5. Refit and service demand remains strong at the top end. Berthon’s service and refit operation in Palma has a full order book stretching into 2026, largely from yachts 100 feet and above. However, activity in the 60–100 foot range has slowed, impacted by high berthing costs and market hesitation. Palma’s berth prices have begun to soften again after sharp increases last year, and brokers are now negotiating attractive winter deals to keep yachts local.
6. Buyer confidence remains fragile. Levels of buyer remorse are high, with some clients stepping back at the final moment. Global uncertainty and economic caution are feeding a wait-and-see approach, particularly among first-time buyers and those upgrading into larger yachts. Brokers across all offices report that their role now involves more reassurance, education, and managing expectations throughout the process.
7. Market sentiment expects prices to fall, but stability continues. Some buyers remain convinced that brokerage prices will drop sharply over the winter, but this appears unlikely. The price delta between new and brokerage yachts remains wide, and builders are far more likely to slow or pause production than to sell below cost. For now brokerage values are holding steady, with well-presented, sensibly priced yachts still finding serious buyers.
Across the group, the message is consistent: while confidence wavers and decision-making takes longer, the market remains active, disciplined, and value-driven. Multihulls are a clear growth story, refit work continues strongly at the large-yacht end, and owners who price realistically are seeing results. The final months of 2025 look set to close on a stable footing, as the yacht industry continues to balance global caution with a steady appetite for quality and adventure afloat.