Overview
The best anchorage is not always the most famous one.
One of the easiest mistakes in Sardinia charter planning is treating Costa Smeralda as a postcard instead of a working cruising zone. Guests often arrive with a list of names they have heard before, but the best day on the water usually comes from sequencing stops properly rather than forcing the most famous bay into every route.
The strongest Costa Smeralda anchorages are the ones that combine water quality, visual payoff, practical distance and the right mood for your group. Sometimes that means an iconic stop close to Porto Cervo. Sometimes it means choosing a slightly less over-signposted bay so the whole day feels smoother and more expensive in the right way.
Why anchorages matter
Good anchorages shape the whole feeling of the charter.
On a Sardinia yacht charter, anchorages are not just places to stop. They are where the day becomes memorable. They determine whether the route feels rushed or relaxed, generic or specific, overexposed or quietly premium.
This matters even more in Costa Smeralda because the coastline is so reputation-heavy. The strongest routes usually balance one or two recognisable highlights with one or two better-feeling stops that improve the rhythm of the day. That is often the difference between a route that sounds impressive and one that actually feels great onboard.
Best anchorages
The strongest Costa Smeralda anchorages for charter planning.
Iconic, photogenic, classic Costa Smeralda stop
Spiaggia del Principe
Spiaggia del Principe is one of the names people recognise even before they really understand the coastline. From the water, it delivers exactly what guests hope Costa Smeralda will feel like: clean colour, elegant surroundings and a stop that feels instantly rewarding. It works especially well as part of a polished day route when the brief is swimming, scenery and a recognisable highlight rather than full-day solitude.
Broad bay, easier relaxed stop, strong for longer swim-led days
Liscia Ruja
Liscia Ruja tends to work well when you want a more open-feeling stop with a softer rhythm. It is useful in routes where the goal is not only to tick off famous names but to create a better day flow. For families and mixed groups, it can feel easier and less compressed than some of the tighter glamour-led anchor points.
Beautiful water colour, refined feel, easy to combine with nearby bays
Capriccioli area
The Capriccioli area is strong because it gives you flexibility. It sits in the part of the coast where a yacht day can feel visually rich without requiring huge movement. That makes it useful for charters where the brief is less about covering distance and more about layering several high-quality swim stops into one elegant route.
Quiet-luxury feel, excellent for slower premium cruising
Romazzino coastline
Romazzino works particularly well for guests who want Costa Smeralda to feel refined rather than frantic. It is less about announcing itself and more about the overall atmosphere. On the right yacht, especially in shoulder season, this part of the coastline can help the day feel expensive in the right way: calm, controlled and beautifully paced.
Close to Porto Cervo, glamorous, strong for classic north-east routes
Grande Pevero / Piccolo Pevero waters
These waters are useful when the route is being shaped around Porto Cervo and the surrounding prestige zone. They are not just famous because of land access and branding. From a charter point of view, they are practical because they sit inside a coastline that lets you construct a day with recognisable names, strong swimming and a distinctly Costa Smeralda identity.
Important planning distinction
Tavolara-facing alternatives are not Costa Smeralda
A lot of first-time guests mentally blend north-east Sardinia into one single cruising zone. That creates bad route assumptions. Costa Smeralda anchorages are part of one charter logic. Tavolara and the wider Olbia-facing side sit inside another. Understanding that difference is one of the easiest ways to avoid building a route that looks good on paper but feels stretched in practice.
How to plan the route
The best Costa Smeralda days are usually built around rhythm, not maximum distance.
Many first-time guests make one of two mistakes. They either try to do too much, or they choose stops only because the names sound prestigious. Better route design is usually simpler. Pick a departure logic, decide whether the day is swim-led, lunch-led or glamour-led, then let the stop sequence follow that.
If you want a slower premium day, you do not need to stack every famous bay into one charter. If you want a more energetic itinerary, you can push the route harder, but only if the yacht, timing and sea conditions make that shape sensible.
Best time to enjoy them
Shoulder season often makes good anchorages feel even better.
Costa Smeralda is beautiful in peak summer, but it is also at its busiest. That can still be right for guests who want the full holiday atmosphere. But from a pure route quality point of view, June and September often make the best anchorages feel more rewarding because the whole day can breathe better.
May and October can also be strong for value and pace, though they require more care around weather sensitivity. If you are comparing options, it is worth reading this together with the best time to charter in Sardinia guide.
Which yacht works best
The right yacht changes how Costa Smeralda anchorages feel.
Motor yacht
Often strongest for polished day-charter routing, faster movement and a more glamorous Costa Smeralda feel.
Catamaran
Excellent when comfort, stability and a more swim-led group day matter more than speed.
Sailing yacht
Best when the day should feel more classic, more relaxed and a little less performance-driven.
There is no single best yacht type in the abstract. The best yacht is the one that matches the day you are actually trying to create. Use the yacht search and the Costa Smeralda destination page together, rather than choosing a yacht in isolation.