The Complete Sailing Trip Packing List
Everything you need for a week on the water, whether you are chartering a catamaran in the BVI or coastal hopping in the San Juans.
Quick answer
Category
Outdoors & Adventure
Items per trip
~46 items
Scenarios
2 scenarios
Tips
8 pro tips
A sailing trip packing list starts with a collapsible duffel bag, 2 to 3 swimsuits, quick-dry clothing in layers, reef-safe SPF 50+ sunscreen, polarized sunglasses with a retainer strap, non-marking deck shoes, a waterproof phone case, a headlamp, motion sickness medication, and a personal flotation device if the charter lacks one. Skip hard luggage, denim, and bulky sneakers.
Pack for a sailing trip like you pack for a backpacking trip, not a hotel. Storage is measured in cubic inches, not closet space. Cabins are narrow and lockers are shallow, and anything rigid turns into a projectile when the boat heels, tipping hard to one side under sail. First-timers almost always bring too much. Charter skippers have a fix: lay out everything you plan to bring, then put a third of it back.
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Every item should earn its locker space by doing at least two jobs. A rash guard, the snug UV shirt surfers wear, covers you for sun and snorkeling. A buff works as a neck gaiter, a headband, or a hair tie. A headlamp is your reading light and your night-vision safety signal. Denim, hard-shell luggage, and anything cotton-heavy stay on shore.
The list splits in two because water temperature drives every other decision. Warm-water charters in the Caribbean, the Med, or Southeast Asia come down to sun protection, reef-safe sunscreen, and staying cool. Cold-water coastal sailing in the Pacific Northwest, Northern Europe, or Patagonia adds foul-weather layers plus neoprene and thermal base layers. On a night watch, your shift steering while the others sleep, those layers are the line between bearable and miserable.
Bareboat or skippered charter in tropical or subtropical waters. Air temperature 75 to 95°F, water temperature 78 to 86°F. Days split between sailing, snorkeling, and shore dinners. Minimal foul-weather gear needed.
👕Clothing
Essentials
- Quick-dry swim trunks or board shorts x3 (Double as hiking shorts on shore)
- Swimsuit or bikini x2 (Always have a dry one ready)
- UPF 50+ long-sleeve rash guard x2 (Sun protection while sailing and snorkeling)
- Lightweight linen or moisture-wicking t-shirts x3
- Light hoodie or fleece for evenings (Anchorages cool down after sunset)
- Lightweight rain jacket (packable) (Tropical squalls appear with 10 minutes of warning)
- Quick-dry underwear (synthetic or merino) x4
- Wide-brim sun hat with chin strap (Without a strap, the wind takes it overboard)
Nice to Have
- Cover-up or casual dress for shore dinners (Most marina restaurants are relaxed, no formal wear)
- Buff or multi-use neck gaiter (Sun shield, headband, or hair tie in one)
👟Footwear
Essentials
- Non-marking deck shoes or boat shoes with siping soles (White or gum-rubber soles only, never black)
- Water shoes or reef walkers (Protects feet from coral, urchins, and hot sand)
Nice to Have
- Flip-flops or sport sandals for shore
☀️Sun & Water Protection
Essentials
- Reef-safe sunscreen SPF 50+ (mineral, zinc oxide) x2 (Many marine parks ban chemical sunscreens with oxybenzone)
- SPF lip balm (Lips burn fast on the water with constant wind)
- Polarized sunglasses with retainer strap (Polarization cuts water glare, strap keeps them aboard)
Nice to Have
- Aloe vera gel (travel size) (For the sunburn you will get despite the sunscreen)
- Snorkel mask (own fit, not rental) (Rental masks leak; a properly fitted mask is worth the bag space)
- Rashguard leggings or wetsuit shorts (Jellyfish protection and thigh sunburn prevention)
🔌Electronics & Tech
Essentials
- Waterproof phone case (IPX8 rated)
- Portable power bank (10,000+ mAh, under 100 Wh for flights) (Boat outlets may only work when the engine runs)
- USB charging cable (multi-tip)
- Headlamp with red-light mode (Red light preserves night vision on deck)
Nice to Have
- Waterproof Bluetooth speaker (small)
- GoPro or waterproof action camera
🧴Toiletries & Personal
Essentials
- Biodegradable shampoo and body wash (Non-biodegradable soap pollutes anchorages)
- Travel-size toothbrush and toothpaste
- Deodorant
- Insect repellent (DEET or picaridin) (No-see-ums at sunset are relentless in the tropics)
- Prescription medications in original bottles
- Motion sickness medication (meclizine or scopolamine patches) (Patch on 4 hours ahead, or pills an hour before; waiting until you feel sick is too late)
- Small first-aid add-ons: waterproof bandages, antibiotic ointment, anti-itch cream (Charter boats carry a basic kit but rarely stock extras)
Nice to Have
- Dry shampoo (Freshwater showers on a sailboat are a luxury, not a given)
📄Documents & Money
Essentials
- Passport (if sailing internationally) (BVI, Greece, Croatia all require passport even from nearby countries)
- Sailing certifications (ASA or RYA card) (Required for bareboat charters in most countries)
- Travel insurance proof (printed and digital)
- Waterproof document pouch
- Cash in local currency for mooring fees and small harbors (Many island fuel docks and mooring balls are cash only)
Nice to Have
- Credit card with no foreign transaction fees
🍽️Galley & Provisions
Essentials
- Insulated water bottle (32 oz per person) (Goal is 1 gallon per person per day in tropical heat)
- Non-perishable snacks (nuts, jerky, granola bars, dried fruit) (Fridge space is tiny; keep shelf-stable snacks topside)
Nice to Have
- Reusable zip-lock bags (gallon size) x5 (Organize leftovers, keep phones dry, seal wet swimsuits)
- Collapsible dry bag for provisioning runs (Easier than juggling grocery bags in the dinghy, the small boat that runs you between the anchored yacht and shore)
- Spice kit or hot sauce (travel bottles) (Charter galleys stock salt, pepper, and oil but rarely more)
Packing Tips
- 1Use a soft-sided duffel bag or backpack, never a hard-shell suitcase. Rigid luggage cannot fit through companionway hatches or into cabin lockers, and most skippers will refuse to take it aboard.
- 2Pack everything inside dry bags, the waterproof roll-top sacks that seal at the top, or large zip-lock bags grouped by system (sleep, sail, swim, shore). If the boat takes a wave or a hatch leaks overnight, your dry clothes stay dry.
- 3Bring at least two swimsuits so one can dry while you wear the other. Quick-dry board shorts double as hiking shorts on shore excursions.
- 4Non-marking soles are not optional. Black-soled shoes leave permanent scuff marks on fiberglass decks and the skipper will ask you to take them off. White or gum-rubber soles with siping grip best on wet decks.
- 5Start motion sickness medication before you feel sick, not after. Put on a scopolamine patch at least 4 hours before you leave, or take meclizine (Bonine) about an hour before. Once you are already nauseous, oral medication is far less effective.
- 6Bring a waterproof phone case rated IPX8 or higher. Phones die on boats from splash exposure, not submersion. A $12 pouch saves a $1,200 phone.
- 7Leave one complete dry outfit sealed in a waterproof bag and do not touch it until you need it. After a squall or a rough crossing, dry socks and a warm layer feel transformative.
- 8Provision snacks that do not require refrigeration and do not crumble: mixed nuts, jerky, granola bars, dried mango. Fridge space on a sailboat is tiny and the ice melts faster than you expect.
Frequently Asked Questions
What kind of bag should I bring on a sailing trip?
Do I need to bring my own life jacket on a charter?
What shoes can you wear on a sailboat?
How do you prevent seasickness on a sailboat?
Can you wear jeans on a sailboat?
How much should I pack for a week-long sailing trip?
Do I need sailing certifications for a bareboat charter?
What sunscreen should I use on a sailing trip?
Is there electricity on a sailboat?
What should you not bring on a sailing trip?
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