BLUE EYES is best considered for clients who need space, service, and a polished guest flow, with full-scale superyacht presence with formal service and serious deck space. The useful planning angle is a high-service event charter, not a generic yacht-listing comparison.
Shortlist logic
Why this yacht belongs in the conversation
BLUE EYES should make the shortlist when the brief needs a high-service event charter around Amalfi Coast and Capri. The decision should weigh 82'9 / 25.22m, 9 guests, 4 cabins, 2025 against route timing and guest flow.
- Best use
- a high-service event charter
- Guest profile
- 9 guests; clients who need space, service, and a polished guest flow
- Route style
- Capri, Li Galli, and Nerano; strongest when the yacht is not forced into a rushed sightseeing loop
- Port logic
- start from the guest's hotel side of the coast before deciding between Amalfi, Positano, Sorrento, or Naples
- Compare by
- ask whether a smaller or larger yacht would make the same route feel easier
- Watch-out
- the shortlist should include one realistic alternative in case dates, berth access, or owner approval change
Who this yacht suits
BLUE EYES is not a generic inventory pick. It is a better match when the client wants full-scale superyacht presence with formal service and serious deck space, a high-service event charter, and a route shaped around Capri, Li Galli, and Nerano.
Local route logic
The local decision is less about distance and more about timing. Around Amalfi Coast and Capri, BLUE EYES should be planned with boarding point, lunch stop, swim time, and return window in one brief. In practice, start from the guest's hotel side of the coast before deciding between Amalfi, Positano, Sorrento, or Naples.
Planning window
May to September, when Capri timing, tender access, and lunch reservations need clean planning. For this yacht, confirm preferred dates, guest count, cabin needs, and cruising area together so the quote reflects the real plan. the shortlist should include one realistic alternative in case dates, berth access, or owner approval change.
Guest experience
For guests, the difference is felt in pace: where people sit, how lunch is handled, where swimming fits, and how the return feels. BLUE EYES should be evaluated against that rhythm, not only against specs.
Shortlist logic
BLUE EYES should be compared against at least one alternative if the brief is flexible. The useful difference may be cabin layout, crew style, speed, toys, berth access, or how naturally the yacht fits Amalfi Coast and Capri.
Broker caveat
Ask the broker to state the limitation as plainly as the advantage. For BLUE EYES, the check should cover availability, owner approval where relevant, cruising area, APA, fuel, and whether the planned route still works in real weather.