The order books at the world’s leading superyacht shipyards — Feadship, Lürssen, Benetti — have never been fuller. Delivery timelines stretch three to five years. The vessels being commissioned are larger, more technically complex, and more operationally demanding than anything that came before them.
And the industry has a problem it is not discussing loudly enough: there are not enough qualified people to crew them.
The pipeline of officers trained to STCW standards for vessels above 3,000 gross tonnes has not grown at the pace the market demands. Chief engineers capable of managing hybrid propulsion systems — increasingly standard on new builds — are being recruited away from commercial shipping at salaries that would have seemed extraordinary five years ago. Experienced captains with the social intelligence to manage a principal’s family for eight consecutive months are, in the bluntest possible terms, rare.
For principals currently in build programmes or planning significant charter seasons, this is not an abstract industry problem. It is an operational one. The vessel you have waited four years for may be delivered without the crew it deserves.
The family offices and principals who are navigating this well are treating crew recruitment with the same lead time as the build itself — beginning the search for key officers during the construction phase, not after delivery.
The yacht industry builds extraordinary vessels. The next challenge is building the workforce to match them.
Curated by: Hype Luxury




