
Charter Itinerary’s Yacht Listings are accessible only to authorised brokers who meet our yacht listings verification standards. If you’re an active member of two or more industry associations like AYCA, CYBA, IYBA, or MYBA, you’re automatically approved for access. If not, you’ll need professional references from association members who can vouch for your work.
Every yacht on the platform is uploaded by its Central Agent. By listing on Charter Itinerary, Central Agents create an additional sales channel for their fleet, exposing it to 70% of the charter market in value. Before that yacht reaches brokers searching the platform, however, we verify six things. These yacht listings verification standards aren’t bureaucratic requirements. They’re structural protections that separate professional MLS platforms from open marketplaces where standards don’t exist.
Central Agent Representation Rights Come First
The Central Agent must prove they’re authorised to represent the yacht for charter. This requirement exists because platforms without verification create problems when yachts appear without the CA’s knowledge or permission.
We require evidence of representation rights before a listing goes live. Consequently, brokers using Charter Itinerary are finding yachts whose Central Agents actively chose to list them, verified their authorisation, and maintain control over their listings. It’s a small check that prevents larger problems down the line.
Commercial Registry and Compliance Aren’t Optional
All yachts must be commercially registered and in compliance with LY2, SCV, or equivalent legislation in non-Red Ensign jurisdictions. We verify this through a Certificate of Registry issued by a reputable Flag State, clearly noting the yacht’s status as commercial, or through a Certificate of Compliance issued by a recognised authority.
This requirement protects brokers from enquiring about yachts that aren’t legally allowed to charter. Furthermore, it maintains professional standards across the platform. You’re not competing with yachts that cut corners on compliance because those yachts don’t make it onto the platform.
P&I Insurance Verification Standards Protect Everyone
A valid P&I insurance policy where the yacht’s name is clearly visible must be provided. No exceptions. This protects brokers, protects clients, protects the industry.
Some platforms don’t verify insurance, relying instead on self-attestation or skipping the check entirely. When you enquire about a yacht through Charter Itinerary’s Yacht Listings, you’re enquiring about a yacht whose insurance coverage has been verified before it appeared in your search results. It’s one less thing to worry about when presenting options to clients.
Professional References From Industry Associations
Central Agents must provide a reference from an external company that’s an active member of AYCA, CYBA, IYBA, or MYBA, confirming the yacht is of excellent charter standard. Additionally, we reserve the right to request references from surveyors and reputable brokers who are active association members.
This requirement does something important. It ties our admission standards to the same professional associations brokers already trust. We’re not creating our own definition of “charter-ready.” We’re using the definition your industry associations have developed over decades.
Professional Crew and Maintenance Standards
Yachts must be fully and permanently crewed by professional yacht crew, as well as maintained and equipped to the highest standards for chartering. This isn’t aspirational language. It’s an admission requirement that Central Agents must meet before their yachts appear on the platform.
Moreover, yachts may only be represented on Charter Itinerary by one Central Agent at a time. This prevents the confusion and relationship friction that happens when multiple parties claim representation rights for the same yacht. It’s a simple rule that maintains clarity across the platform.
Ongoing Accountability Through Complaint Review
Admission standards matter, but so does ongoing accountability. Should we receive three written complaints from three different approved companies against a yacht over a 12-month period, we review the yacht and may temporarily delist it during that review.
This system protects brokers who enquire through the platform. You’re not discovering a yacht’s problems after your client does. Additionally, yachts not made available for charter for more than 12 months without notifying us are deemed inactive and removed from the platform. Standards at admission mean nothing without accountability after.
What Separates Professional MLS Verification Standards From Open Marketplaces
The Open Marketplace Model
Some platforms operate like consumer marketplaces where anyone can list and verification happens through self-attestation or doesn’t happen at all.
The Professional MLS Approach
Professional MLS platforms work differently. They verify Central Agent representation rights before listings go live through yacht listings verification standards. They check commercial registry documentation, insurance policies, and professional references. They maintain standards through ongoing accountability systems that protect everyone using the platform.
The difference matters because brokers using open marketplaces compete with unvetted operators and listings that may not meet professional standards. Brokers using professional MLS platforms work with Central Agents who pass the same requirements their industry associations demand.
Why These Standards Protect Broker Relationships
These verification checks weren’t designed to make admission difficult. They were designed to protect the professional relationships brokers have with Central Agents and clients.
When you search Charter Itinerary’s Yacht Listings, you’re seeing yachts whose Central Agents proved representation rights, verified commercial compliance, submitted insurance documentation, and earned professional references. You’re not seeing every yacht that applied. You’re seeing the ones that passed requirements built around professional standards.
This structure respects the value chain brokers operate in. Central Agents control their listings. Brokers work with verified professionals. Clients enquire about yachts that meet industry standards. The alternative is platforms where verification doesn’t happen, where anyone can list, where professional standards erode because nobody maintains them.
We chose differently. Every requirement, every verification check, every accountability system exists to maintain the yacht listings verification standards brokers expect from platforms built by and for the industry. It’s why Central Agents use the platform to reach 70% of the charter market, and why brokers trust the listings they find when they search.
Brokers using Charter Itinerary’s platform aren’t competing with listings that bypassed verification. They’re working with verified Central Agents through a system that protects the relationships professionals built.
Explore how the platform works or start a free trial to experience the difference professional standards make.
Frequently asked questions
Everything you need to know about yacht listings verification standards.
Who can access Charter Itinerary’s Yacht Listings?
What documentation do Central Agents need to list a yacht?
How does Charter Itinerary verify P&I insurance?
What happens if a yacht receives multiple complaints?
Can multiple Central Agents represent the same yacht on Charter Itinerary?
How do yacht listings verification standards protect brokers?
Still have a question?
Can’t find the answer to your question? Send us an email and we’ll get back to you as soon as possible!


