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Explore how Aman, Four Seasons, and The Ritz-Carlton are taking luxury to sea with brand-backed superyachts. 🛳️
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By Sam Elyaszadeh
Luxury hotel brands are reshaping what "hotel" means—by launching their own yachts.
Photo Courtesy of Four Seasons Yachts
Luxury hospitality brands have started to break free from land. In the last 18 months, Aman, Four Seasons, and The Ritz-Carlton have all announced or launched flagship yachts that operate as extensions of their hotel ecosystems. These floating properties elevate not only the guest experience, but also how luxury travel defines itself.
The luxury travel sector exceeded $2.1 trillion in 2024, and top-tier guests are shifting toward a new kind of luxury experience — a desire to travel effortlessly between destinations without trading comfort or brand consistency. Yachts offer a seamless alternative. They let luxury brands expand into regions where land-based development is restricted, while capturing more guest spend under one brand and one loyalty ecosystem.
Aman at Sea — Amangati:
Aman’s first motor yacht, named Amangati (meaning “peaceful motion”), is scheduled to launch in 2027. It spans approximately 600 feet, with 47 suites each offering private balconies. Amenities include four dining venues, a Japanese garden-inspired spa, a beach club, jazz lounge, and twin helipads. The vessel emphasizes tranquility, discretion, and full immersion consistent with Aman’s ethos.
Four Seasons Yachts — Four Seasons I:
The inaugural yacht is set to launch in January 2026, built by Fincantieri, and will offer 95 suites, each with terraces and floor-to-ceiling views. The top-tier “Funnel Suite” spans roughly 9,600 sq ft across multiple levels. Onboard features include 11 restaurants, multiple lounges, and a high staff-to-guest ratio.
The Ritz-Carlton Yacht Collection:
This branded cruise arm launched its first vessel, Evrima, in 2022, followed by Ilma in 2024. A third ship, Luminara, began operations in mid‑2025. With capacities around 226 suites accommodating approximately 450+ passengers, it features amenities like a spa, wine vault, marina beach platform, art exhibitions, and high-end dining.
These vessels blur the line between hotel and home. The emphasis is on brand continuity, not novelty. A guest staying at a Four Seasons in London can expect virtually identical hospitality aboard Four Seasons I in the Adriatic—right down to the pillow menu, music selection, and spa treatments.
New High-Margin Assets:
Unlike traditional cruise liners built to scale, these yachts are small, intimate, and focused on ultra‑high-spend guests. They enable luxury groups to maintain premium average daily rate economics—and travel to ports where building new hotels would be impossible.
Designing for Movement:
Delivering a consistent brand experience at sea requires adaptive systems: from climate and lighting control tuned to humidity and wave movement, to sensory design (scents, textures, sound) that adjust with itinerary and location.
Platform Thinking:
Rather than standalone hotels, these yachts become nodes in a larger brand network—bookings flow through the same reservation systems, loyalty programs, and brand loyalty touchpoints as their hotels on land.
Hospitality is transforming into a mobility-first platform. If hotel rooms were once the unit of experience, branded yachts are the next phase — portable, curated, and deeply branded. Soon, guests may subscribe to their preferred brands and move with them to a resort, a yacht, or advisory-outpost all over the world—with one keycard.
This is not just a travel trend—it’s a design story, brand strategy, and architectural evolution. The flagship isn’t rooted in geography anymore, it sails. And if Aman, Four Seasons, and The Ritz-Carlton get this right, the next check-in might come with a tide chart.
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