Buying

Yacht refit planning — sequence, budget, and yard selection

How to plan a cruising yacht refit in the Nordics — safety-first sequencing, realistic budgets, yard quotes, and when refit beats buying ready on 9–14 m boats.

Introduction

Refit planning is not the same as «fix what the survey found.» Buyers who treat refit as one lump sum often stall mid-season with the boat on the hard, half rewired, and no launch date. Nordic owners on 9–14 m cruisers do better with a phased plan: safety and watertight integrity first, propulsion second, comfort and cosmetics last.

Start with refit vs ready if you are still choosing between a project boat and a turn-key listing. This guide assumes you already own — or are under contract on — a candidate like Hallberg-Rassy HR 36, Najad 390, or Bavaria 34 Cruiser.


Phase map — what order matters

Phase Scope Typical timing
0 — Float safely Through-hulls, seacocks, bilge pumps, gas hose dates, rudder stock play Before launch
1 — Structure Chainplate rebed, osmosis treatment, keel bolt survey, deck leaks Haul-out window
2 — Propulsion Engine service, saildrive seals, shaft alignment, fuel tank hygiene After phase 1 dry
3 — Rigging Standing rig replacement, running rig, winch service Before heavy sailing
4 — Systems Electrics, navigation, solar — see electronics refit When power budget is defined
5 — Cosmetic Teak, upholstery, gelcoat — lowest ROI if structure open Last

Skipping phase order is how €30k refits become €80k: opening the interior before chainplate moisture is mapped, or polishing gelcoat before osmosis treatment.


Budget framing (2026, Nordic yards)

Figures are orientation for 9–14 m GRP cruisers — confirm quotes for your boat.

Phase Low (EUR) High (EUR) Notes
Safety / seacocks 2 000 8 000 Often non-negotiable post-survey
Osmosis / hull 5 000 25 000 Depends on extent — osmosis repair guide
Standing rigging 8 000 18 000 HR/Najad premium yards cost more
Engine + saildrive 3 000 12 000 Service vs replacement
Electronics tranche 4 000 15 000 Phased, not all at once
Teak / cosmetic 5 000 40 000+ Often deferred — teak deck cost

Add 25–35% contingency on top of yard quotes. Compare total refit + purchase against ownership cost calculator and a ready alternative on market pages.


Yard and project management

Decision Practical rule
One yard vs specialist trades Single yard simplifies liability; specialists win on rigging-only jobs
Fixed quote vs T&M Fixed for defined scope (rig swap); T&M for exploratory osmosis
Owner labour Realistic only if you have time + skills — document everything for resale
Launch deadline Book re-launch slot when haul-out starts, not when work is «almost done»

Get written scope referencing survey findings — link to reading a survey report. Revisit survey day prep if a re-survey closes the project.


Model-specific notes

Model band Refit watch-outs
HR 36 / HR 342 Chainplate core moisture · teak deck cost
Najad 390 Aft-cockpit deck hardware · rigging age
Linjett 35 Performance rig — budget standing rig early
Beneteau Oceanis 37 Saildrive service history · production variability

Use compare tool when deciding whether refit spend exceeds switching models.


FAQ

Q: Should I refit before or after the first season?
A: Fix phase 0 before launching. Defer cosmetics until you know the boat fits your sailing pattern.

Q: Does refit always add resale value?
A: Documented safety and structure work helps; cosmetic over-spend rarely returns 100% on Nordic listings — see resale guide.

Q: Can I live aboard during refit?
A: Usually impractical during structural work — budget marina fees or storage separately in annual budgeting.

Q: When is refit the wrong call?
A: When survey finds multiple phase-1 issues exceeding ~40% of replacement value — walk or renegotiate per negotiating price.


Next steps

Download patterns from buyer checklist · book advisory for refit scope on a specific hull · browse models index.

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