
From the outer reefs of the Maldives to the hidden anchorages of Raja Ampat, from the wild coast of Patagonia to the Society Islands of the South Pacific — NAORA offers its members a world that goes far beyond what any itinerary can contain.
Anchored in a remote bay in the Azores, the only light coming from a sky full of stars. Diving the outer reefs of the Maldives, where the coral runs so deep you cannot see the bottom. Watching the sun rise over the Society Islands from a deck that is still warm from the night before. These are not highlights from a travel itinerary. They are Tuesday for a NAORA member.
Today, NAORA announces its launch: a private, invitation-only sailing expedition membership that gives a curated circle of modern explorers flexible, recurring access to a continuously moving global journey spanning 183+ destinations and 45,000+ nautical miles over five years. It is the most ambitious membership-based sailing concept ever brought to market — and it is built, from the hull up, for people who are not satisfied with what a hotel can offer.
The NAORA route is not a circuit of popular anchorages. It is not designed around tourism seasons or marina availability. It is designed around one thing: putting its members in the most extraordinary places on earth at the moment those places are most extraordinary.
The route follows trade winds and seasonal weather patterns, refined over 25+ years of accumulated offshore sailing knowledge. It begins in the Mediterranean — the Balearics, Sardinia, the Adriatic, the Aegean — before crossing the Atlantic via the Canary Islands and Cape Verde. From the Caribbean, it passes through the Panama Canal into the Pacific. Southeast Asia. The Maldives. The Indian Ocean. The Red Sea. The South Pacific. Patagonia. And back again — a five-year loop that never quite repeats, because the world does not.
Each leg is timed with the prevailing wind systems and anchored in each region during its peak season. Members who join the Mediterranean leg experience the sea at its most vivid. Those who join for the Indian Ocean leg arrive during the perfect sailing window. Those who make the South Pacific passage with NAORA experience one of the most transcendent crossings available to any sailor, private or otherwise.
And at every stage, NAORA members are not experiencing these places as tourists. They are experiencing them as people who belong there — because the crew does, the captain does, and the community does.
Every NAORA journey takes place aboard the Fountaine Pajot Thira 80 — one of the largest production catamarans in the world, built for exactly the kind of long, deep, ocean-crossing lifestyle that NAORA is designed around. At nearly 24 metres in length, with a displacement of 66 tonnes and a sail area of 340 square metres, the Thira 80 is not a day-tripper. It is an offshore passage-maker of the highest order, wrapped in the interiors of a luxury private villa.
Six to seven private en-suite double cabins. Wide teak decks for morning yoga and midnight conversations. A salon designed for the kind of dinner party that only happens when the nearest land is two hundred miles away. A professional galley from which a private chef produces three-course meals with ingredients sourced at every port. The Thira 80 is, quite simply, one of the finest environments in which a human being can spend time — and it is moving, always, toward somewhere remarkable.
The catamaran design is not a compromise. It is the correct answer for this model. Two to three times the living space of a monohull of equivalent length. Minimal heel, smooth passages, dramatically reduced motion sickness. Wide decks and a shallow draft that allows NAORA to anchor in remote bays that deeper-keeled vessels cannot access. The Thira 80 delivers comfort without sacrificing reach — which means NAORA members can go further, stay longer, and arrive more refreshed than any comparable vessel would allow.
“We don’t discover places. We return to them. That is the difference NAORA members will feel from day one. — The NAORA Founders”
There is a version of global travel that is available to anyone with a credit card and a premium booking platform. Beautiful hotels in beautiful places, populated by other people with beautiful credit cards. NAORA is not that. NAORA is the version of global travel that requires local knowledge, earned trust, and years of relationship-building to access.
The founding team has spent 11 years across Southeast Asia — not as tourists, but as residents. They have friendships in fishing villages that do not appear on any map, and access to anchorages that are not listed in any cruising guide. They know the chef at the restaurant that has no sign. They know the fisherman who knows the reef that the dive boats have not found yet. They have sat at tables in communities that most travellers will never find, not because of money, but because of time.
That accumulated knowledge and those relationships are what NAORA members are buying access to when they join. Not a boat. Not a route. A world that the founding team has spent decades learning to navigate — and that deepens, for every member, with every return.
The NAORA onboard experience is curated with the same level of intention as the route itself. Water sports equipment is maintained to professional standard — diving gear, kites, paddleboards, and exploration tenders are available whenever conditions allow. Shore excursions are arranged in advance, drawing on local networks to provide cultural access and private experiences that are unavailable to independent travellers.
The community aboard NAORA is deliberately international. Members speak French, German, Spanish, Arabic, Mandarin, Dutch, and many other languages — but English is the official language of all navigation, safety briefings, and crew communication. The diversity of the community is a feature, not a coincidence. When extraordinary people from extraordinary backgrounds share an extraordinary environment, what results is a quality of conversation and connection that no land-based club or conference can replicate.
Between voyages, the community continues. Regional gatherings in key cities. Private dinners. Cultural events at port. NAORA is not a place its members visit. It is a world they belong to.
NAORA membership is structured in three tiers. Coastal members receive approximately one week of access per year — an introduction to the vessel, the community, and the rhythm of offshore life. Offshore members receive approximately 40 days per year, building lasting relationships and experiencing the full depth of the expedition. Navigator members receive approximately 90 days per year, with priority on route selection and scheduling, and a level of integration into the NAORA world that is closer to a second home than a holiday.
A one-time entry fee of €3,000–5,000 opens the door. Annual fees range from €9,000 for Coastal membership to €59,000 for Navigator access. Extended and bespoke arrangements are available for members who want a more permanent presence within the system.
Every membership begins with a private conversation. Not a sales call. A conversation. NAORA wants to understand who you are and what you are looking for. You want to understand where the boat is going and who is aboard. Only from that mutual understanding does the question of membership arise.
To begin that conversation, visit www.naora.world
About NAORA — NAORA is a membership-based private sailing expedition founded by four Belgian adventurers with 25+ years of offshore sailing expertise. Its five-year global journey spans 183+ destinations and 45,000+ nautical miles, covering the Mediterranean, Atlantic, Caribbean, Indian Ocean, Southeast Asia, and South Pacific. Membership tiers — Coastal, Offshore, and Navigator — offer flexible, recurring access to life at sea aboard the Fountaine Pajot Thira 80, one of the largest luxury production catamarans in the world. NAORA is not a travel company. It is a new category of living.