Corsica-Sardinia 7-Day Itinerary
Navigate the legendary Bonifacio Strait between French Corsica and Italian Sardinia, exploring dramatic cliffs, pristine archipelagos, and the glamorous Costa Smeralda.
Day 1: Bonifacio
Your Corsican odyssey begins in Porto Vecchio beneath ancient Genoese towers, where noon embarkation launches you into waters so clear the rocky bottom appears magnified six meters down. Within an hour, Île Piana emerges, a granite sanctuary where the yacht anchors in a turquoise cove. Your crew prepares lunch while you swim in water that seems more Caribbean than Mediterranean, the only sounds being wavelets on stone and wind through the pine trees. The afternoon passage south follows Corsica's dramatic coastline, limestone cliffs plunging sheer to the strait below. Bonifacio reveals itself gradually: a medieval citadel perched on a precipice that drops ninety meters to the sea, the town appearing carved from single stone. The entrance channel cuts narrow between towering rock faces, forcing even modern yachts to proceed slowly beneath walls rising overhead in tiers. The King of Aragon's staircase descends the cliff face, one hundred eighty-seven steps carved into limestone during a 1420 siege, testament to medieval determination. As evening falls, the citadel glows golden, ramparts that have defended against Aragonese, Genoese, and Corsican forces now mellowed into pure beauty.
Sailing: 3 hours (25 nautical miles)
Mooring Options: Port de Bonifacio, Île Piana Anchorage
Recommended Beach: Plage du Petit Sperone
Dining: Finestra by Italo Bassi
Activities: Noon embarkation in Porto Vecchio, Welcome drinks and yacht tour, Swim stop at pristine Île Piana, Afternoon passage to Bonifacio, Exploration of medieval citadel perched on cliffs, Walk the King of Aragon's staircase carved into limestone, Sunset aperitifs overlooking the Strait of Bonifacio, Michelin-level dinner in the old town
Day 2: Lavezzi Islands
The morning passage southeast carries you into the Strait of Bonifacio, where the Lavezzi archipelago scatters one hundred granite islets across waters straddling France and Italy. These islands mark France's southernmost territory, protected as nature reserve since the 1980s, preserving ecosystems unchanged for millennia. The yacht anchors in Cala Lazarina, embraced by granite boulders worn smooth by waves and time, water graduating from pale jade shallows to deeper sapphire beyond the bay. This clarity makes snorkeling revelatory, every pebble appearing within reach though resting three meters down, fish flashing silver and blue over stones, groupers observing from rocky hollows. No development mars these beaches, only sand and stone, nature providing all facilities. A trail winds through maritime scrub to the cemetery island where seven hundred victims of the Sémillante rest, a French frigate wrecked here in 1855, reminding that these beautiful waters have killed as readily as they've sheltered. The afternoon passes in timeless Mediterranean rhythm: swim, sun, paddle to the next cove, conversation meandering like the channels between islands. Other yachts arrive at sunset, anchoring at respectful distances, all seeking the same things: solitude, clarity, water so pure it seems otherworldly.
Sailing: 0.75 hours (6 nautical miles)
Mooring Options: Cala Lazarina anchorage, Cala Chiesa anchorage, Multiple protected bays throughout archipelago
Recommended Beach: Cala Lazarina
Dining: La Ferme, Île de Cavallo
Activities: Short morning passage to France's southernmost territory, Anchor in clear blue water, Swimming & watersports, Snorkeling over granite boulders and white sand, Lunch at La Ferme, Exploration of nature reserve trails, Sunset observation from deck
Day 3: Santa Teresa Gallura, Sardinia
The passage south across the Strait of Bonifacio brings you from French into Italian waters, a crossing barely an hour long but spanning centuries of cultural division. Corsica and Sardinia appear almost close enough to touch, yet they developed distinctly: Corsica pulled toward France despite Italian roots, Sardinia maintaining fierce island identity predating Rome. Santa Teresa Gallura occupies Sardinia's northernmost point, a town established in 1808 when King Carlo Emanuele IV recognized this strategic position, naming it for his wife Maria Teresa. The town wraps around its harbor and climbs slopes of the Gallura region, northern Sardinia's granite country where massive boulders weathered into fantastic shapes create landscapes sculpted by nature's artistry. Rena Bianca beach lies east of the harbor, white sand fine as powder, water so clear and shallow that wading fifty meters keeps you waist-deep. This beach anchors local life, families gathering afternoons, children playing while parents watch from shore, the whole town turning out for sunset. The Tower of Longonsardo rises above the harbor, a 16th-century Spanish watchtower built when Barbary corsairs raided these shores so frequently that coastal villages evacuated to interior mountains. Today it hosts summer concerts, martial purpose transformed into cultural center. The town wears its youth lightly, none of the ancient stone of Corsican villages, instead a cheerful collection of white and pastel buildings laid out in rational grid. The atmosphere shifts subtly from Corsica: more Italian exuberance, restaurants serving Sardinian specialties distinct from mainland cuisine.
Sailing: 1 hours (8 nautical miles)
Mooring Options: Porto di Santa Teresa, Rena Bianca anchorage
Recommended Beach: Rena Bianca
Dining: Millo Ristorante
Activities: Morning crossing from French Corsica to Italian Sardinia, Arrival in Gallura granite coastline, Beach time at white-sand Rena Bianca, Visit to Spanish Tower of Longonsardo, Walking & Shopping in town center, Traditional Sardinian aperitivo, Fresh seafood dinner overlooking the strait
Day 4: La Maddalena
The passage east through La Maddalena archipelago reveals why these islands remained restricted military zone until 2008, Italian Navy controlling access to protect strategic waters between Sardinia and Corsica. Sixty-two islands and islets scatter across these channels, creating a maritime maze of currents and rocks. This military presence accidentally preserved what development destroyed elsewhere, the coast bypassing the archipelago entirely. The yacht threads channels between granite islands rising abruptly from waters measuring thirty meters deep within boat lengths of shore. Isola Razzoli passes to starboard, uninhabited nature reserve where seabirds nest in numbers that darken the sky during migration. Beyond, Budelli's Spiaggia Rosa appears, the infamous pink beach whose color comes from crushed coral and shells. Landing became prohibited after tourists took sand as souvenirs, literally carrying the beach away. Now you observe from the yacht, the beach still glowing rose against turquoise water, testament to nature's fragility. La Maddalena town occupies the largest island, settlement that grew around its natural harbor when Sardinian shepherds recognized these islands' value. Garibaldi came here for his final exile, purchasing half of Caprera where he lived as farmer while Italy unified partly through his campaigns. His house remains museum, simple rooms where the man who unified Italy spent his last years growing olives and writing memoirs, the contrast between austere life and historical weight making the visit profound.
Sailing: 1.5 hours (13 nautical miles)
Mooring Options: Porto di La Maddalena, Cala Gavetta, Cala Coticcio anchorage
Recommended Beach: Spiaggia Rosa viewing (protected), Cala Coticcio
Dining: Lunch & Dinner on board
Activities: Morning cruise through archipelago channels, Pass Isola Razzoli nature reserve, Tender to Spiaggia Rosa viewing point (no landing), Swimming at Cala Coticcio (Tahiti), Visit to Giuseppe Garibaldi's house on Caprera, Hiking on Caprera island trails, Exploration of La Maddalena town, Traditional Sardinian dinner
Day 5: Porto Cervo (Costa Smeralda)
The morning passage south follows Sardinia's northeastern shore where granite coast gives way to Costa Smeralda, the Emerald Coast. This fifty-five-kilometer stretch achieved fame through vision: in 1962, Aga Khan IV encountered this remote coast while sheltering from storms, recognized its potential, and created what is essentially a planned resort region. He purchased vast tracts, hired architects, established aesthetic rules, and transformed pristine coves and granite headlands into a paradise rivaling the Côte d'Azur. Porto Cervo occupies the development's heart, an artificial harbor carved from rock providing yacht berths for vessels whose lengths exceed most villages' main streets. The marina features shops selling items at stratospheric prices, restaurants requiring weeks' advance reservations, bars where aperitivo costs more than fine dining elsewhere. Yet the Aga Khan's mandate prevents garish excess: buildings follow Sardinian vernacular styles, white plaster and natural stone, terra cotta tiles, proportions respecting traditional villages while hiding contemporary luxury within. The Stella Maris church rises above the harbor with modernist interpretation of traditional forms, its bell tower serving as landmark and reminder that even manufactured paradise needs spiritual dimension. The Piazzetta comes alive evening, billionaires mixing with yacht crews and locals maintaining the infrastructure. Designer boutiques line the square, brands conveying aspirational luxury. Sunset transforms the scene, everyone migrating toward waterfront bars where watching becomes competitive sport in casual elegance. Superyachts line the quays like thoroughbreds, representing wealth that staggers imagination. Cala di Volpe curves north, the Bay of Foxes, where the hotel that launched Costa Smeralda's fame still operates, a 1960s creation so convincing that scouts use it for period films. The beach club here set standards copied worldwide.
Sailing: 2 hours (20 nautical miles)
Mooring Options: Marina di Porto Cervo, Yacht Club Costa Smeralda berths, Cala di Volpe anchorage
Recommended Beach: Cala di Volpe
Dining: Phi Beach
Activities: Morning cruise along Costa Smeralda, Arrival at Porto Cervo marina, Beach club experience at Cala di Volpe, Designer shopping in Piazzetta, Visit to Stella Maris church, Dinner/nightclub experience at Phi Beach
Day 6: Tavolara Island
The passage southeast from Porto Cervo toward Tavolara feels like transitioning between worlds, Costa Smeralda's calculated beauty giving way to coastline shaped by geology rather than planning. Tavolara rises five kilometers offshore like a massive limestone ship run aground, measuring five kilometers long but barely one wide, its spine reaching 565 meters at Punta Cannone, sheer cliffs dropping to water on all sides except the narrow western spit where boats anchor. The island's appearance approaches architectural impossibility, a wall of pale limestone strata oriented northwest-southeast, looking more constructed than natural. This improbable island spawned improbable claims: in 1836, King Carlo Alberto supposedly recognized Giuseppe Bertoleoni's sovereignty, making Tavolara the world's smallest kingdom. Bertoleoni's descendants maintain the claim, displaying regal photographs in the family restaurant where fresh seafood and local wine are served to yachtsmen anchoring in the tiny harbor. The island achieved protected status in 1997 as part of Tavolara-Punta Coda Cavallo Marine Protected Area, preserving exceptional biodiversity: groupers large enough to resemble small submarines, endangered monk seals in remote coves, seabirds nesting by thousands on inaccessible cliffs. Marine reserve regulations create snorkeling unlike anywhere else on this coast, fish populations recovered to levels unseen elsewhere in decades. Cala Brandinchi stretches along the mainland opposite Tavolara, nicknamed Sardinia's Tahiti for water glowing turquoise over white sand, shallow enough to wade fifty meters while remaining waist-deep. Pine forest backs the beach, providing shade even in August.
Sailing: 2.5 hours (25 nautical miles)
Mooring Options: Porto San Paolo anchorage, Tavolara anchorage (Spiaggia Istmo del Passetto), Cala Brandinchi anchorage
Recommended Beach: Cala Brandinchi (Tahiti)
Dining: Gusto by Sadler
Activities: Morning departure from Costa Smeralda, Passage past marine protected area, Arrival at dramatic Tavolara limestone island, Hike to summit viewpoint (565 meters), Swimming & Watersports at Tahiti beach (Cala Brandinchi), Fresh seafood lunch on board
Day 7: Olbia (Disembarkation)
Your final morning breaks clear over Tavolara, the limestone island glowing in early light. One last swim in water so transparent it barely seems to exist, the seabed appearing magnified through six meters of clear blue water. The final breakfast on board. The yacht weighs anchor and turns west, Tavolara falling astern, its improbable cliffs maintaining their architectural impossibility from every angle. The passage crosses Olbia Gulf, protected waters that made this location valuable since Phoenicians established trading posts nine centuries before Christ. Romans called it Olbia, Greek for prosperous, testament to wealth generated through maritime commerce. The modern town spreads around the gulf's inner reaches, Sardinia's fourth-largest city and primary gateway through its airport. Yacht marinas cluster south, creating infrastructure supporting Costa Smeralda nearby. The old town preserves historic character, medieval churches and Roman ruins surviving among contemporary buildings, San Simplicio basilica standing since the 11th century. As the yacht approaches its berth, passing between breakwaters, you reflect on the week's journey: from Corsica's limestone cliffs through Lavezzi's granite wilderness, crossing to Sardinia where archipelagos and manufactured paradises told stories of preservation and development, nature and planning. The contrast between La Maddalena's military-preserved purity and Porto Cervo's billionaire playground, between Bonifacio's medieval citadel and Tavolara's natural drama, revealed Mediterranean complexity, this sea containing multitudes that coexist in patterns changing with every generation while remaining essentially Mediterranean. The yacht secures to the dock, crew handling lines with practiced efficiency. Goodbyes carry warmth earned through days in close quarters, acknowledgment that you have shared something valuable.
Sailing: 1 hours (8 nautical miles)
Mooring Options: Marina di Olbia, Olbia airport marina
Recommended Beach: Cala Brandinchi
Dining: Il Fuoco Sacro
Activities: Breakfast with views of Tavolara, Final swim in clear blue waters, Morning cruise toward Olbia, Passage through Olbia Gulf, Packing and preparation underway, Arrival at Olbia marina, Disembarkation and crew farewells, Optional exploration of Olbia old town and lunch at Il Fuoco Sacro