

Castoldi
Beach landers, tenders, ribs and solas from 4.3m to 10.5m, built in Albairate, Italy since 1962.
The Castoldi range
21 models on the register
21 boats


JT 19 SOLAS

Castoldi

Castoldi

Castoldi

Castoldi

Castoldi

Castoldi

Castoldi

28

25

21

19

19 RB/ SOLAS

18

18 RB/ SOLAS

17

16

15

14

14 RB/SOLAS
In their own words
About Castoldi
Castoldi is an Italian manufacturer headquartered in Albairate, in the Milan metropolitan area of Lombardy. The company has been developing waterjet propulsion since the early 1960s, with the first mass-produced Castoldi waterjet unit presented at the Genoa Boat Show in 1969. Today more than 40,000 Castoldi hydrojet units operate worldwide, across civilian, military, and commercial fleets.
The range we ask Castoldi for runs from compact garage-fit tenders at 4.3m right through to the flagship Jet Tender 34 at 10.5m - sixteen passengers, twin 440 hp diesels paired to twin Turbodrive waterjet units, and a certified top speed of 50 knots. Every model in between follows the same build logic: deep-V hulls hand-laid in Kevlar and vinylester resin, Castoldi's own Turbodrive waterjet drives manufactured in-house, and a package of practical details - retractable helms, self-bailing cockpits, and walkthrough deck layouts - that captains value on a working programme.
The propeller-free drivetrain is the defining feature of any Castoldi. No exposed rotating parts below the keel means safe operation around swimmers and watersport guests; zero draft restriction means beach landings and sand-bank crossings that a conventional-drive tender cannot attempt. SOLAS-certified rescue versions (JT 14 RB, JT 18 RB, JT 19 RB) sit alongside the standard tender line, so owners running a dual-purpose programme can specify a single platform. We'd put the mid-range JT 21 through JT 28 models alongside the main European jet-tender alternatives: the build quality is consistent, the proprietary waterjet technology is genuinely in-house, and the range breadth covers most mothership garage sizes without compromise.
Where they sit
Castoldi on the register
Beach Landers
Bow-loading shallow-draft tenders that put guests dry on the sand.
Browse beach landers →17 modelsTenders
General-use tenders moving guests between yacht and shore.
Browse tenders →14 modelsRIBs
Rigid inflatables that earn their keep on the working week.
Browse ribs →9 modelsSOLAS
Coded survival craft for commercial yachts above 500 GT.
Browse solas →What we know
Castoldi at a glance
Over 6 decades in the segment.
European build origin gives close access to the Med refit network.
Documented on the register with full spec, pricing where supplied, and brief-side notes from work we have done.
Read
Reference reading on Castoldi's segment
The Complete Guide to Buying a Superyacht Tender
Most tender purchases go wrong in the brief, not the build. This guide walks the buying process end to end, brief first, garage envelope second, propulsion third, yard shortlist fourth, contract fifth, the way we run it for owners.
ReadTender Garage Sizing: Matching Tender to Mothership
The tender garage is the most expensive box on the yacht to get wrong, once built, stretching it means cutting structure. This guide works backwards from the tender envelope through the seven dimensions that actually decide which boat fits.
ReadCustom vs Semi-Custom vs Production Tenders
Production, semi-custom and full-custom are not a quality ladder, they are three different commercial propositions. This guide defines each tier, what they cost, the lead times, and how to pick the right one for the brief before a yard is chosen.
ReadLead Times and Delivery: Planning Your Tender Build
Tender lead times are the single most under-planned variable in superyacht projects. This guide sets out the six phases of delivery, the realistic 2026 timing, 14 to 30 months for a custom build, 6 to 14 weeks for stock, and how to plan it.
Glossary
Castoldi terms worth knowing
Talk to us
Brief us on a Castoldi.
Send the mothership, the programme, and the role you need filled. A response follows within 48 hours.



