The first Baltic 80 Café Racer is bold, bright and a little rebellious

The first Baltic 80 Café Racer is bold, bright and a little rebellious

The first Baltic 80 Café Racer is bold, bright and a little rebellious

Sailing boat

02/07/2026 - 11:31

True to the Café Racer spirit the first hull of the Baltic 80 Café Racer goes its own way in terms of styling and personality. The boat was not designed to blend in, but to reflect an owner who’s been willing to push the boundaries.

After the success of the Baltic 68 Café Racer fleet, which set new benchmarks for speed, style and ease of handling in the large luxury daysailer segment, the new 80 takes the concept even further. Drawing on owners’ feedback and the experience gained from the 68 fleet, the Baltic Yachts team returned to the drawing board to refine and elevate the concept.

Scaling the original concept to full maxi-yacht proportions while staying true to its defining principles: safety, simplicity and exhilarating sailing performance, the yacht will still measure under 24 metres, allowing owners to enjoy weekend sailing without unnecessary complexity.

The two different rig configurations allow for everything from lazy downwind sailing with family and friends to rail-down racing with a full crew—the choice is yours.

Rebellious interior

The interior of the Baltic 80 Café Racer has been developed with flexibility at its core, allowing each yacht to reflect the way her owner prefers to sail, live and socialise on board.

Hull No.1 explores a fully open, loft-style arrangement, where the galley, dining and lounge areas are connected as one, offering comfort and luxury through generous living space and bold styling. This configuration gives the sense of volume and light, creating a relaxed, informal environment that supports a highly social way of living on board.

Alternative layouts introduce greater definition between spaces. Owners can opt for a semi-enclosed galley, which maintains the connection to the main saloon while providing a degree of separation, or a fully enclosed galley, offering a more traditional arrangement with increased privacy and functional separation between cooking and living areas.

The saloon itself can also be configured to suit different preferences. One option features large lounge armchairs, creating a more individual, considered seating arrangement, while an alternative layout incorporates an extended sofa, offering a softer, more informal setting for relaxing and entertaining.

The first yacht sets out a clear direction, but the concept is intentionally adaptable, allowing each subsequent interior to respond to varied interests and preferences. This approach encourages individuality, offering the freedom to introduce distinctive fabrics and finishes that set the yacht apart, all while maintaining an aesthetic that truly reflects the Café Racer ethos—pared-back, purposeful, and effortlessly distinctive.

The first Baltic 80 Café Racer isn’t trying to define the look—it’s starting the conversation. Interior Designer Mark Tucker from Design Unlimited explains how “It shows just how confident and expressive this concept can be and invites the next owner to take it somewhere completely their own—ultimately, it’s all about making it easier and more enjoyable to just go sailing.”

Design

Developed by Surge Projects, the Café Racer 80 was shaped through advanced CFD analysis coupled with the aero data from the North Sails Virtual Wind Tunnel. An impressive number of twenty-one hull configurations were evaluated using an advanced dynamic VPP where optimum sail trim showed the yacht's full-motion behaviour.

The resulting design features powerful hull lines with exceptionally low resistance in light airs, while delivering form stability and control required as conditions build.

A generous J dimension supports a larger genoa, maximising acceleration and delivering superior performance on reaching courses alongside the jib-top configuration.

With a lightship displacement of just 29 tonnes, the Café Racer 80 has been specifically optimised for coastal racing, where reaching and downwind performance often determines success. The yacht is expected to compete at the upper end of Maxi Class 3, with a projected IRC rating of 1.480.

The first hull underway

Drawing on the experience from Raven, the record-breaking foil assisted 111-footer delivered back in 2023, the hull is being built using a carbon fibre female mould. Meaning exacter measurements, less fairing, more performance – all in the typical Baltic manner of always optimising, trying to improve build techniques and quality. The material choice of prepreg carbon for the hull will further enhance the lightweight. Lamination will commence in August after the Finnish summer holidays and delivery is set for summer 2027.

Performance pedigree

The Café Racers share the same design team as Baltic 108 WinWin, which won the overall title at The Superyacht Cup Palma Richard Mille regatta last week. Delivered in 2014 WinWin has secured the title in both 2016 and 2019 becoming only the second yacht to ever win the event three times.

With her modern, powerful lines typified by the wide transom combined with Baltic Yachts’ lightweight construction, WinWin transitions easily between comfortable cruising and competitive racing.

Celebrating its 30th anniversary, the Superyacht Cup Palma is Europe’s longest-running superyacht regatta, with Palma providing an exceptional setting for high-performance sailing. The event’s return to the newly redeveloped Club de Mar-Mallorca further reinforces the city’s position as the epicenter of the global superyacht community. The marina’s transformation reflects both ambition and long-term investment, mirroring the forward-looking mindset shared by all its partners and strongly supported by Baltic Yachts.

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