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Frozen Yachts & Sanctions: Where Does the European Union Really Stand in Early 2026? Focus on High-Value Private Assets under Sanctions
Since December 2025, the European Union has confirmed the continuation of the freeze on Russian assets, without adopting a clear doctrine regarding the management of immobilised high-value assets. Among these, private yachts now represent a blind spot within the sanctions regime. This article provides a rigorous assessment of the EU’s position in early 2026, examines the specific challenges raised by frozen yachts, and outlines a reasonable path forward.

E. VOTAT
Jan 204 min read


Frozen Yachts & Sanctions: The 2025 Assessment
Between 2024 and 2025, frozen yachts moved out of the legal blind spot.
Court decisions, maintenance practices, monitored movements, captain liability and the rise of compliance show that asset freezing is no longer a merely conservative measure, but an active, structured and costly regime.
Through key European and international cases, this article sets out the practical lessons for yachting professionals.

E. VOTAT
Jan 196 min read


Frozen Yachts & Sanctions – Finland: The Divina Barbara Decision and the End of Nominee Immunity
A 2025 Finnish court decision marks a decisive shift in the enforcement of EU sanctions against superyachts. By refusing to return Divina Barbara despite the intervention of a nominee owner, the court confirmed that artificially complex offshore structures no longer shield frozen assets. This ruling reflects an emerging European doctrine prioritising effective control and benefit over formal ownership.

E. VOTAT
Nov 18, 20254 min read


Frozen Yachts Sanctions : After Phi, Luminosity?
After the Phi ruling, Luminosity raises the same question Europe can no longer avoid.
Frozen under sanctions but not seized, unmanaged and deteriorating, the 107-metre megayacht illustrates how immobilisation without structure destroys value and credibility.

E. VOTAT
Jul 30, 20254 min read


Frozen Yacht Sanctions UK: The Phi Case in London - How the world’s most elegant 59-m yacht became a floating paradox moored in London’s fog
Built to glide across the world’s most exclusive seas, Phi now lies frozen in the heart of London.
Seized under the UK sanctions regime in March 2022, this 59-metre superyacht has become a symbol of legal ambiguity, asset degradation and geopolitical paralysis.

E. VOTAT
Jul 20, 20257 min read


Frozen Yachts & Maritime Justice: Once meant to fund Ukraine’s war effort. Now bleeding €20M a year
Frozen under international sanctions, the superyacht Royal Romance has become a €20 million-a-year liability. Once intended to support Ukraine’s war effort, it now exposes Europe’s legal deadlocks, institutional paralysis and the shortcomings of maritime justice in dealing with frozen assets.

E. VOTAT
May 21, 20255 min read
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