Polish boatbuilder Galeon Yachts recently rolled its 2,800th yacht out of its Gdansk waterfront facilities, a milestone that underscores both the scale and staying power of the second-generation, family-run company. Founded in 1982, Galeon has evolved into one of Europe’s most prolific producers of semi-custom cruising yachts, with a lineup now spanning 33 to 80 feet.
The yard’s next move in the US market comes with the arrival of the new Galeon 520 Flybridge, a model that neatly captures the brand’s blend of in-house engineering and Tony Castro–penned exterior design. Like its larger siblings, the 520 Fly is built around Galeon’s long-standing philosophy of adaptable spaces, strong indoor-outdoor flow and owner-focused functionality.
Galeon range includes 26 models across multiple segments, from the outboard-powered 335 GTO to the flagship 800 Fly. While the flybridge yachts remain the most recognizable, the brand also builds hardtops, sport cruisers, skydecks and explorer-style models with both inboard and outboard propulsion. That breadth allows Galeon to target everything from day boating to extended cruising without abandoning a consistent design language.
Much of that visual identity comes from Tony Castro, whose exteriors now define the entire lineup. His clean, modern profiles are paired with interiors developed in-house, giving Galeon tight control over layout experimentation and production execution. The result is a series of yachts that tend to push spatial boundaries.
The new 520 Flybridge takes the popular “beach club” concept further by tying the balconies directly into the main-deck social spaces. With the side platforms lowered and the salon windows slid open, the port-side dinette can extend outward to form an open-air bar, while the starboard lounge stretches onto the balcony to create a wide waterside seating zone. It’s a setup that blurs the line between interior and exterior in a way typically reserved for much larger yachts.
Flexibility continues throughout the layout. An aft-deck sofa rotates to face either the cockpit table or the swim platform, depending on whether the focus is dining or watching activity at the water. Inside, the navigator’s seat flips to join the salon seating when underway duties are done. Forward, a convertible lounge with a high-low table transitions from casual dining space to full sunpad.
Behind the scenes, every Galeon yacht is built entirely in-house across the company’s two Gdansk-area shipyards, which together encompass roughly 540,000 square feet of covered production space. Composite work, metal fabrication and joinery are all handled internally, giving the yard tighter quality control and the ability to accommodate the semi-custom finishes and layout tweaks many owners request.
For US owners, the 520 Flybridge represents not just a new model but a distilled version of what has made Galeon one of Europe’s most influential production yacht brands: adaptable layouts, innovative exterior engineering and a semi-custom approach that prioritizes real-world use.







