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Roman Abramovichs Solaris megayacht
Billionaires of the world live in palatial estates, build fortified bunkers, and work in glass-sheathed towers that touch the sky. But not all of them. Some of the most pioneering names in tech, video games, quantum science, engineering, and hospitality think beyond the ordinary and are turning their superyachts into more than just holiday venues. They are quietly turning them into floating headquarters. A growing number of billionaires now prefer the privacy, control, and calm of working at sea. It is like work from home, only reimagined in teak, titanium, and satellite beams.
Gaming billionaire Gabe Newell spends a majority of his time on his superyachts. Pictured is the Tranquility.
While their employees sit in generic glass towers, figures like Sergey Brin, Richard Branson, Gabe Newell, Mike Lazaridis, Roman Abramovich, and Ernesto Bertarelli carve out strategy from sea-surrounded lounges, panoramic offices, and business decks. On a yacht, walls do not have ears, and lobby gossip does not exist. There are no loose-lipped bartenders, no elevator eavesdroppers. Secure communications, armored glass, trained crew, and controlled access make these vessels the ultimate corporate safe rooms disguised as pleasure craft. What happens on a yacht truly stays on a yacht.
There are some of the most striking superyachts that double as floating offices, each fitted with dedicated owner’s spaces, business decks, satellite communications, and helipads that bring the boardroom to them instead of the other way around.
Gabe Newell
Up until recently, Gabe Newell, worth $11 billion, was best known as the cofounder and CEO of Valve Corporation, which gave the world Half-Life, Counter-Strike Strike etc. Now the owner of Oceanco has made boats his business literally with the acquisition of the iconic Dutch shipyard. Newell is known to conduct business on his luxury vessels Leviathan and Tranquility. Aboard his latest 363-foot mammoth Leviathan are several labs, dive centers, and a hospital, turning the vessel into a floating research campus. To de-stress and do what he loves, it is equipped with a 15-station gaming lounge for mid-sea LAN parties. Even before acquiring the $500 million giant, he lived and worked similarly aboard the $250 million Tranquility.
A bedroom onboard the Tranquility
Newell is known to have built his routine around life at sea, working, diving, hitting the gym, then working again. The yacht was never a vacation toy, it was his primary base. Tranquility features a private executive office that forms part of the owner’s suite, giving Newell a quiet, enclosed command center. True to her name, Tranquility is equipped with at-anchor stabilizers and a high-volume hull that reduces motion and vibration, essential when long hours are spent on screens, calls, and code reviews. The vessel also carries a commercial-grade helipad, so executives, partners, and talent can be flown directly to his floating office.
Sergey Brin
Google cofounder Sergey Brin, worth $221 billion, commissioned Dragonfly and ended up with one of the largest private vessels in the United States. The real flex is not the length, a cool 466-feet, but the way the yacht is tailored to his working style. The $450 million mammoth is understood to feature an entire business deck for a founder who never truly logs off.
The deck includes a large office, a gym to reset between calls, and a games room to decompress. A dedicated helicopter hangar allows discreet and rapid arrivals and departures. With a massive volume in the 9,000 GT range, Dragonfly offers expansive lounges and meeting areas that can easily host negotiations and strategy sessions in complete privacy. It is a realistic platform for Brin and his teams to spend extended periods onboard without compromising on connectivity, security, or seriousness.
Mike Lazaridis
Once a pioneer, always a pioneer. Mike Lazaridis, the man worth nearly $2 billion, co-founded Research In Motion and the BlackBerry smartphone. The billionaire is obsessed with research, quantum science, and engineering. For a mind like his, there are no real days off, which makes Artefact, his 262-foot Nobiskrug superyacht, the perfect innovation platform.
The office onboard the Artefact
Artefact yacht features a full panoramic owner’s office on the dedicated owner’s deck, a glass-wrapped workspace that looks more like a control room than a beach house. The roughly $150 million yacht uses hybrid-electric propulsion, advanced batteries, and a carefully engineered layout to deliver extremely low noise and vibration, paired with exceptional stability and comfort. At about 2,999 GT, the yacht has enough volume for dedicated workspaces, meeting rooms, and lab-style areas where complex technical reviews and experiments can unfold far from prying eyes.
Roman Abramovich
Roman Abramovich, worth around $9 billion, has long understood that power needs privacy. His yachts Solaris and Eclipse, together valued at well over $1 billion, are not just symbols of wealth; they are purpose-built for business at the highest level. Both vessels offer expansive salons and lounges that can be configured as boardroom-style meeting spaces.
The salon in Eclipse
Eclipse is famous for its heavy-duty security, reported missile detection systems, bulletproof glass, armor protection, and technology designed to deter intrusive photography. Solaris continues that philosophy, with a fortress-like superstructure and state-of-the-art surveillance.
Two helipads across each superyacht ensure a constant flow of guests and advisors without commercial terminals or hotel lobbies. For a former Chelsea FC owner and global dealmaker, these are not toys; they are fortified offshore boardrooms where sensitive negotiations and crisis calls can play out without interruption or leaks.
Richard Branson
Group founder Richard Branson, with a net worth close to $3 billion, has spent his career proving that serious business can be run in swim shorts. Long before remote work was fashionable, Branson ran meetings from beaches, boats, and his hammock on Necker Island in the British Virgin Islands. For him, islands and yachts are not escapes from work. They are part of the ecosystem.
Branson’s world in the BVI has relied on high-bandwidth satellite and fiber connectivity, along with dedicated offices and open-air pavilions that overlook docks and anchorages. Yachts and catamarans tied into this network become natural extensions of his office. If he can run a multibillion-dollar empire from a hammock, a well-connected floating office is not a stretch. It is simply the Branson doctrine in motion: if work must follow you, it might as well follow you somewhere with turquoise water.
Ernesto Bertarelli
Ernesto Bertarelli’s relationship with the sea started in childhood on family sailing trips and evolved into championship-level racing with Alinghi. The biotech billionaire behind Serono, now worth around $11 billion, was confident on a dinghy when most children were still learning to swim. Today, it feels natural that much of his world orbits around a yacht. His 318-foot Vava II is a study in how a floating family home can double as a serious business hub.
VAVA II yacht interiors
The approximately $190 million yacht can accommodate around 36 guests, offering ample space for conference-style rooms, private lounges for discreet conversations, and relaxed, club-like terraces for softer diplomacy. An Airbus H145 helicopter, worth nearly $9 million, provides seamless transfers between shore and ship. For someone who combines high finance, philanthropy, sailing campaigns, and a global lifestyle, Vava II is less a toy and more a mobile family office that happens to come with a beach club. (Luxury Launches)