The Hanse Yachts 385 Standard 2011 vs Hanse Yachts 575 Standard 2014 comparison sits squarely in the category of decisions where specs alone won't tell the whole story — intended use, storage, and long-term ownership costs all factor in.
Size is the most obvious dividing line here. The Hanse Yachts 575 Standard 2014 measures 56,4 feet overall (2014), giving it roughly 19,0 additional feet of deck space compared to the Hanse Yachts 385 Standard 2011 at 37,4 feet (2011). Weight tells a clearer story for trailering families: the Hanse Yachts 575 Standard 2014 tips the scales at 42 990 lbs — 27 117 lbs less than the Hanse Yachts 385 Standard 2011 at 15 873 lbs. That difference is meaningful if you're working within a half-ton or three-quarter-ton truck's tow rating, especially once you factor in a motor, gear, and fuel.
The power gap is worth calling out. Rated to 150 hp, the Hanse Yachts 575 Standard 2014 has a 123-hp advantage over the Hanse Yachts 385 Standard 2011's 27-hp ceiling — enough to notice on acceleration and at cruising speed, particularly with a full passenger load. Fuel capacity breaks the other way: the Hanse Yachts 575 Standard 2014 carries 137 gallons versus 42 gallons in the Hanse Yachts 385 Standard 2011. On a lake day that's negligible, but for coastal cruising or long reservoir runs the extra range matters.
For family outings this is probably the sharpest distinction between the two. The Hanse Yachts 575 Standard 2014 is rated for 17 passengers, while the Hanse Yachts 385 Standard 2011 caps at 11. If you're regularly pulling extended family or a group of friends onto the water, the extra seats on the Hanse Yachts 575 Standard 2014 could be the deciding factor.
Displacement is where these two sailboats genuinely part ways. The Hanse Yachts 575 Standard 2014 displaces 42 990 lbs — a 27 117-lb difference over the Hanse Yachts 385 Standard 2011 at 15 873 lbs. That gap separates two entirely different categories of sailing: the heavier boat is built for offshore passage-making and load-carrying, while the lighter hull rewards performance sailing and easier handling in lighter air.
Draft is a practical consideration that many buyers underestimate until they're already at the marina. The Hanse Yachts 575 Standard 2014 draws 9,5 ft, compared to 6,5 ft for the Hanse Yachts 385 Standard 2011. That 3,0-foot difference affects which anchorages you can access, which haul-out facilities will take you, and how carefully you need to read the tide tables in shallower cruising grounds.
The Hanse Yachts 385 Standard 2011 uses Sloop rigging. For auxiliary power the Hanse Yachts 575 Standard 2014 carries a 150-hp engine against 27 hp on the Hanse Yachts 385 Standard 2011. Motoring range and ability to punch through a foul current or enter a tight marina under power will favour the more powerful installation.
For extended cruising, water capacity matters: the Hanse Yachts 575 Standard 2014 carries 214 gallons versus 79 gallons on the Hanse Yachts 385 Standard 2011 — a significant advantage on longer passages where watermaker or provisioning stops aren't guaranteed.
Bottom line: The Hanse Yachts 575 Standard 2014 is the offshore and bluewater choice — at 42 990 lbs displacement and 56 ft it has the load capacity, range, and seakeeping for extended passages. The Hanse Yachts 385 Standard 2011 at 15 873 lbs is the more nimble, accessible option — easier to single-hand and better suited to coastal and inland sailing.