We are just back from a 9 day bareboat charter through TMM. Prior to departure we had some issues with the BVI gateway portal until we were informed that it is buggy on Safari and that we should use Chrome as our browser to access it, which solved the problem (but it would have been nice to know in advance). Start early and use the WhatsApp technical support for issues. The Day 0 test at the airport was quick and we had our results in 36 hours. The day 4 test was also quick, but we did not receive our results for 57 hours. Cost us a day of diving and a planned trip to Cooper. Although Malone Bay on VG is listed as anchorage only for quarantine, the mooring field at Leverick extends almost into Malone and several boats on quarantine we moored there. The gentleman collecting mooring fees for Leverick asked if we were quarantined and offered to bring us ice and provisions if we were. Very helpful. Once out of quarantine the usual anchorages restaurants are empty. Only a few tables at dinner and some with limited menus. Anegada Beach Club did not grill the lobsters outside but cooked them on the stove inside. Some of the restaurants have limited hours, so be sure to call ahead and check.we had the Baths to ourselves (hello 1985) and there are blissfully no cruise ships allowed yet (though that may change in June). The issue is the pre-departure test to get back into the US. Given he variable timing to receive results (everyone we met had a story) and the fact that the testing done on the out islands are sent Road Test for processing, the 72 hour window gets pretty tight pretty fast. The airline gate agent at EIS counted carefully and we saw one family turned away as their tests were one day too old. At that int they were looking at another 2-3 days to get tested. Overall, we had a great time and the weather wind and sailing spectacular. The only real negative was an underlying testing anxiety that had us either looking for testing sites or waiting on results 24-7. Have fun but plan your trip carefully.