On 27 June 1875, a 24-year-old boatbuilder named Friedrich Lürssen opened a modest workshop in the German riverside village of Aumund. He’d just finished his training and had hoped to join his father’s yard. But in a classic example of practical family wisdom, his father Lüder declined the proposal. “One yard can’t feed two families,” he told his son. So Friedrich struck out on his own—and in doing so, began a journey that would ultimately redefine shipbuilding.
Now, 150 years later, Lürssen is a name synonymous with engineering excellence, custom yachtbuilding, and naval innovation. Still family-owned, still based in northern Germany, and still upholding Friedrich’s founding principle—to lead in quality and performance—Lürssen remains at the forefront of the global superyacht and defence shipbuilding industries.
The yard’s journey from oars to opulence is nothing short of extraordinary. Initially specialising in racing rowboats for Bremen’s club oarsmen, Friedrich quickly gained a reputation for lightweight construction and immaculate workmanship. His boats were winning regattas and attracting attention across Germany, but it was his open-mindedness that truly set him apart.
In 1886, when engineer Gottlieb Daimler needed a boat to test a new petrol engine, he turned to Friedrich. The result was REMS, widely credited as the world’s first motorboat. It was an odd-looking thing by today’s standards—6 metres long, 60 kilograms of engine clattering away at 700 rpm, producing a mighty 1.5 horsepower. Locals were sceptical. Some reportedly shouted that “the devil himself must be aboard” when they first saw it moving without sails or oars. But Lürssen had changed boating forever.
The yard didn’t slow down. By the early 1900s, Friedrich’s son Otto had joined the firm, bringing formal engineering training and a hunger for speed. In 1905, the family launched Donnerwetter, a sleek racing craft that hit 35 knots—almost unheard of at the time. Then came the Lürssen-Daimler, a 102-horsepower speedboat that swept the racing scene in Monaco, winning the Champion of the Sea and Grand Prix des Nations in 1911.
When Otto died suddenly in 1932, it was his wife Frieda—daughter of a ship’s captain—who took the helm. Described as strong-willed and technically astute, Frieda ran the yard through uncertain times and later handed control to her sons, Gert and Fritz-Otto. One of their early post-war projects was the Pegasus II, a 55-metre yacht for a London shipowner, marking the yard’s steady transition into larger, more luxurious builds.
By the 1970s, design legend Jon Bannenberg had arrived with bold new ideas. His Carinthia V, launched by Lürssen in 1971, broke with tradition—she had clean, linear styling that prefigured the modern superyacht aesthetic. The yacht caused such a stir that a rival reportedly exclaimed, “She’s too modern!” Bannenberg reportedly shot back: “No—your eyes are too old.”
That willingness to think differently runs through everything Lürssen does. In the 1990s, the company established a dedicated yacht division under fourth-generation leaders Friedrich and Peter Lürssen. This gave rise to a new era of engineering-led luxury, where no concept was too ambitious.
One of those ambitions was Limitless, the 97-metre hybrid yacht delivered in 1997—possibly the first of its kind to integrate an energy-efficient propulsion system. Others followed. Azzam, the world’s longest yacht at 180.61 metres, launched in 2013 with a top speed of over 30 knots. Dilbar, delivered in 2016, still holds the record for largest yacht by gross tonnage at over 15,900 GT.
But perhaps the quirkiest example of Lürssen’s culture of craft is found in the way its vessels are treated before delivery. In the early 2000s, when a client requested a yacht with an extremely low noise profile, Lürssen engineers were according to shipyard lore seen taping eggshells to the engine room walls during testing to check for vibration. If the shells cracked, the mounting wasn’t quiet enough. You won’t find that in the spec sheet—but it speaks volumes about the yard’s pursuit of perfection.
Today, the company employs about 2,000 people across three German shipyards, with an innovation hub in Croatia and a presence in the US. The recent acquisition of the Nobiskrug shipyard adds capacity for more refits and new builds, including the upcoming Cosmos, a 114.2-metre yacht powered by methanol fuel cells—capable of zero-emission slow cruising and silent anchoring for 15 days.
Through the newly launched Lürssen Foundation, the company is investing in the next generation of maritime engineers and climate innovators, with scholarships aimed at supporting clean energy research.
And while Lürssen has certainly built some of the world’s largest yachts—29 of the world’s Top 100, in fact—Peter Lürssen is clear: “We don’t set out to build the biggest yachts. We set out to build the best yacht for each client.”

From the early roar of REMS on the River Neckar to the quiet hum of fuel cells aboard Cosmos, Lürssen’s journey has been powered by a unique combination of family commitment, engineering integrity, and fearless creativity.
As Friedrich Lürssen once said, “Leading in quality and performance—that should be my company’s reputation.” A century and a half later, that reputation not only endures—it thrives.