We bought a 2006 Bav 30 cruiser 3 years ago as a first boat. No regrets whatsoever. Only unexpected problem was the stainless steel exhaust silencer had corroded to give a few small pin-holes, so if there's a slight smell of exhaust in the aft cabin or brown stains in the centre of the bilge aft of the saildrive then you'll need to replace, but it's an easy job to slot in a Vetus (plastic) waterlock in its place.
Our boat is the relatively rare tandem keel version (4'8" draft) which is supposed to have the same performance as the long-keel version but to be honest I can't really tell the difference.
The Bav30 doesn't have a traveller so if you enjoy fine tweaking the mainsail trim then this might be a downside, but as others have mentioned the sails aren't the best to begin with so maybe not as big an issue as you might expect.
Our boat was very highly specified by the previous owner, with things I wouldn't have really valued but now I have them I couldn't do without:
- Cockpit tent (really handy for sitting "inside" when moored and adds quite a few weeks onto the length of the sailing season)
- Mikuni air heating (ditto adding weeks onto the sailing season)
- Chartplotter at helm
- Autopilot
- Solar panel which means you can be genuinely "off-grid" without needing to run the engine to top-up the domestic battery.
If you find a boat with these fitted its definitely worth paying a bit extra.
The other options we looked at seriously were Moody 31s, but they were quite a bit older for the same money. We had also sailed a Dufour 325 on flotilla holidays but can't say the Bavaria 30 is any way deficient in comparison. So although this was a starter boat, we're miles away from wanting to upgrade to something bigger/more serious, it really is a great boat.