I am hoping that one of you experts can help me. I was boarded by the Coast Guard for a standard safety check a few weeks ago while underway on the Chesapeake Bay. Everything checked out...no problems. They were getting ready to leave and one of the Coast Guardsman said that he was surprised that the boat was not Documented. I told him that there is no lienholder (who would typically require that) and I registered it with the State of Maryland. He said that any boat (commercial or pleasure) must be documented if it is over 5 tons. He then showed me in his rule book, where it stated exactly that. I have read some conflicting and unclear federal guidelines in an effort to clarify. Does anyone here know if this is true or not? Thanks. BTW...they did not cite me for any violation of the rule...if you were wondering
No, it is not true. It may be documented it it's over 5 tons. No size must be. Bet he doesn't know how tons are arrived at either as it isn't weight but it's volume based. You're perfectly ok. He's perfectly confused or you misunderstood.
I was boarded for a safety check a couple weeks ago also off of the Choptank. Mine is registered also, no mention of documentation.
BS. Doc is optional and there is a minimum displacement to qualify but there is no rule that says a boat must be.
The only requirement for Fed Docs is if you have a lienholder (i.e. bank). It may have been desirable at some point in time to have boat documented but no longer. State registration is still required, unless you're under a foreign flag.
Us customs doesn't care whether you re documented or not when coming back... They ll take a state reg or doc nr. No difference. Thousands of undocumented boats go back an forth to the Bahamas. No issues, no need to warm them ahead of time either. Not sure what this has to do with the question