
Florida Boating Regulations
Did You Know?
Florida law requires anyone 21 years old or younger to take an
approved boating safety course and earn a boating safety ID care
to operate a boat with 10 horsepower or more. Boaters 21 and
under must carry the ID card and a photo ID while operating a
powerboat or personal watercraft.
Florida Online Boating
Safety Course and Exam
This online boating safety course is approved by
the Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission.
Successfully completing this course will allow you to obtain the
official
Florida Boating Safety Education ID Card.

Click here to start the exam
The boating safety course and exam
are free - you only pay when you pass!
Books on Florida Boating Regulations
VESSEL REGISTRATION
All vessels operating with mechanical propulsion devices
(such as gas or electric outboards) are required to be registered.
Vessels must be registered and numbered within thirty
(30) days of purchase.
Registration numbers must be displayed on the forward
half of the vessel on both sides above the waterline. The numbers must
be bold block letters at least 3†high in a color contrasting to the
hull.
The vessel registration decal must be renewed annually
and is to be displayed within six (6) inches of, either before or after,
the registration numbers on the port (left) side.
Documented vessels without a state registration in full
force and effect, must also obtain a Florida registration and display
the validation decal on the port side of the vessel when using Florida
waters.
BOATING ACCIDENTS
The operator of a vessel involved in a boating accident where
there is personal injury beyond immediate first-aid, death,
disappearance of any person under circumstances which indicate
death or injury, or if there is damage to the vessel(s) and/or
personal property of at least $2,000.00, must, by the quickest
means possible, give notice to one of the following: the Florida
Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, the sheriff of the
county in which the accident occurred, or the police chief of
the municipality in which the accident occurred, if applicable.
It is unlawful for any person operating a vessel
involved in a boating accident to leave the scene without giving all
possible aid to the involved persons and without reporting the accident
to the proper authorities.
RECKLESS AND
CARELESS OPERATION
Anyone who operates a vessel with willful disregard for the
safety of persons or property will be cited for reckless
operation (a first-degree misdemeanor).
All operators are responsible for operating their
vessel in a reasonable and prudent manner with regard for other vessel
traffic, posted restrictions, the presence of a divers-down flag, and
other circumstances so as not to endanger people or property. Failure to
do so is considered careless operation (a non-criminal infraction).
A violation of the Federal Navigation Rules is also a
violation of Florida law.
MANDATORY VIOLATOR EDUCATION
Florida law requires that anyone convicted of a
criminal boating violation, a non-criminal boating infraction
which resulted in a boating accident, or two non-criminal
boating safety infractions within a 12-month period, must enroll
in,
attend, and successfully complete a NASBLA/state approved
classroom boater education course. Correspondence or on-line
course applications
do not meet these requirements.
VESSEL SPEED
RESTRICTIONS
Any vessel operating in a speed zone posted as “Idle
Speed - No Wake†must operate at the minimum speed that will maintain
steerageway.
Any vessel operating in a speed zone posted as “Slow
Down - Minimum Wake†must operate fully off plane and completely
settled in water. The vessel’s wake must not be excessive nor create a
hazard to other vessels.
BOATING UNDER THE INFLUENCE
It is a violation of
Florida law to operate a vessel while impaired by alcohol or other
drugs. A vessel operator suspected of boating under the influence must
submit to sobriety tests and a physical or chemical test to determine
blood or breath alcohol content.
In Florida, a vessel operator is presumed to be under the influence
if their blood or breath alcohol level is at or above .08.
Any person under 21 years of age who is found to have a breath
alcohol level of .02 or higher and operates or is in actual physical
control of a vessel is in violation of Florida law.
WATER SKI REGULATIONS
The operator of a vessel towing someone on skis or another
aquaplaning device must either have an observer, in addition to the
operator, on board who is attendant to the actions of the skier or have
and use a wide-angle rear view mirror.
No one may ski or aquaplane between the hours of ½ hour past sunset
to a ½ hour before sunrise.
No one may water ski or use another aquaplaning device unless they
are wearing a U.S.C.G. approved non-inflatable Type I, II, III, or V
personal flotation device (PFD).
Inflatable personal flotation devices are prohibited.
No one may ski or use another aquaplaning device while impaired by
alcohol or other drugs.
The operator of a vessel towing a skier may not pull the skier close
enough to a fixed object or another vessel that there is risk of
collision.
PERSONAL WATERCRAFT REGULATIONS
Each person operating, riding on, or being towed behind a personal
watercraft must wear an approved non-inflatable Type I, II, III, or V
personal flotation device. Inflatable personal flotation devices are
prohibited.
See all the Florida PWC Safety Rules and Regulations
here.
MOORING TO MARKER OR BUOYS
Except in the event of an emergency, it is unlawful to moor or fasten
to any lawfully placed navigation aid or regulatory maker.
BOATER SAFETY EDUCATION
REQUIREMENTS
Anyone 21 years of age and under who operates a vessel powered by 10
horsepower or more must pass an approved boater safety course and have
in his/her possession photographic identification and a boater safety
identification card approved by the Florida Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Commission. A person is exempt from this requirement if
there is a person on board who is not affected by this law or is at
least 18 years of age and holds a boater education I.D. card. This
person must be attendant to and take responsibility for the safe
operation of the vessel.
Take the
online Boater Safety Exam now!
Anyone who is convicted of a criminal boating violation, any boating
infraction resulting in a reportable boating accident, or two
non-criminal boating safety violations within a 12-month period must
attend and successfully complete an approved boating safety course
and file proof with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission. The violator’s privilege to operate a vessel in the state
will be suspended until proof of course completion is filed.
DIVERS-DOWN FLAG
The
size of divers-down flags displayed on vessels must be at least 20
inches by 24 inches, and a stiffener is required to keep the flag
unfurled. Dive flags carried on floats may still be 12 inches by 12
inches. Also, divers-down flags on vessels must be displayed above the
vessel’s highest point so that the flag's visibility is not obstructed
in any direction.
Divers must make reasonable efforts to stay within 300 feet of a
divers-down flag on open waters (all waterways other than rivers,
inlets, or navigation channels) and within 100 feet of a flag within
rivers, inlets, or navigation channels.
Vessel operators must make a reasonable effort to maintain a distance
of at least 300 feet from divers-down flags on open waters and at least
100 feet from flags on rivers, inlets, or navigation channels. Vessels
approaching divers-down flags closer than 300 feet in open water and 100
feet in rivers, inlets, and navigation channels must slow to idle speed.
INTERFERENCE WITH NAVIGATION
Except in the event of an emergency, it is unlawful for any person to
anchor or operate a vessel in a manner that will unreasonably interfere
with the navigation of other vessels.
EQUIPMENT AND LIGHTING
REQUIREMENTS
The owner and/or operator
of a vessel is responsible to carry, store, maintain, and use the safety
equipment required by the U.S.C.G. safety equipment requirements.
To find out what lights are required for your boat,
click here.
A child under the age of six (6) must wear a U.S.C.G. approved Type
I, II, or III personal flotation device while onboard a vessel under 26
feet in length while the vessel is underway. “Underway†is defined
as anytime except when the vessel is anchored, moored, made fast to the
shore, or aground.
The use of sirens or flashing, occulting, or revolving lights is
prohibited except where expressly allowed by law.
MAXIMUM LOADING AND HORSEPOWER
No person may operate a monohull boat of less than 20 feet in length
while exceeding the maximum weight, persons, or horsepower capacity as
displayed on the manufacturer’s capacity plate.
LIVERIES (BOAT/PWC RENTAL
FACILITIES)
The facility is prohibited from renting a vessel that does not have
proper safety equipment, exceeds the recommended horsepower or load
capacity, or is not seaworthy.
The facility must provide pre-rental or pre-ride instruction on the
safe operation of the vessel with a motor of 10 horsepower or more. This
instruction must include, at a minimum, operational characteristics of
the vessel, safe operation and right-of-way, operator responsibilities,
and local waterway characteristics. The person delivering this
information must have completed a NASBLA/state-approved boater safety
course.
All renters required by law to have a
boater education ID card must have the card or its equivalent before
the facility may rent to them.
The livery must display boating safety information in a place visible
to the renting public in accordance with FWC guidelines.
PWC liveries must provide on-the-water demonstration and a check ride
to evaluate the proficiency of renters.
PWC liveries may not rent to anyone under the age of 18.
PWC liveries must display safety information on the proper operation
of a PWC. The information must include: propulsion, steering and
stopping characteristics of jet pump vessels, the location and content
of warning labels, how to re-board a PWC, the applicability of the
Navigation Rules to PWC operation, problems with seeing and being seen
by other boaters, reckless operation, and noise, nuisance, and
environmental concerns.
MARINE SANITATION DEVICES
Vessels operating in Florida waters must comply with the U.S.C.G.
requirements relating to marine sanitation devices, if applicable.
MUFFLING DEVICES
All vessels must be equipped with an effective muffling device.
The use of cutouts is prohibited, except for vessels competing in a
regatta or official boat race and such vessels while on trial runs.
LAW ENFORCEMENT AUTHORITY
Law enforcement officers of the Florida Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Commission, Sheriff’s deputies of the various counties,
and any other authorized enforcement officer, shall have the authority
to order the removal of vessels deemed to be an interference or hazard
to public safety, enforce all boating safety laws, or cause any
inspection to be made of all vessels in accordance to state law.
A law enforcement officer may stop any vessel for the purpose of
checking for compliance with boating safety equipment requirements.
MANATEE AWARENESS
Manatees are protected by state and federal law.
It is illegal to harass, hunt, capture, or kill any marine mammal,
including manatees. Anything that disrupts a manatee’s normal behavior
is a violation of law, punishable under federal law up to a $50,000
fine, one-year imprisonment, or both.
Boaters must observe all manatee protection zone requirements.
Learn more about Florida manatees.
SEA GRASS AWARENESS
Sea grasses are the
principal food for endangered marine herbivores such as manatees and
green sea turtles, act as natural filters to help purify the water, and
provide a suitable environment for a wide variety of marine life.
Boaters should make all available attempts to avoid running through
sea grass beds.
Navigation charts identify sea grass beds as light green or marked as
“grs†on the chart.
Boaters should make all possible attempts to stay within channels
when unfamiliar with a waterway. Avoid taking shortcuts through sea
grass beds to avoid causing propeller scars.
It is a violation of Florida law to damage sea grass beds in some
areas within state waters. Learn more about sea grass in Florida.
Note: This information is accurate
as of January
2007
and is subject to change in May of each year. Please call the Florida Fish
and Wildlife Conservation Commission’s Boating Safety Section at (850)
488-5600 for annual updates to this information or questions regarding
course requirements.