Boat insurance premiums have risen significantly in coastal markets over the past three years. Insurers have factored in higher repair costs, increased hurricane activity, and rising boat theft rates into their pricing. But there are real, actionable steps you can take to reduce what you pay for marine insurance without gutting your coverage.
1. Take a Boating Safety Course
Most marine insurers offer discounts of 5–15% for completing an approved boating safety course. US Power Squadron, the Coast Guard Auxiliary, and online providers like BoatUS and Boater Exam all offer NASBLA-approved courses. This is the single easiest discount to earn — the course typically takes one day or a few hours online, and the premium savings can exceed the course cost within the first year.
2. Increase Your Deductible
Raising your deductible from $500 to $1,000 typically reduces your premium by 15–25%. Raising it to $2,500 can cut your premium by 30–40%. This strategy works best if you have adequate emergency savings to cover the higher deductible in the event of a claim. Don’t take a $2,500 deductible if a $2,500 expense would create financial hardship.
3. Bundle Your Policies
If you insure your home and car with the same carrier, adding a boat policy often qualifies you for a multi-policy discount of 5–10%. Progressive, Nationwide, and State Farm all offer boating coverage that can be bundled with existing home and auto policies. Check whether bundling produces better savings than a standalone marine specialist like BoatUS or GEICO Marine.
4. Pay Annually Instead of Monthly
Most insurers charge an installment fee (typically 3–5% annually) for monthly payment plans. Paying your annual premium in a single payment eliminates this cost. For a $1,200/year policy, monthly payments might cost $1,250–$1,260 total — $50–$60 in unnecessary fees.
5. Install Safety Equipment
Documented safety equipment reduces perceived risk for insurers. A GPS/tracking system reduces theft risk and can earn a 5–10% discount. USCG-approved fire suppression systems in the engine compartment, EPIRBs (emergency position-indicating radio beacons), and documented bilge pumps all demonstrate responsible ownership. Ask your insurer specifically what safety equipment discounts they offer.
| Discount Strategy | Typical Savings | Effort Required |
|---|---|---|
| Complete boating safety course | 5–15% | Low — 1 day or online |
| Increase deductible ($500 → $1,000) | 15–25% | None |
| Multi-policy bundle | 5–10% | Low |
| Pay annually | 3–5% | None |
| GPS/anti-theft tracking | 5–10% | Moderate — install device |
| Experienced captain discount | 5–10% | Low — document experience |
| Store in secured marina | 5% | None if already doing it |
6. Compare Quotes Every Year
The boat insurance market is competitive and pricing varies significantly between carriers for identical coverage. Set a reminder to get 3–4 competing quotes every year at renewal time. BoatUS, Progressive, GEICO Marine, Nationwide, and Markel are all worth comparing. The effort of an annual comparison takes 30–45 minutes and can produce $200–$500 in annual savings.
Lower premiums also start with choosing the right insurer in the first place — our annual roundup of the best boat insurance companies compares rates, coverage tiers, and claims satisfaction scores so you can shop with confidence before renewal. If you’re also looking to reduce the overall cost of boat ownership, our boat loan calculator can help you model the tradeoffs between a larger down payment (which reduces premium-eligible hull value) and a lower monthly loan payment.