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Boat Insurance • Comparison • 2026

Boat Insurance Comparison — Agreed Value vs ACV, Coastal Extras & How to Save

Couple comparing boat insurance quotes on a tablet at a marina

Shopping for boat insurance in 2026? Marine policies can vary dramatically by carrier because boats vary dramatically by hull type, horsepower, navigation territory, storm exposure, and marina/lender requirements. As an independent agency, we compare multiple marine insurers side-by-side so you can see coverage differences clearly—especially the big one: agreed value vs actual cash value (ACV).

This page gives you a practical checklist to compare policies correctly. We’ll mirror your current limits and deductibles (if you have a policy) so your comparison is apples-to-apples, then we’ll suggest upgrades that matter where you actually boat: on-water towing, uninsured boater, pollution and wreck removal, hurricane haul-out, and gear coverage for electronics and fishing equipment.

Boat insurance coverage snapshot

Use this table to compare policy language across carriers. We map it to marina slip requirements, financing clauses, and your navigation territory.

Coverage What it does Typical limits / options What to verify
Hull (Agreed Value vs ACV) Pays to repair/replace your boat after covered losses Agreed value (no depreciation) or ACV (depreciates) Settlement basis for total loss and partial losses
Liability (Protection & Indemnity) Injury and property damage you cause to others $300k–$1M+ (higher for larger vessels) Fuel spill, wreck removal, and legal defense included?
Medical Payments Medical costs for you and passengers $1k–$25k+ Per person vs per accident limits
Uninsured Boater Injuries caused by an uninsured/underinsured boater Often matches liability or uses set sublimits Included or optional; how it coordinates with MedPay
Personal Effects / Fishing Gear Rods, reels, electronics, safety gear $1k–$10k+ (scheduled or unscheduled) Per-item caps and theft-from-dock/vehicle rules
Towing & Assistance On-water towing, jump-starts, fuel delivery $250–unlimited (program dependent) Per-incident vs annual cap; distance limits
Named Storm / Hurricane Haul-Out Reimburses some cost to haul/secure ahead of a named storm Often a % of cost up to a cap Trigger definition, receipts, and safe harbor rules
Dinghy/Tender & Trailer Extends protection to tenders and your trailer Named values or sublimits Where coverage applies (road vs water)

Agreed value vs ACV: the decision that changes claim outcomes

Agreed value means you and the carrier agree up front on what your boat is worth. If the boat is a total loss, the payout is that agreed amount, without depreciation. Actual cash value (ACV) generally pays market value at the time of loss and typically applies depreciation—especially on parts and equipment.:contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}

In plain terms: agreed value is often preferred for newer boats, boats with upgrades, or situations where depreciation would feel like a penalty after a major loss. ACV can reduce premium, but it increases the chance you’ll argue value after a claim. We price both options so you can see the premium difference and decide with clear numbers.

Agreed value tends to fit when

  • Your boat is newer or has meaningful upgrades (electronics, repower, refit)
  • You want predictable total-loss settlement
  • You keep the boat in coastal/storm exposure zones

ACV tends to fit when

  • Your boat is older and you accept depreciation in exchange for a lower premium
  • You mainly want liability + basic hull protection
  • You can self-fund larger gaps after a total-loss valuation

Boat types & what underwriters look for

Different boats create different risk patterns. These are the factors that usually move eligibility and price.

Boat type What matters Notes
Bass / Runabout Horsepower, speed, operator age/experience Safety course and kill-switch use can improve pricing
Pontoon / Deck Passenger capacity, storage location Guest-heavy use: confirm higher liability limits
Sailboat / Catamaran Rig type, cruising plans, coastal vs offshore Navigation territory endorsements are crucial
Personal Watercraft (PWC) Rider age, unit count, performance mods Multi-PWC and boater safety discounts are common
Yacht (30’+) Survey, mooring, crew, storm plan Higher liability; consider umbrella coordination

Coastal & storm-readiness tips (the “fine print” that matters)

Coastal boating adds contract language that inland boaters rarely think about: navigation territory, named-storm deductibles, haul-out obligations, and proof requirements for marinas. Many policies also include (or offer) named storm haul-out reimbursement—helping cover the cost to haul/secure a boat when a named storm is approaching.:contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}

Navigation territory

Policies can restrict operation to inland lakes, coastal waters, ICW, or offshore. If your territory changes (seasonal trips, Bahamas, coastal cruising), endorsements must match the plan—otherwise you can create a coverage problem at the worst time.

Named storms and deductibles

Some policies apply separate storm deductibles and require reasonable storm-prep actions. We review these rules before hurricane season so you know what is expected.

Wreck removal and pollution

Marinas increasingly expect policies to include fuel-spill and wreck-removal protection. We confirm the wording and limits so certificates satisfy slip agreements.

Proof for marinas and lenders

Additional insured/interest and minimum liability requirements are common. We issue certificates quickly so you don’t lose a slip or delay a closing.

How to save (without cutting critical coverage)

Start with these savings levers before downgrading settlement type or liability limits.

Discount / strategy How it works What to confirm
Boater safety course Approved course can reduce premium Accepted course list + certificate upload rules
Multi-policy / umbrella Bundle boat with home/auto or add umbrella Umbrella minimum underlying limits (boat + home + auto)
Storage & security Indoor storage, alarms, tracking devices Eligible devices and proof requirements
Higher deductibles (smartly) Lower premium by raising deductibles Named storm deductibles may be separate—model both
Lay-up endorsement Discount for off-season storage Operating during lay-up can restrict coverage—know dates

Dock & waterside flood companion protection

Boat policies typically don’t replace flood insurance for your home, dock, boat-house, or waterside structure. If you keep gear on a lift, in a dock box, or in a coastal storage area, consider a separate flood policy for the property side.

Related topics

FAQs

Is agreed value worth the extra premium?

Often, yes—especially for newer boats or meaningful upgrades. Agreed value can reduce depreciation disputes at total loss. We price agreed value and ACV so you can see the difference.:contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}

Do I need boat insurance if I only use inland lakes?

Many marinas still require liability and proof of coverage (and sometimes pollution/wreck removal language). Inland use may be cheaper, but marina requirements still apply.

Will my homeowner’s policy cover the boat?

Home policies often provide limited coverage for small boats and usually don’t provide proper on-water liability. A dedicated boat policy lets you set hull value and maritime liability.

How does named storm haul-out coverage work?

Many marine policies include or offer reimbursement to haul or secure your boat when a named storm is approaching, often subject to a cap and rules. We verify triggers and documentation requirements.:contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}

Can I add my lender or marina as additional interest/insured?

Yes. We can issue certificates and endorsements that meet slip or loan terms—often the same day.

Coverage, discounts, and availability vary by insurer, state, vessel, and navigation territory. This page is general information and does not modify policy terms or bind coverage. Trademarks belong to their owners and are used for identification only. Blake Insurance Group: Licensed insurance producer (NPN 16944666).

Blake Insurance Group
Call: (888) 387-3687 Email: info@blakeinsurancegroup.com Mon–Fri 9:00–5:00
Blake Nwosu, Owner and Principal Agent
Blake Nwosu Owner & Principal Agent

Expert in personal and commercial insurance, including auto, home, business, health, and life insurance.

License: 16117464

Bio: blakeinsurancegroup.com/blake-nwosu/

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