Rules and requirements for passenger boats in Ireland
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Last updated on
Published on
Last updated on
All vessels carrying up to 12 passengers for reward (which means they pay a fee to travel on the boat) or where persons are being carried onboard to / from a place of work, are required to hold a valid passenger boat licence.
Before a passenger boat licence can be issued the boat must be surveyed by a Department of Transport marine surveyor who must certify that the vessel complies with the law. The fee for an initial passenger boat licence is €144.
This requirement was set out in Merchant Shipping Passenger Boat Regulations, as amended. The technical requirements for the different types of licence (P1 – P6) are set out in the Merchant Shipping Passenger Boat Regulations, as amended.
Notes:
The following class of vessel is exempt:
Vessels, being open vessels of no less than 4 metres in length, carrying no more than 3 passengers on board for the purpose of angling and engaged on domestic voyages in smooth waters on canals, rivers, lakes and loughs.
Owners are required to make a declaration stating that they carry the required safety equipment. Declaration forms available from the Marine Survey Office (MSO).
Notes:
Masters of passenger boats (vessels licensed to carry not more than 12 passengers) must undergo appropriate training and testing to operate a passenger boat. The Regulations also require that all Masters of passenger boats hold a valid certificate and a commercial endorsement from 1 April 2006.
Skippers can visit Bord Íascaigh Mhara or the Irish Sailing Association for more information.
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