Boat Slipping - liability insurance

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Karsten
Karsten
NSW
331 posts
NSW, 331 posts
8 Dec 2011 3:28pm

A sailing friend wants to slip his recently acquired 28ft yacht. He does not have (or want) comprehensive insurance for the vessel, which is an older timber vessel in reasonable condition.

However, the yard where he plans to slip wants him to have $10m public liability insurance for the vessel (suppose in case it injures someone due to owner's actions).
I think some marinas also require the same liability insurance for berth hire or even short visits.

Question: Can this guy buy Public Liability insurance for this boat devoid of any other insurance, just to get it slipped?

If anyone has bought such stand-alone liability insurance, would you care to indicate who sells such and the range of premium price involved ?


saltiest1
saltiest1
NSW
2575 posts
NSW, 2575 posts
9 Dec 2011 12:09am
r m insurance (r m group) looked after me very well. might be worth giving them a call.
MichaelR
MichaelR
NSW
862 posts
NSW, 862 posts
9 Dec 2011 12:56pm
Karsten, that's interesting.... from what I understand (and I could be wrong) as soon as the slipway operator gets the boat ready to slip, any public liability is under their coverage.

I slip my boat each year at Careel, they've never asked me for anything.

Unless he's leaving it on a hard stand where members of the public can wander around, but one would expect the yard to have that covered too....

Michael

frant
frant
VIC
1230 posts
VIC, 1230 posts
9 Dec 2011 1:17pm
MichaelR said...

Karsten, that's interesting.... from what I understand (and I could be wrong) as soon as the slipway operator gets the boat ready to slip, any public liability is under their coverage.

I slip my boat each year at Careel, they've never asked me for anything.

Unless he's leaving it on a hard stand where members of the public can wander around, but one would expect the yard to have that covered too....

Michael



I wouldn't think that the yard would agree to cover your public liability at all. Expensive enough to cover their own. Your boat= Your liability if it causes damage or injury to others. Same with berthing at marinas and I would prefer that other people have their boats covered for third party liability at all times. ie you crash into me you should have the ability to pay, otherwise you can't afford a boat.
Karsten
Karsten
NSW
331 posts
NSW, 331 posts
9 Dec 2011 5:05pm
Michael, I would have thought the same as you, but apparently as Frant says you need public liability insurance even to berth at the majority of marinas in Australia.

I have normal cover for my own boat, and public liability is always included as part of that; so I have not had any problems.

But I can understand some don't want full cover insurance, only public liability (equiv to Third Party insurance with cars). And often full cover drops off if you sail far enough offshore so in some cruising circumstances it is not attractive.

His problem is just to slip the boat over a weekend and do his own anti-fouling he needs public liability and his own insurers (and mine) would not sell liability insurance as a separate cover. I guess he'd have the same problem if he wanted to rent a marina berth.

It may be that boat liability cover is easy to buy overseas but for some reason not in the Australian market.
Charriot
Charriot
QLD
880 posts
QLD, 880 posts
9 Dec 2011 7:35pm
It's a real problem, last year I try a few places in Spencer Gulf SA and all the same no proof of cover no way to slip. Took me 6 month to find the place, but I use different method
- don't ask, just book a slip, "Ask yourself - do you fell lucky? "
I was that time. good luck
Ramona
Ramona
NSW
7757 posts
NSW, 7757 posts
10 Dec 2011 6:20pm
Try an online 3rd party policy with this crowd.

www.sydneyboating.com.au/page/boat_insurance.html
saltiest1
saltiest1
NSW
2575 posts
NSW, 2575 posts
11 Dec 2011 10:35am
could he careen it some place?
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