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Boat Shipping Cost Calculator — 2026 Boat Transport Rates

Get a realistic 2026 boat transport estimate by length, beam, vessel type, route, and trailer status — then compare up to 3 marine hauler quotes.

Route

Boat Dimensions

ft
ft

Trailer

Sailboats and boats 30 ft+ almost always need hauler-supplied cradle or hydraulic flatbed regardless of trailer ownership.

Fill in the details and click Calculate

Fill in the details and click Calculate

Frequently Asked Questions

Q

How much does it cost to ship a boat in 2026?

A standard 20–30 ft powerboat on its own trailer typically costs $400–$3,500 to ship interstate, working out to roughly $1.50–$3.50 per mile for short hauls and $0.70–$1.80 per mile over 1,000 miles. Oversize loads with beam over 12 ft or height over 13–6" require permits and escort vehicles, pushing cost to $1,500–$15,000 depending on route. Luxury yachts over 40 ft regularly run $10,000–$50,000.

  • Short haul on trailer (<500 mi, under 30 ft): $400–$1,500
  • Long haul on trailer (1,500–3,000 mi, 20–30 ft): $1,200–$3,500
  • Oversize flatbed (beam >12 ft): $1,500–$15,000 with permits
  • Luxury yacht (40–60 ft): $10,000–$50,000 coast-to-coast
  • Provide-your-own-trailer discount: saves $400–$1,200
Boat SizeOn Owner’s TrailerNeeds Flatbed / OversizeTransit Time
Under 20 ft (bass boat, jetski)$400–$1,200n/a2–5 days
20–30 ft powerboat$1,000–$3,500$2,500–$6,5004–8 days
30–40 ft sailboat / cruiser$2,500–$6,000$4,500–$12,0005–10 days
40 ft+ yacht (oversize)n/a$8,000–$50,0007–14 days
Q

When does a boat become an oversize load?

Any boat wider than 8 ft 6 in (102 in) triggers oversize load status in most US states, but the practical threshold for major permit cost increases is 12 ft of beam. Between 8.5 ft and 12 ft you need a single oversize permit ($25–$150 per state) and usually one escort vehicle. Over 12 ft beam or 13 ft 6 in height you need multiple permits, front and rear escorts, and often a certified pilot car with a height pole — adding $1,500–$8,000 to the base rate.

  • Standard width limit: 8 ft 6 in (102 in) — anything wider is oversize
  • Beam 8.5–12 ft: $25–$150 permit per state + 1 escort
  • Beam >12 ft or height >13–6": multiple permits + 2 escorts
  • Superload (beam >16 ft): engineered route survey, $5,000–$15,000 in permits alone
  • Night and weekend travel often prohibited for oversize loads
Beam WidthPermit ClassEscort NeededAdded Cost
Up to 8–6"NoneNoneStandard rate
8–6" to 12–0"Oversize1 escort+$400–$1,500
12–0" to 14–0"Oversize + height2 escorts+$1,500–$5,000
Over 14–0"SuperloadPilot car + survey+$5,000–$15,000
Q

Do I need to supply my own boat trailer?

If your boat is on its own roadworthy trailer with current registration, functional lights, and good tires, you save $400–$1,200 over having the hauler supply transport cradles or a flatbed. Carriers who provide their own trailer charge a daily rental fee plus the risk premium of loading your boat onto unfamiliar bunks. Sailboats always need hauler equipment because factory trailers are rare, and any boat over 30 ft almost always travels on a hydraulic flatbed regardless of trailer ownership.

  • Own trailer with reg + lights + tires: saves $400–$1,200
  • Hauler-supplied trailer: typical $75–$200 per day rental
  • Sailboats: essentially always need hauler equipment
  • Boats 30 ft+: hydraulic flatbed standard even with owner trailer
  • Trailer inspection fail at pickup: $150–$400 emergency prep fee
Q

How long does it take to ship a boat across the country?

Coast-to-coast boat shipping averages 7–14 days door-to-door, roughly half the speed of car transport. Reasons: oversize loads cannot travel at night in many states, carriers batch multiple jobs on a route, and marina drop-offs often require a specific tide window or crane schedule. Short regional hauls (under 500 miles) typically complete in 2–5 days. Add 3–7 days of pickup scheduling, which stretches to 2–4 weeks for oversize jobs needing permit coordination.

  • Short haul (<500 mi): 2–5 days transit
  • Medium haul (500–1,500 mi): 4–8 days transit
  • Coast-to-coast (>2,000 mi): 7–14 days transit
  • Pickup scheduling: 3–7 days standard, 2–4 weeks for oversize
  • Marina drop-offs: add 1–3 days for crane or tide coordination
Q

What is the cheapest way to ship a boat?

Keep the boat under 8 ft 6 in of beam so it avoids oversize permits, use your own registered trailer, ship in the off-season (October–February excluding snowbird routes), and accept a flexible 2–4 week pickup window. These four levers together typically cut 25–45% off a standard quote. Owner-drive-yourself is cheaper still at ~$0.50 per mile in fuel, but only makes sense for short hauls under 600 miles with a tow-capable vehicle.

  • Keep beam ≤8–6": avoids all oversize permit fees
  • Own registered trailer: saves $400–$1,200
  • Off-season (Oct–Feb): saves 15–25%
  • Flexible 2–4 week window: saves $100–$400
  • DIY tow under 600 mi: ~$0.50/mi fuel cost beats any hauler
Q

Is boat shipping insurance included in the quote?

Most marine hauler quotes include $100,000–$300,000 in basic cargo insurance with a $1,000–$2,500 deductible. For boats worth more than $50,000 you should buy supplemental marine transit coverage at 0.5%–1.5% of hull value for the trip — a $150,000 sailboat adds $750–$2,250 to the shipping cost. Always photograph every side of the boat at pickup and drop-off, and keep the carrier’s Bill of Lading; claims without condition photos are routinely denied.

  • Basic cargo: $100k–$300k, deductible $1,000–$2,500
  • Boats >$50k: buy supplemental marine transit insurance
  • Supplemental premium: 0.5–1.5% of hull value per trip
  • Photo documentation at pickup + drop-off is mandatory for claims
  • Electronics and removable gear typically excluded — ship separately

Example Calculations

124 ft powerboat, Miami to Seattle (own trailer)

Inputs

RouteMiami, FL → Seattle, WA
Distance~3,300 miles
Boat length24 ft
Beam8 ft 4 in (standard)
TypePowerboat
TrailerOwner-supplied + registered

Result

Typical quote range$2,400 – $3,800
Transit time7–12 days
Cost per mile$0.73–$1.15

A standard-beam 24 ft powerboat on its own trailer stays under the 8–6" oversize threshold — no permits, no escorts, standard interstate freight rate. Owner trailer saves about $800 versus hauler-supplied equipment.

234 ft sailboat, Newport RI to Annapolis MD (oversize)

Inputs

RouteNewport, RI → Annapolis, MD
Distance~420 miles
Boat length34 ft
Beam11 ft 2 in (oversize)
TypeSailboat (mast down)
TrailerHauler flatbed + cradle

Result

Typical quote range$3,500 – $6,800
Permits (3 states)$225–$450
Escort vehicle$1.50–$3.00 per mile

Short-haul sailboat at 11 ft 2 in beam triggers oversize permits in RI, CT, NY, NJ, DE, MD plus a front escort for the mast-down length. Hauler-supplied cradle adds to cost but sailboats rarely have factory trailers.

348 ft yacht, Fort Lauderdale to San Diego (superload)

Inputs

RouteFort Lauderdale, FL → San Diego, CA
Distance~2,700 miles
Boat length48 ft
Beam14 ft 8 in (superload)
TypeMotor yacht
TrailerHydraulic hauler + 2 escorts

Result

Typical quote range$18,000 – $42,000
Permits + escorts$6,500–$12,000
Pickup scheduling3–4 weeks

At 14–8" beam the yacht lands in superload class: engineered route survey, front and rear escorts the entire 2,700 miles, multi-state permit coordination, and daylight-only travel in six states. Expect a 3–4 week lead time before pickup.

Formulas Used

Boat shipping cost estimate

Cost = (Distance × Rate/mi) + Oversize Premium + Permit & Escort Fees + Trailer Fee − Season Discount

Total boat shipping cost combines per-mile rate (which drops with distance and with owner trailer) plus flat-fee oversize/permit surcharges. Beam is the single biggest multiplier — moving from 8–6" standard to 12–0" oversize can double the quote on a short haul.

Where:

Rate/mi= Under 500 mi: $1.50–$3.50; 500–1,500 mi: $1.00–$2.00; over 1,500 mi: $0.70–$1.50 (on owner trailer)
Oversize Premium= Beam 8–6" to 12–0": +25–40%; 12–0" to 14–0": +60–120%; >14–0": superload +150–400%
Permit & Escort Fees= $25–$150 per state permit + $1.50–$3.00 per mile escort vehicle (oversize only)
Trailer Fee= Owner trailer: $0; hauler-supplied cradle/flatbed: +$400–$1,200 per trip
Season Discount= Off-season (Oct–Feb): −15–25% versus summer peak

Boat Shipping Costs in 2026: What Owners Actually Pay

1

Summary: Real 2026 Boat Shipping Prices

Shipping a boat in 2026 is priced fundamentally differently from shipping a car. Where a sedan rides on a multi-car carrier at $0.30–$0.70 per mile with near-commodity rates, a boat is an oversize or semi-oversize load that travels on a dedicated trailer, often with escorts and state-specific permits. The practical cost band for a standard 20–30 ft powerboat on its own trailer is $400–$3,500 interstate, and any boat with beam over 12 feet jumps into a $1,500–$15,000 range with permits and pilot cars. Luxury yachts over 40 feet routinely bill $10,000–$50,000 coast-to-coast, and superloads with beam over 16 feet require engineered route surveys that add $5,000–$15,000 in permits alone before the per-mile rate applies.

Four levers drive almost every quote: distance, beam width, whether you supply a roadworthy trailer, and season. Beam is the dominant factor because the jump from 8 feet 6 inches (standard legal width) to 12 feet doubles the permit and escort stack in most states. Owner-supplied trailers with current registration, lights, and good tires save $400–$1,200 over hauler equipment. Off-season shipping from October through February trims another 15–25% off peak summer rates. The sections below walk each lever in the order that most changes the final number, so you can read a quote line by line instead of accepting the bottom-line figure blind. For a sanity check on vehicle-side math, the car shipping cost calculator uses a parallel breakdown for auto transport.

Every range below is anchored to published 2026 pricing from uShip, Montway Auto Transport, Intercity Lines, and American Boat Hauling, plus FMCSA regulatory minimums for oversize loads. Nothing in this guide is a guess — if a hauler quote drifts outside these bands by more than 25% in either direction, treat it as a red flag and collect a second and third bid before signing.

2

What a Boat Actually Costs to Ship in 2026

The headline number most haulers quote for a standard 24 ft powerboat on its own trailer going interstate is $1,500–$2,800 for a medium haul of 500–1,500 miles. That assumes beam under 8 ft 6 in, trailer with current registration and functional brake lights, a flexible 2–4 week pickup window, and shipment in the off-season. Move any of those inputs and the number shifts fast: coast-to-coast at 3,000 miles with the same boat lands $2,400–$3,800, and the same boat pushed to a 2-week peak-summer deadline costs another 15–20%.

Boat length is the headline input that everyone asks about, but beam and height are what actually drive the permit math. A 30 ft powerboat with 8 ft 4 in beam ships cheaper than a 22 ft tournament bass boat with 9 ft 6 in beam, because the narrower 30-footer stays inside the standard legal width in all 50 states while the wider 22-footer triggers oversize permits in every single state on the route. The table below converts the real 2026 market data into typical dollar bands for the five size and class buckets that cover ~95% of pleasure-boat shipping jobs.

2026 typical shipping cost for a 1,500 mile interstate trip, by boat class. Source: uShip, Montway, Intercity Lines, American Boat Hauling.
Boat ClassTypical LengthTypical Beam1,500 mi Cost (own trailer)1,500 mi Cost (hauler flatbed)
PWC / jetski8–12 ft4–5 ft$400–$900$700–$1,400
Compact powerboat16–22 ft7–8 ft$900–$1,800$1,300–$2,400
Mid powerboat / pontoon22–30 ft8–9 ft$1,500–$2,800$2,000–$3,800
Large powerboat / small sailboat28–36 ft9–12 ft$2,800–$5,500$3,500–$7,500
Yacht / oversize sailboat36–50 ft12–16 ftn/a$8,000–$28,000

If your beam is between 8–6" and 9–6", ask the hauler whether a permit-free route is available — some states allow up to 10–0" of beam on specific highway corridors, cutting oversize fees to zero.

3

The Oversize Trigger: Why Beam Width Doubles Your Quote

Federal law sets 8 feet 6 inches (102 inches) as the standard legal width for highway travel. Any load wider than that is an oversize load, and every state it passes through requires its own permit at $25–$150 each. On a coast-to-coast trip that touches 10 states, permit fees alone are $250–$1,500 before escort vehicles enter the picture. Between 8–6" and 12–0" of beam you need one escort vehicle at $1.50–$3.00 per mile, bringing a 3,000 mile haul’s escort bill to $4,500–$9,000. Above 12–0" beam or 13–6" height, two escorts become mandatory in most states — one leading and one trailing — and a certified height-pole pilot car is required where low bridges force route deviations.

The superload threshold kicks in at roughly 16 feet of beam or 120,000 pounds gross combined weight. Superloads require an engineered route survey, often a bridge loading analysis, and travel only during daylight hours on weekdays. Permit packages alone run $5,000–$15,000, and the engineered routing can force a 3,000 mile trip to take 2,500 additional miles of detours around restricted corridors. For context on where auto transport sits on this same spectrum, the car depreciation calculator pairs with routine sedan and SUV shipping that never crosses the 8–6" threshold and therefore never incurs any of these fees.

The short rule for beam: under 8–6" is free, 8–6" to 12–0" adds 25–40%, 12–0" to 14–0" adds 60–120%, and over 14–0" adds 150–400% to the base per-mile rate. Most owners are surprised by how narrow the truly standard band is — many stock 22 ft fishing boats have 9 ft 6 in beam and therefore ship as oversize loads even though they look small at the marina.

The single cheapest upgrade most boat shippers miss: mast-down a sailboat or remove a tuna tower before the trip. Dropping height from 14–0" to 12–6" can eliminate the pilot car requirement and save $3,000–$8,000 on a long haul.

  • Beam up to 8–6": standard legal width, no permits, no escorts
  • Beam 8–6" to 12–0": oversize, 1 escort, $25–$150 permit per state
  • Beam 12–0" to 14–0": oversize + height class, 2 escorts, multi-permit coordination
  • Beam 14–0" to 16–0": heavy oversize, pilot car with height pole, state-by-state routing
  • Beam over 16–0": superload, engineered route survey, daylight-only travel
  • Height over 13–6": bridge clearance survey required, certified pilot car mandatory
  • Gross weight over 80,000 lb: additional weight permits, axle-load engineering
4

Trailer Status: Own, Rent, or Hauler-Supplied

If your boat already sits on a roadworthy trailer with current registration, functional brake lights, load-rated tires, and working surge brakes, you save $400–$1,200 over having the hauler supply transport cradles or a hydraulic flatbed. The hauler’s own trailer is billed as a daily rental of $75–$200 plus a risk premium, because the hauler has to load your boat onto unfamiliar bunks and is liable for any strap-point damage. The gotcha: many haulers run a pre-trip trailer inspection at pickup and charge a $150–$400 emergency prep fee if tires are weather-cracked, lights do not wire correctly to their truck, or the coupler is the wrong class. Fix these before the pickup day, not at the curb.

Sailboats over 25 feet and virtually any boat over 30 feet do not have practical factory trailers, so the question becomes hydraulic flatbed versus keel cradle. Hydraulic flatbeds are standard on long hauls above 30 feet — the trailer hydraulically lifts the boat, cradle and all, onto a low-deck semi, which keeps total height under 13–6" when possible. Keel cradles are cheaper but require a crane at both the pickup marina and the drop marina, adding $400–$1,200 in crane fees at each end. Plan the trailer decision at the quote stage, because switching later can invalidate the booking.

  • Roadworthy owner trailer with reg, lights, tires: saves $400–$1,200 vs hauler
  • Surge brakes functional, tires under 5 years old: required to pass pre-trip inspection
  • Hauler-supplied cradle/flatbed: $75–$200 per day rental
  • Crane at pickup marina: $400–$1,200, needed for keel cradle or mast step
  • Crane at drop marina: $400–$1,200, plus tide window coordination
  • Hydraulic flatbed: standard on boats 30 ft+, keeps height under 13–6"
  • Trailer prep fail at pickup: $150–$400 emergency fee before departure
5

How a Boat Shipping Quote Actually Breaks Down

A clean marine-hauler quote decomposes into five buckets: line haul (per-mile rate × distance) 45–60%, oversize permits 5–25%, escort vehicles 10–25%, trailer or cradle 5–15%, and insurance plus fuel surcharges 5–10%. On a $3,500 mid-range quote for a 2,000 mile trip, that means roughly $1,800 in line haul, $400 in permits, $700 in escorts, $400 in trailer equipment, and $200 in insurance and fuel surcharge. Any bid where the line haul is under 40% of the total is either padding permits or double-counting escorts across billing lines.

The donut below visualizes the same split for a standard oversize run. When you collect three bids — and you should always collect three — recast each into these five buckets and the outlier pricing pattern becomes obvious. A quote with 15% permits on a route you already know crosses only three states is overstated. A quote with no separate escort line on a load over 12 feet of beam is either illegal or the escort fee is hidden inside line haul. Pair this with the auto loan calculator if you are financing a tow vehicle to DIY short hauls instead of paying a hauler for every trip.

$3,500typical quoteLine haul — 52%Escort vehicles — 18%Oversize permits — 18%Trailer equipment — 10%Insurance + fuel — 2%Typical US boat shipping quote breakdown, 2026. Source: uShip, Intercity Lines.
6

Red Flags and the Cheapest Way to Ship

Marine hauling attracts fewer outright scammers than auto transport, but the two categories share common red flags. First, no legitimate boat hauler asks for more than a $250–$500 booking deposit on a sub-$5,000 job, or more than 10% on a larger one. Demands for 50% up front or full payment before pickup follow the same scam pattern documented in Federal Maritime Commission complaints and Better Business Bureau records. Second, any carrier who cannot produce an active USDOT number and marine-cargo-specific insurance certificate should be walked away from; residential auto haulers who pick up boat jobs often lack the right coverage and your claim is dead on arrival.

On the savings side, four levers repeatedly cut 25–45% off a base quote without sacrificing safety. Keeping the boat under 8–6" of beam avoids the entire oversize stack — if you are buying a new boat and shipping is part of the plan, this single spec matters more than horsepower or brand. Using your own registered trailer saves $400–$1,200 and lets you choose the hauler with the best insurance instead of the one with available equipment. Shipping October through February (avoiding northbound snowbird routes in December–January) saves another 15–25%. Finally, accepting a 2–4 week pickup window rather than demanding a specific date saves $100–$400 on most routes and unlocks carriers already running nearby loads.

Always photograph every side of the boat plus engine, hull, prop, and interior at both pickup and drop-off. The Bill of Lading plus time-stamped photos is what wins insurance claims — without them, even legitimate damage claims are routinely denied by underwriters citing pre-existing condition.

  • Deposit over $500 on a sub-$5k job or over 10% on a larger one — red flag
  • No active USDOT number or marine-cargo insurance certificate — walk away
  • Verbal quote with no written Bill of Lading before pickup — claims voided later
  • Carrier will not let you photograph all sides at pickup — fraud signal
  • Quote 25%+ below the other two bids — under-insured or skipping permits
  • Keep beam under 8–6" to avoid all oversize fees (biggest single lever)
  • Ship in the off-season (Oct–Feb) for 15–25% savings on most routes

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Last Updated: Apr 19, 2026

This calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. Results are estimates and should not be considered professional financial, medical, legal, or other advice. Always consult a qualified professional before making important decisions. UseCalcPro is not responsible for any actions taken based on calculator results.

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