What is the oldest build date boat to buy today do to the way insurance companies are doing? Sold my Craftsman built 2 years ago and want another boat today as spring is just around the corner.
Depends a bit on the boat, the manufacturer and the boat's value. Generally, insurance companies start getting nervous about 30 year old boats, they will insure them if the survey is good. You will probably have better luck with companies specializing in boats as the underwriters will have a better understanding of boats and value.What is the oldest build date boat to buy today do to the way insurance companies are doing? Sold my Craftsman built 2 years ago and want another boat today as spring is just around the corner.
My suggestion is to not rely on the good intentioned responses you receive from participants here. This is a highly variable issue, the answer to which is a function of many variables. Not just age.Looking at 35'-41' Morgan
Morgans have a reputation as a solidly built boat. If/when you make an offer on one, make a satisfactory survey and obtaining insurance as contingencies. It might be wise to begin shopping for insurance now, no one will give you a firm quote on a hypothetical boat, but they may indicate their willingness to consider insuring the kind of boat you are looking at.Looking at 35'-41' Morgan
This is the best advice.My suggestion is to not rely on the good intentioned responses you receive from participants here. This is a highly variable issue, the answer to which is a function of many variables. Not just age.
Ask your marine underwriter.
To reiterate again, as the saying goes, when a boat gets older than a "certain" age, insurers need to see real proof not just that it passes the 20 foot test (exists and appears to float), but that the structure and systems are actually up-to-date.May just be a Florida thing but a buddy at our club had a very difficult time getting a liability policy on a 30 year old Catalina 30. He has no history of claims and has owned and insured several boats over the years.
Get a “would-be quote” for the boat that you may try to buy. Do not “bite” then ask about insurance. I doubt anybody here can really answer, as said above.What is the oldest build date boat to buy today do to the way insurance companies are doing? Sold my Craftsman built 2 years ago and want another boat today as spring is just around the corner.
I don't trust any boat made after about 1980. They are just too new to know how they'll stand up. Still working out those new-boat kinks.
Not to be stickler... but something isn't right with this. $100/$1000 would make the insurance $10k for the $100k boat... somewhere you are missing a 0.It works out to approximately $100. per $1000. of value.
i.e. if your boat has a value of $100K, you will pay $1K per year to insure it; for that fixer-upper you bought for 5K, it will be a lot less.