Bigger boat maintenance costs
The point could well be made that
exponential costs on bigger boats is an urban myth.
Think of it this way: Most of the SYSTEMS on bigger boats like C36 are pretty similar to those on a C30 or C27. Engine's are almost the same (M18, M25, M25XP) so filters and fuel and engine related issues like transmissions and cutlass bearings, etc., would be pretty much the same. Except for the length of wires, electrical systems, too. A head and holding tank are the same. Most have fresh water systems with pressure pumps and shower sumps.
So what's different? Berthing, waxing the hull (cockpits on some of these boats are almost as long as the smaller ones since Catalina always made great cockpits), new sails and standing rigging. Anything I missed? The few dollars difference for insurance seems small.
Running rigging will be a tad more. (I have NO idea how that came out as a URL

)
For people who do not intend to live aboard or spend weeks/months at a time, 36 feet is generally way too much boat. You will sail less and it will cost twice what a 30 foot boat would cost
I beg to differ. I have a 34 foot boat and I use it, singlehanding most of the time, as much and even more than I did our C25. I have had both for the same 13 years of ownership. The larger boat is more comfortable, my wife comes with me more, I anchor out more than daysail because it's more comfortable, and we go further, faster. "Way too much boat..." is incorrect, at least for me and for those of us who USE our boats. Yeah, there are lotsa harbor queens out there, but I'm not one of 'em. :dance:
So, while the question of whether this is this OP's first boat remain valid, if it's not and he wants it, I recall a discussion last week where someone suggested that the poster get the largest boat he can afford to avoid going through, essentially, 3-foot-itis.

I find it interesting that when someone asks about a 36 foot boat, the replies from those with smaller boats suggests he should get a smaller one, rather than answering the question about the quality of the boat he asked about to begin with. That's all.
