Transient Slip Pricing — marina pricing photograph

Marina Pricing

Transient Slip Pricing

Per-night dockage rates for cruisers and overnight visitors

Transient slip pricing is per foot per night, ranging from about $2.00 on inland lakes to $10+ at premium downtown marinas in peak season.

The U.S. average transient slip rate is around $3.50 per foot per night. Inland and small-craft marinas sit at $2.00 – $3.00; coastal and ICW marinas at $3.00 – $5.00; resort and downtown marinas at $5.00 – $10+.

Electricity is always extra. Most marinas bill a flat $10 – $25 per night for 30 amp, $20 – $40 for 50 amp, or meter usage on longer stays. Some include shore power below a certain consumption threshold.

Booking through Dockwa, Snag-A-Slip, or directly by phone is standard. Peak-season weekends in popular destinations (Newport, Annapolis, Key West, Marina del Rey) often sell out 1 – 3 months ahead.

Reading the per-foot number correctly

A per-foot rate is a starting point, not a quote. Two marinas advertising the same number can produce monthly totals $300–$500 apart for the same boat once they apply slip-length billing, beam premiums, tax, and shore-power markup.

When you compare transient slip pricing across marinas, build a three-line worksheet for every quote: base rent, utilities and recurring fees, and one-time deposits. That's the only way to compare apples to apples.

Transient Slip Pricing — 2025 Price Ranges

Inland lake marinas$2.00 – $3.50 / ft / night
Gulf Coast / Florida Panhandle$2.50 – $4.50 / ft / night
Florida East Coast / ICW$3.00 – $5.50 / ft / night
Mid-Atlantic / Chesapeake$3.00 – $5.00 / ft / night
Northeast (peak season)$4.50 – $8.00 / ft / night
Resort / luxury / event marinas$6.00 – $12.00 / ft / night

Cost by boat size

25 ft boatMinimum slip lengths often make small boats pay for 25–30 ft even when the hull is shorter.$300 – $1,500/mo
35 ft boatThe broadest inventory category; standard 30A or 50A power and conventional wet slips.$420 – $2,100/mo
45 ft boatMore beam and power requirements start narrowing the slip pool in older marinas.$540 – $3,150/mo
60 ft yachtDeep-water and end-tie inventory becomes important; some marinas add yacht premiums.$900 – $4,800/mo
80 ft yachtExpect 100A power, wider fairways, stronger docks, and more limited availability.$2,800 – $9,600/mo

Cost by marina type

Basic municipal marinaBest value, fewer resort amenities, often longer waitlists.$12 – $30/ft/mo
Full-service marinaFuel, pump-out, repair vendors, laundry, showers, and active dockmaster support.$18 – $45/ft/mo
Resort marinaPools, restaurants, concierge, valet, hotel access, and vacation-style amenities.$35 – $80/ft/mo
Yacht or mega-yacht marinaDeep-water slips, high-amp power, crew facilities, and premium security.$50 – $200+/ft/mo

Cost by region

Inland lakesLowest average rates; covered slips and seasonal contracts are common.$12 – $25/ft/mo
Gulf CoastStrong value, hurricane clauses, and good monthly availability outside winter.$15 – $35/ft/mo
Florida East CoastHigh demand from year-round boaters, liveaboards, and yacht traffic.$25 – $70+/ft/mo
Chesapeake / Mid-AtlanticBalanced pricing with seasonal contracts and strong sailboat infrastructure.$18 – $40/ft/mo
Northeast / CaliforniaShort-season or scarce-waterfront markets command premium rates.$25 – $80+/ft/mo

The fees nobody mentions on the phone

The phone quote covers base rent. The real bill includes electric, tax, pump-out, parking, key fobs, dock-box rental, mandatory resort fees, environmental surcharges, and sometimes a "marina fee" that's really a markup on shore power.

For longer stays, also ask about contract minimums, automatic renewal, break-lease penalties, and what happens to your deposit if the marina reassigns your slip. None of these are unreasonable on their own — they're only a problem when you don't know they exist.

Three boats, three very different bills

30-foot center console, inland lake, weekend use: roughly $450–$900/month all-in. Power is light, fees are predictable, and minimum-slip-length billing is usually the biggest variable.

42-foot sailboat, Chesapeake or mid-Atlantic, year-round: typically $900–$1,700/month with winter haul-out cycles and seasonal storage often calculated separately.

55-foot motoryacht, South Florida, full-time liveaboard with two ACs: $2,500–$5,000+/month is realistic once you stack base rent, 50A power, liveaboard fees, tax, and insurance-driven slip choices.

Use these as scaffolding. Your actual quote will move with the specific harbor, the specific slip, and what the marina decides to put on each line of the bill.

Transient Slip Pricing — FAQ

Is there a discount for staying multiple nights?
Some marinas offer 6th or 7th night free promotions; many switch to a weekly rate after 5–7 nights. Beyond 14 nights, monthly almost always wins.
Why do prices vary so much by region?
Waterfront land value, season length, demand, dredging cost, storm exposure, and the number of available slips all vary by market. South Florida and Southern California have scarce waterfront and year-round demand; inland lakes have lower land cost and more seasonal use.
Can marina pricing be negotiated?
Sometimes. Negotiation works best off-season, on multi-month stays, with cash prepayment, at marinas with visible vacancies, or when your boat fits an awkward slip size the marina wants occupied.
Do catamarans and sailboats pay different rates?
Catamarans often pay a 1.25×–1.5× beam multiplier or are charged for the wider slip they require. Monohull sailboats usually pay standard per-foot rates but may need deeper basins and taller pedestals for masthead clearance.
How do boat size and slip size affect the final bill?
Most marinas bill by the larger of your boat's length overall or the slip length. A 37 ft boat assigned to a 40 ft slip usually pays the 40 ft rate, and bowsprits, swim platforms, dinghy davits, and pulpits may count in LOA.
Is annual dockage cheaper than monthly dockage?
Usually yes. Annual contracts commonly save 15–35% compared with month-to-month rates, but they reduce flexibility and may include break-lease penalties.
What does liveaboard status add to the bill?
Marinas that allow liveaboards typically charge $100–$400/month per person on top of dockage to cover utilities, pump-out, and shore facility wear. Some markets cap the number of liveaboard slips, so the surcharge buys access more than amenities.

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