Yacht Club Dockage — marina photograph

Marina Type

Yacht Club Dockage

Member dockage at private yacht clubs and reciprocal cruising privileges

Yacht club dockage bundles slip access with social membership, junior sailing programs, racing, and reciprocal privileges at partner clubs around the world. The trade-off is initiation fees, monthly dues, and F&B minimums.

Initiation: $2,500 (small clubs) to $100,000+ (top clubs like NYYC, San Diego YC, Royal Hawaiian YC). Monthly dues $200–$1,500. Slip rates often competitive with public marinas once you're a member.

Reciprocal privileges are the hidden value — free or discounted transient dockage at hundreds of partner clubs worldwide. Active cruisers recoup dues through reciprocity alone.

Is this the right category for your boat?

Yacht Club Dockage fit a recognizable pattern: member dockage at private yacht clubs and reciprocal cruising privileges. If your typical day on the water matches that description, this category is worth a serious look. If not, the rules and pricing structure can feel awkward.

A useful gut check: imagine your worst weekend at the marina — a late arrival, a power problem, a guest staying aboard, a storm watch. If the operating model in this category handles those cases gracefully for your boat, the fit is probably right.

The mechanics of holding a slip

Most marinas in this category run on a deposit plus contract model. Until both are returned, the slip isn't really yours, especially over a holiday weekend or in a market where waitlists are normal.

Ask explicitly what happens between "we have availability" and "your slip is confirmed." The boater who treats those phrases as the same thing is the one who arrives to find the slip gone.

Translating per-foot rate into real cost

Per-foot pricing — usually initiation $2.5k – $100k+ / dues $200 – $1,500 / month for this category — is a useful shorthand, but it's not a quote. Two marinas at $30/ft can produce monthly totals $400 apart once you layer in slip-length billing, beam premiums, mandatory parking, taxes, and how each one treats shore power. Always ask for the all-in total for your specific boat, dates, and intended use.

Which amenities are worth paying for

Standard amenities here include clubhouse, restaurant, pool, junior sailing, racing fleet. The honest test for each one: would you pay extra for it on a separate line item? Pump-out, secure parking, and dependable Wi-Fi usually clear that bar. Resort amenities like pools and restaurants are valuable if you'll genuinely use them, but they often live inside a 5–15% mandatory fee — make sure that math works for you.

Pros and cons

Pros

  • • Matches a clear way of using a boat, so the slip search gets shorter
  • • Easier to compare apples-to-apples against similar marinas nearby
  • • Amenities, rules, and dockmaster expectations are predictable
  • • Pricing patterns are well understood, so quotes are easier to vet

Cons

  • • Availability can be tight in season or in popular harbors
  • • Headline rates often leave out power, tax, and resort fees
  • • House rules vary widely from one operator to the next
  • • The best slips often require deposits or sitting on a waitlist

Locking it in cleanly

Confirm the assigned slip number (not just "we'll find you something"), the metering method for shore power, the cancellation deadline, and the named-storm procedure. Marinas that handle those four questions confidently usually run a tight operation.

Before paying a deposit, re-read the contract for renewal rights, guest policies, and outside-contractor rules. If you plan to keep the boat here for more than a season, those clauses matter more than the first month's rent.

Best for

  • Active cruisers
  • Racers
  • Families with junior sailors
  • Networkers

Typical amenities

ClubhouseRestaurantPoolJunior SailingRacing Fleet

Yacht Club Dockage — FAQ

Do I need to own a boat to join a yacht club?
Most require boat ownership or active membership in a sailing program. A few accept social members without boats.
What's reciprocal cruising?
Free or discounted dockage at partner clubs — valuable for active cruisers visiting other harbors.
What does the storm plan look like?
In hurricane-exposed regions, ask whether the marina shelters in place, requires haul-out, evicts on a watch or a warning, and whether they provide extra cleats, lines, or assistance from staff before the storm.
What does this marina type typically cost?
Plan for Initiation $2.5K – $100K+ / Dues $200 – $1,500 / month. Treat that as a planning range; power, tax, liveaboard fees, resort fees, pump-out, parking, and deposits are usually separate line items.
What is the single biggest mistake people make booking this?
Choosing by the category label instead of the written agreement. Two marinas can both call themselves the same thing while running on very different rules, storm plans, and fee structures.
How do I compare two quotes apples-to-apples?
Put each quote into the same format: base rent, utilities, mandatory fees, amenities you will actually use, distance from your cruising route, and contract flexibility. Total monthly cost, not per-foot rate, is what matters.

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