Tennessee Marina Directory

1 verified · 1 known · 1 cities

Boating in Tennessee

Tennessee offers boaters a remarkable mix of protected harbors, open-water cruising grounds, and inland waterways that draw transient cruisers, liveaboards, and weekend recreational captains alike. Across 1 known marinas — 1fully verified by the WetSlipFinder editorial team — the state supports everything from small skiffs to mega yachts. Local conditions vary by region, but the fundamentals of smart boating in Tennessee stay the same: monitor weather windows carefully, respect tide and current cycles, file a float plan, and confirm dockmaster availability before you arrive. Whether you keep a wet slip year-round or you transit through on a delivery, the directory below is built around what working captains actually need: real phone numbers, real dockmaster contacts, real VHF channels.

Major Boating Regions

The major boating regions of Tennessee are organized around its principal waterways and harbors. Cruisers tend to cluster near deep-water inlets where transient dockage is plentiful, while liveaboards favor sheltered basins with strong utility infrastructure. Each region has its own dockmaster culture, fuel pricing patterns, and seasonal traffic rhythm. Knowing which region matches your boat, your timeline, and your skill level is the first step to a smooth visit. The 1 cities below cover the bulk of Tennessee's active marina coverage.

Popular Waterways

Popular waterways in Tennessee include the coastal sounds, intracoastal segments, large lakes, and navigable rivers that thread the state. Each waterway carries its own chart hazards, bridge clearances, and seasonal shoaling patterns. Captains new to Tennessee should review the latest USCG Local Notice to Mariners, cross-check chartplotter data against current NOAA charts, and call ahead to marinas for condition updates — particularly after named storms or unusual rainfall events.

Marina Cities in Tennessee

Tennessee marina coverage spans 1 cities with verified or partially verified facilities. Each city hub on WetSlipFinder collects the marinas in that community, with dockmaster contact information, slip availability cues, and amenity details. Use the lists below to navigate by geography, and click through to a city page for the full local directory.

Coastal Cities

Inland Marina Cities

No inland cities indexed yet for Tennessee.

Tennessee Wet Slip Guide

Securing a wet slip in Tennessee requires planning. Demand is strongest in the high season at coastal marinas, while interior lake marinas often have waitlists for covered slips. Pricing varies by location, slip size, and amenity level — expect to pay a premium for floating concrete docks, side-tie configurations, and protected basins. Most marinas require a slip application, proof of insurance, vessel documentation, and a security deposit. Read every line of the slip agreement before signing: storm protocols, liveaboard rules, and pet policies vary widely.

Monthly Slip Rentals

Monthly slip rentals in Tennessee suit cruisers planning an extended stay or seasonal residents migrating with the weather. Monthly rates are generally calculated on length-overall (LOA) and may include shore power, water, and trash service. Negotiate utility allotments up front so you understand metered versus included electricity, especially for boats running air conditioning or heat. Call the dockmaster before reserving — month-to-month inventory turns quickly.

Annual Slip Rentals

Annual slip rentals are the most cost-effective option for Tennessee boat owners who use their vessel year-round. Annual agreements usually require a waitlist deposit and may grant first-right-of-refusal on adjacent slips. Liveaboard status, if available, is normally tied to annual contracts and capped at a percentage of total slip inventory. Review storm-haul clauses carefully — many Tennessee marinas require owners to remove vessels when a named storm is forecast within a specific cone window.

Tennessee Transient Dockage Guide

Transient dockage in Tennessee supports cruisers moving along the coast, ICW travelers, and event-driven visitors. Most transient slips are reserved by phone or through the dockmaster directly — online reservation systems exist at larger facilities but are not universal. Call ahead. Confirm depth at MLLW (mean lower low water), confirm approach instructions, and confirm whether a side-tie or stern-tie configuration is available. Have your fenders set, lines rigged, and bow thruster ready well before you enter the basin.

Short-Term Dockage

Short-term transient dockage typically covers one to seven nights and is priced per foot per night. Many Tennessee marinas waive overnight fees when you take fuel or spend a minimum at the on-site restaurant, so always ask. Hail the marina on the VHF channel listed in each marina profile as you approach — this is the fastest way to get slip assignment and current approach guidance from the dockmaster on duty.

Mega Yacht Dockage

Mega yacht dockage in Tennessee is concentrated at a small number of deep-water facilities with the depth, beam clearance, and 100A/200A three-phase power required for vessels above 80 feet LOA. Captains should coordinate well in advance with the dockmaster, confirm bridge clearance along the approach, and arrange line handlers if not standard at the facility. Crew accommodations, provisioning support, and customs clearance are facility-dependent.

Safe navigation in Tennessee waters depends on understanding the seasonal weather patterns, tide cycles, current behavior, and storm exposure unique to the region. Even experienced captains review local conditions before every passage — chart updates, NOAA marine forecasts, and direct calls to marinas along the route give the clearest picture. The sections below cover the fundamentals every Tennessee boater should review.

Weather Patterns

Weather in Tennessee follows seasonal patterns shaped by latitude, ocean proximity, and prevailing wind regimes. Summer brings afternoon thunderstorms with rapid wind shifts; fall and spring transition periods can deliver strong frontal passages with significant sea-state changes. Always check the latest NOAA marine forecast for your specific zone before departure, and verify forecast confidence — low-confidence forecasts mean wider error bars and more conservative go/no-go decisions.

Tides & Currents

Tide and current behavior in Tennessee varies sharply by location. Coastal inlets can run several knots on max ebb or flood, making timing critical for safe entry. Use NOAA Tides & Currents station data for the specific approach you plan to take, and verify with the dockmaster on arrival — local knowledge frequently catches what published predictions miss, especially around shoaling inlets and bridge approaches.

Storm Considerations

Storm preparation in Tennessee is non-negotiable during the named-storm season. Confirm your marina's storm plan in writing: many require haul-out at a specific watch/warning threshold, and slip contracts often contain explicit removal clauses. Have a hurricane hole pre-identified, fuel topped off, and ground tackle inspected. Insurance carriers may require named-storm coverage with specific haul-out compliance.

The marinas listed below are published in our Tennessee directory. Entries marked Verified have had their contact and operating details confirmed by the WetSlipFinder editorial team within the current review cycle. Entries marked Public listing are sourced from public records and still awaiting editorial verification — always call ahead to confirm. 1 facilities are currently published across Tennessee.

Frequently Asked Questions about Tennessee Marinas

The questions below come up repeatedly from boaters planning visits to Tennessee. Answers are general — always confirm specifics with the dockmaster of the marina you plan to use. Policies, pricing, and availability change frequently.

How many verified marinas are in Tennessee?

1 marinas are currently verified out of 1 known facilities across Tennessee. Verification means the WetSlipFinder editorial team has confirmed dockmaster contact information and operating status within the current review cycle. The remaining facilities are tracked as candidates pending review.

When is the busiest season for Tennessee marinas?

Peak season in Tennessee typically aligns with warm-weather boating months and major regional events. Transient dockage during peak weekends often books out — reserve early, especially for holiday weekends, fishing tournaments, and regatta dates. Off- season visits offer better rates and easier slip access at most facilities.

Do Tennessee marinas allow liveaboards?

Liveaboard policies vary by marina and are typically tied to municipal regulations, slip contract type, and inventory caps. Some marinas permit full-time liveaboards on annual contracts; others restrict liveaboard nights per month. Always confirm liveaboard status in writing before signing a slip agreement.

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