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Official Florida Boating Handbook Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission

Boating Basics: On the Water

Navigation Rules

There are two terms that help explain these rules:

  • Stand-on vessel: The vessel which should maintain its course and speed
  • Give-way vessel: The vessel which must take early and substantial action to avoid collision by stopping, slowing down, or changing course

The table below shows pictures and rules for different types of boating situations. For more in-depth instruction, view the interactive animations offered in the online boating course.

Rules: Powerboat vs. Powerboat Rules: Powerboat vs. Sailboat
Head-On Power vs. Power:
Neither vessel is the stand-on vessel. Both vessels should keep to the starboard (right).
Both vessels giving way to the right
Head-On Power vs. Sail:
The powerboat is the give-way vessel. The sailboat is the stand-on vessel.

Powerboat giving way to (going right of) the sailboat
Crossing Power vs. Power:
The vessel on the operator's port (left) side is the give-way vessel. The vessel on the operator's starboard (right) side is the stand-on vessel.

Powerboat on the port (left) gives way to the vessel on the starboard (right)
Crossing Power vs. Sail:
The powerboat is the give-way vessel. The sailboat is the stand-on vessel.



Powerboat gives way to the sailboat
Power vs. Power:
The vessel that is overtaking another vessel is the give-way vessel. The vessel being overtaken is the stand-on vessel.

Powerboat giving way while overtaking another vessel
Power vs. Sail:
The vessel that is overtaking another vessel is the give-way vessel. The vessel being overtaken is the stand-on vessel.

Sailboat giving way while overtaking powerboat
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Online boating safety handbook last modified:October 28, 2008
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