Yachting
regulations and charges
St Lucia has five seaports: Ports Castries and Vieux Fort cater mainly for commercial
shipping, with Rodney Bay Marina, Marigot Bay and Soufriere devoted mainly to
pleasure craft. All seaports are located on the west coast.
There are three entities involved in processing the formalities for entry into
St Lucia: Immigration, Customs, and the St Lucia Air & Seaports Authority
(SLASPA). Additionally, the Soufriere Marine Management Authority (SMMA) manages
a protected Marine park along part of the West Coast, from offices along the
Soufriere waterfront. The SMMA is responsible for collecting mooring, snorkel
and dive fees for the zone under its control. The Soufriere Development Foundation
(SDF) also collects a head tax for disembarkation on docks in the Soufriere Bay.
For the purpose of determining the applicable fee paid to SLASPA there are two
classes of yachts. These are: private and commercial.
A private yacht is one which does not engage in plying
passengers on hire. A bare-boat charter is classified as private. Commercial
yachts are those which embark/disembark passengers who have paid as individuals
or groups for the pleasure of travel on these vessels.
A commercial yacht requires an occasional
license, determined by overall length, to cruise. Private yachts
do not pay the occasional license.
All yachts pay for pratique, clearance,
navigational
aids and passenger dues, determined by vessel weight or length.
Passenger dues do not apply to master and crew on private yachts, but do on commercial.
Yachts in transit may clear in/out with the validity of the clearance being 72
hours; the validity of a regular clearance is 24 hours.
Yachts wishing to moor at a location within St Lucian waters other than their
port of entry after obtaining a clearance must obtain a Permit to Moor from Customs
at a cost of EC$25. This permits the yacht to remain in local waters for an additional
72 hours.
Yachtsmen wishing to snorkel, dive, or spearfish require permits from the Department
of Fisheries for areas outside of SMMA control. A local dive guide must also
accompany any dive.
Sports fishing requires a craft license from the Fisheries office costing EC$270/US$100;
recreational/casting also requires an EC$50/US$20 license.
When it comes to immigration requirements,
visitors can request up to 3 months stay in the first instance. Bona fide visitors
and yachtsmen can expect to be granted a minimum of 42 days. Applications for
extensions must be made in person at the Immigration Office in downtown Castries.
There is an EC$100 fee per 21-day period.
An embarkation tax of US$21 (at airports) applies when a passenger leaves by
air having arrived by sea; the seaport embarkation tax (EC$15 per person) applies
if arrivals by sea join a departing yacht as a passenger.
Clearance
Clearance
at Marigot bay
Customs is located within the Police Station on the
bay front. Opening hours are 0800-1200, and 1300-1630 Mon-Fri.
Weekday overtime, Saturday, Sunday and public holiday duty beyond 1630 hrs
incur a Clearance fee of EC$10, plus a minimum of 3 hours at the hourly rate
of the duty officer. The Clearance fee is EC$15 on Sundays, plus the minimum
3 hours.
There is an immigration officer conveniently located in the police station
next to the Customs office.
Customs acts as the collection agency for SLASPA.
Customs telephone: +1 (758) 458-3318
Clearance
at Soufriere
Soufriere is unique in that there are additional agencies – the Soufriere
Marine Management Authority (SMMA), and the Soufriere Development Foundation
(SDF) - involved in the reception/facilitation of yachts.
Customs is located along the bay front and is manned 7 days a week 0800-1200,
1300-1630. Overtime rates apply after 1630 daily, as per the arrangements above.
The $15 standard fee applies on Sundays and public holidays.
Immigration is located at the Police Station along the bay front, and is therefore
always open.
SLASPA does not maintain an office, therefore Port charges are not collected
at this time.
The SMMA offices are co-located with Customs along the bay front. Their rangers
patrol the Park area, and collect mooring fees for use of the buoys, as anchoring
is not allowed in most of the SMMA zone. Snorkel and dive permits are also
issued. Office hours are 0900-1700 Mon-Fri. Rangers are on patrol from 0700-1900
daily, and up to 2300 two days per week. Advanced bookings for moorings are
accepted.
The fee structure
is as follows: yachts <40ft – EC$40/US$15 for 2 nights,
EC$54/US$20 per week; >40<70ft – EC$54/US$20 for two
nights, EC$67, US$25 per week; >70ft – EC$107/US$40 per
night.
- Dive fees are:
EC$13.50 per person/day, EC$40.50 per annum
- Local dive master, US$40-$45 per dive
- Snorkel: EC$3 per person per day
The SDF has jurisdiction over the docks and charges a fee of EC$8 per head
for docking.
Where a stern line is used with a bow line to an SMMA buoy, both charges apply.
The office is located on the bay front and is open between 0830-1630 Mon-Fri.
Telephone contacts:
| Customs |
+1(758)
459-5656 |
| Immigration |
+1(758)
456-3620 |
| SMMA |
+1(758)
459-5500/VHF Ch.16 |
| SDF |
+1(758)
459-7200 |
| Tourism
Info |
+1(758)
459-7419 |
|