Boating Course & Fees in Florida
In Florida, boaters can complete a boating safety course through a vendor offering a NASBLA-approved curriculum to earn the Florida Boating Safety Education Identification Card. The card itself carries no state issuance fee. Once obtained, the card does not expire, providing permanent proof of completion. The course is delivered by private vendors, and pricing varies by provider; prospective students should contact individual vendors directly for current tuition costs.
Florida does not mandate boating safety education for all boaters, though the course is widely available and recognized. The state also offers a Livery Operator Permit at no cost for those operating rental vessels. For accurate, current information on approved vendors, course availability, and any applicable fees, individuals should consult the official Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission website or contact the state agency directly.
| Detail | As the state publishes it |
|---|---|
| Accepted credential / course | Florida Boating Safety Education Identification Card (NASBLA-approved course; card does not expire) |
| Fees | no state fee to issue the ID card (course via NASBLA-approved vendors); Livery Operator Permit is no-cost |
| Card required? | Required for some operators |

Course costs vs. card fees
Two different prices are at play: the boater-safety course (often free or low-cost, set by the approved vendor) and any state card or processing fee. Several states offer a free NASBLA-approved course — for example through the BoatUS Foundation — so the card can cost little beyond a small state fee. Vendor prices change, so confirm the current course list and fees on the official state agency page.
Step-by-step: how to get licensed → · Do you need a licence? →
Compiled from the official state source, cross-referenced against NASBLA, and verified June 2026. Always confirm the current rule on the official Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC), Boating and Waterways Section page before you rely on it — boating law changes and some states are mid-rollout. How we compile this. Informational only, not legal advice.