Boating License Requirements in Rhode Island
Rhode Island requires boating education for certain operators. Anyone born after January 1, 1986, who operates a motorboat with an engine greater than 10 horsepower must hold a Rhode Island Boating Safety Certificate. Additionally, all personal watercraft (PWC) operators, regardless of age or birth year, are required to obtain the certificate. The Rhode Island Boating Safety Certificate is earned through a state- and NASBLA-approved course of at least eight hours or by passing the Rhode Island Boating Safety Challenge Exam with a score of 70 percent or higher.
Operators should note age-related operating restrictions. Children under 12 may not operate a motorboat independently; they require supervision by a competent person aged 18 or older. Those aged 12 to 15 may operate a motorboat alone only if they hold a boating safety certificate. For personal watercraft, operators under 16 are permitted to operate only if they hold a Rhode Island certificate. The Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management, Division of Law Enforcement (Environmental Police) Boating Safety Program oversees these requirements. Boaters should verify the current regulations directly on the official state agency website, as boating laws are subject to change.
| Detail | As the state publishes it |
|---|---|
| Education card required? | Required for some operators |
| Who needs it | born after January 1, 1986 (vessels with a motor greater than 10 hp); AND all PWC operators regardless of age/birth year |
| Minimum operating age | motorboat: none under 12 unless supervised by a competent person 18+; 12-15 alone only with a certificate; PWC: under-16 operators only if they hold an RI certificate |
| Accepted credential | Rhode Island Boating Safety Certificate (state- and NASBLA-approved course, min 8 hrs, or the RI Boating Safety Challenge Exam at 70%+) |
| Reciprocity (other states' cards) | partial |
| Rental / livery rule | Verify on the official state agency page |
| Fees | RI Boating Safety Challenge Exam free; free electronic study guide; third-party classroom/online courses may charge |
| Administering agency | Rhode Island DEM, Division of Law Enforcement (Environmental Police) - Boating Safety Program |
Confirm before you operate. This is informational only, not legal advice. The official state boating-law agency page is the authoritative source for who needs a card and how to get it.

What a boater-education card proves
A boater-education card shows you’ve passed a NASBLA-approved safety course covering navigation rules, required equipment and emergencies — it is not a driver’s-license-style test of skill. Most states accept an approved card from any state, but who must carry one, and from what age, is set state by state. Check the rule below, then confirm it on the official state agency page before you head out.
Full requirements for Rhode Island → · Course & fees → · How to get licensed →
Compiled from the official state source, cross-referenced against NASBLA, and verified June 2026. Always confirm the current rule on the official Rhode Island DEM, Division of Law Enforcement (Environmental Police) - Boating Safety Program page before you rely on it — boating law changes and some states are mid-rollout. How we compile this. Informational only, not legal advice.