Boating Course & Fees in North Carolina
North Carolina requires boating-safety education for certain operators, typically those under a specified age or operating certain vessel types. The North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission approves boating-safety courses that meet NASBLA standards. Completing an approved course results in a boating-safety education certificate, which satisfies the state's educational requirement. Alternatively, operators may take a proctored equivalency exam or hold a valid USCG operator license to meet the same requirement.
Several options exist for obtaining boating-safety education in North Carolina at no cost to the student. The BoatUS Foundation offers a free approved course available to state residents. Other NCWRC-approved vendors also provide courses; pricing varies by vendor and course type, as individual course providers set their own fees. Those operating without proper boating-safety credentials may face non-compliance penalties. Current course availability, pricing, and specific educational requirements should be confirmed directly with the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission or through the state's official boating-safety resources.
| Detail | As the state publishes it |
|---|---|
| Accepted credential / course | boating-safety education certificate from a NASBLA-approved course (or proctored equivalency exam, or USCG operator license) |
| Fees | no state fee; NCWRC-approved courses available free (BoatUS). ($50 is a non-compliance fine, not a card fee.) |
| 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 North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission (NCWRC) page before you rely on it — boating law changes and some states are mid-rollout. How we compile this. Informational only, not legal advice.