How to Get a Boating License in Virginia
Boaters operating motorboats with 10 horsepower or greater must obtain a Virginia Boating Safety Education Certificate, regardless of age. Similarly, anyone 14 or older operating a personal watercraft (PWC) is required to hold this certification. Those who do not fall into these categories should confirm their status through the Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources.
To earn the certificate, an applicant must complete a boating safety course that is approved by NASBLA (the North American Association of Boating Law Administrators). Once the course is finished, the individual must pass an accompanying test. Upon successful completion, the boater receives the Virginia Boating Safety Education Certificate, which must be carried while operating a covered vessel.
The Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources maintains the official list of approved courses and current regulations. Boaters should consult the DWR's official website to confirm course options, eligibility requirements, and any updates to state rules before enrolling.
- Confirm whether you're in the population this state covers (cutoff / age band).
- Take the accepted course: Virginia Boating Safety Education Certificate (NASBLA-approved); optional $10 Lifetime Boater Card.
- Pass the test and receive your card or certificate.
- Carry it aboard whenever you operate, and confirm the current rule on the official state page.

Carry the card every time you operate
Once you’ve earned the card, keep it aboard whenever you operate — many states require you to show it on request, and a card from one state is usually honored in another. If you’ll boat across state lines, check each state’s rule, since the covered ages and accepted credentials differ. Always confirm the current requirement on the official state agency page.
Course & fees for Virginia → · Full requirements →
Compiled from the official state source, cross-referenced against NASBLA, and verified June 2026. Always confirm the current rule on the official Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources (DWR) page before you rely on it — boating law changes and some states are mid-rollout. How we compile this. Informational only, not legal advice.