Does Home Insurance Cover Your Boat in South Carolina? Guide
July 16, 2026

Does home insurance cover your boat in South Carolina?

If you own a boat and a home in South Carolina, it's reasonable to assume your homeowners policy handles both. The reality is more complicated, and the gaps can be expensive. Whether you keep a 17-foot center console in your backyard on the Grand Strand or a pontoon at a Conway-area lake, understanding exactly what your homeowners policy will and will not do for your boat is one of the most important coverage conversations you can have.

What homeowners insurance typically covers for boats

Most standard homeowners policies include some protection for watercraft, but it is narrow. Here is what you can generally expect from a typical South Carolina homeowners policy:

  • Small, low-powered motors: Outboard motors under 25 horsepower are often covered under personal property, up to a limited dollar amount (usually $1,000 to $1,500).
  • Theft while stored on your property: If your small boat or motor is stolen from your yard or garage, the personal property coverage in your homeowners policy may respond, subject to your deductible and the sub-limit above.
  • Sailboats under 26 feet: Some policies extend limited physical damage coverage to sailboats below this length, though the dollar cap often applies here too.

That is about where homeowners coverage ends for most policies. Once you start talking about motorized boats with more power, larger vessels, or liability while the boat is on the water, you are almost certainly outside the scope of a standard homeowners policy.

Where homeowners insurance falls short on the water

The limits of homeowners boat coverage become clear when you think through real-world scenarios. Here are the areas where a homeowners policy will typically leave you exposed:

Physical damage on the water

Your homeowners policy covers your home and its contents, not a vessel while it is being used on a lake, river, or the Atlantic Ocean. If you hit a submerged stump on the Waccamaw River or collide with another boat off Murrells Inlet, your homeowners carrier is almost certainly going to deny the claim. That kind of physical damage to your hull, engine, and electronics requires its own watercraft policy.

Liability on the water

This is the most consequential gap. If you are operating a motorized boat and injure a passenger, injure someone in another vessel, or damage another boat, the liability exposure can be significant. Medical bills, legal defense costs, and any settlement or judgment could easily reach tens of thousands of dollars. A homeowners policy's liability section does not extend to motorized watercraft in use. Without a separate boat policy, you are personally responsible for those costs.

High-powered or larger boats

Any boat powered by an engine over 25 to 50 horsepower (the exact threshold varies by insurer) is typically excluded from homeowners coverage entirely, whether it is on your property or in the water. If you have a 150-horsepower outboard on a 22-foot offshore fishing boat, your homeowners policy was never going to help.

Trailer coverage

Your boat trailer may have limited coverage under homeowners while parked at your home, but once it is attached to your vehicle and rolling down Highway 17, coverage typically shifts to your auto policy. Even then, the boat itself is not covered under auto. You end up with a patchwork situation where different pieces fall under different policies, and some pieces fall through the cracks entirely.

Hurricane and storm damage

South Carolina's coast faces storm threats every year, from tropical systems that develop quickly in the Atlantic to named hurricanes that track directly toward the Myrtle Beach area. If a hurricane damages your boat while it is on a trailer in your yard, the homeowners policy might respond to the hull under personal property, but only up to that tight sub-limit. A $40,000 center console is not going to get much relief from a $1,500 sub-limit. For more on how storm coverage works for coastal property, the post on hurricane deductibles in SC is worth reading alongside this one.

What a separate boat insurance policy actually covers

A dedicated boat insurance policy fills the gaps that homeowners leaves wide open. A well-structured watercraft policy typically includes:

  • Hull coverage (physical damage): Covers damage to the boat itself, the motor, and permanently attached equipment from collisions, sinking, fire, theft, and storm damage.
  • Liability coverage: Pays for bodily injury and property damage you cause to others while operating the boat. This is the coverage that protects your personal finances if a serious accident happens on the water.
  • Medical payments: Covers medical expenses for you and your passengers after a boating accident, regardless of who is at fault.
  • Uninsured watercraft coverage: Pays for your injuries if you are hit by an operator who has no insurance. South Carolina does not require boat insurance by law, which means a meaningful portion of boaters on local waterways have none.
  • Towing and assistance: Covers the cost of getting your disabled vessel back to shore, something boaters on the Intracoastal Waterway or offshore of the Grand Strand will appreciate.
  • Personal property on the boat: Fishing gear, electronics, life jackets, and other equipment on board can be covered up to a specified limit.

One important decision when setting up a boat policy is how the boat's value is calculated in the event of a total loss. This comes down to agreed value versus actual cash value, and it can make a major difference in how much you collect after a claim. For a detailed look at that distinction, see the post on agreed value vs. ACV boat insurance in SC.

South Carolina boating context: why coverage matters more here

South Carolina does not require boat owners to carry insurance, but skipping it is a significant financial risk. The state's coastal and inland waterways are among the busiest in the Southeast. A few factors specific to this area are worth noting:

  • High boat density: The Intracoastal Waterway runs the full length of the Grand Strand, and the creeks, inlets, and nearshore ocean around Murrells Inlet, Pawleys Island, and North Myrtle Beach are packed with recreational boaters on weekends from March through October.
  • Hurricane exposure: The South Carolina coast sits in a well-documented hurricane zone. Boats stored on trailers, in dry stack facilities, or in marinas face real wind and surge risk during storm season (June through November).
  • Uninsured boaters: Because insurance is not required, you can encounter operators who carry nothing. If one of them hits you and causes serious damage or injury, you need your own coverage to recover.
  • Year-round boating: Mild winters mean boats are in the water longer here than in most of the country. Longer time on the water means longer exposure to risk.

For a broader overview of boating coverage and what it typically costs in this state, the post on how much boat insurance costs in South Carolina breaks down the key rate factors.

How much of a gap are we actually talking about?

To put this in concrete terms, consider a few common scenarios and how coverage plays out without a dedicated boat policy:

  • Scenario 1: Hull damage in a collision. Your 24-foot center console hits a sandbar off the coast near Surfside Beach. Repair bill: $8,000. Homeowners pays: $0 (motorized boat, in the water). Out of pocket without a boat policy: $8,000.
  • Scenario 2: Liability for an injury. A passenger on your boat falls and breaks a leg after you hit a wake near North Myrtle Beach. Medical bills and potential legal costs: $35,000. Homeowners liability: $0 (motorized boat in use). Out of pocket without a boat policy: $35,000 or more.
  • Scenario 3: Hurricane damage on the trailer. A tropical storm makes landfall near Conway and your boat, sitting on a trailer in your driveway, sustains $22,000 in damage. Homeowners personal property sub-limit: $1,500. Gap: $20,500.

None of these scenarios are far-fetched. They describe the kind of losses that happen every season along the South Carolina coast and the Pee Dee region. The cost of a separate boat policy, by comparison, is often $200 to $600 per year for a typical recreational boat, depending on the vessel and coverage level.

What to do if you are not sure what you have

If you are not certain what your current homeowners policy covers for your boat, pull out your declarations page and look for the watercraft sub-limit under personal property and any watercraft liability exclusion. Both are usually spelled out clearly. If you cannot find it or do not understand what you are reading, call your agent and ask them to walk through it with you specifically.

It is also worth reviewing your homeowners coverage in light of all the coastal risks you face here. The post on what home insurance actually covers is a useful reference for understanding the broader scope of your homeowners policy and where the edges are.

If you have a newer or higher-value boat, or if you boat frequently in South Carolina waters, the smart move is to get a dedicated policy in place before you need it.

Talk to an independent agent who knows South Carolina waterways

Moore and Associates Insurance is an independent insurance agency serving the Grand Strand, Conway, Georgetown, Pawleys Island, and the surrounding communities of coastal South Carolina. Because we work with multiple carriers, we can compare watercraft policies side by side and find the coverage that fits your boat, your budget, and how you actually use it.

We can also review your existing homeowners policy to make sure you understand what it does and does not do for your watercraft before you head out on the water this season. Call us at (843) 839-5076 or reach out through our contact page to get started. We would rather have this conversation with you now than after a claim.

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