Boat Title and Registration in Florida, What You Need Before You Buy
- Nina Meek
- Jan 8
- 5 min read
It’s a hot Florida morning, you’re standing next to a boat that looks perfect, and the seller hits you with, “Title’s around here somewhere.” That’s the moment you slow down. Because boat title and registration in Florida can be the difference between “we’re on the water this weekend” and “my boat is stuck in paperwork limbo.”

What do you actually need before you buy?
Before you buy a boat in Florida, make sure you can get proof of ownership (usually the current title), a proper bill of sale, and confirmation there’s no lien or you have a lien release. Florida gives buyers 30 days to title and register after purchase, and you must keep proof of the purchase date onboard during that period. Florida Highway Safety
What’s the difference between a Florida boat title and a boat registration?
A title proves legal ownership. A registration is your permission to operate on Florida waters, and it comes with your registration certificate and decal.
In Florida, most motorized vessels on public waterways must be titled and registered, with some exceptions. Florida Highway Safety
Do all boats need to be titled and registered in Florida?
Most motorized boats do. Florida also has clear exemptions, like certain non-motorized vessels under 16 feet, vessels on private ponds, and federally documented vessels being exempt from Florida titling. Florida Highway Safety
If you’re unsure, treat it like this: if it has a motor and it’s hitting public water in Florida, assume it needs paperwork.
How long do you have to title and register a boat after you buy it in Florida?
Florida gives you 30 days to title and register after purchase. During that window, you’re expected to keep proof of the purchase date onboard. Florida also notes that running an unregistered vessel after the 30 days can be a criminal issue, so this is not the part to procrastinate. Florida Highway Safety
Also, Florida’s transfer guidance says a transfer application should be filed within 30 days, and being late can trigger an extra fee. Florida Highway Safety
What paperwork should you get from the seller before you pay?

Here’s the buyer checklist I’d screenshot and send to a friend.
Mini checklist, bring-this-or-walk checklist
Current title in the seller’s name (Florida title or out-of-state title, properly signed over). Florida Highway Safety
Bill of sale with a full boat description (make, year, length, HIN, propulsion, and price). Florida Highway Safety
Lien release, if a lien is shown on the title (do not “trust me bro” this one).
IDs for everyone signing (so names match paperwork).
Trailer paperwork, if a trailer is included (separate title or registration depending on trailer weight, see below). Florida Highway Safety

Simple “what you need” table
Buying situation | What you should receive before paying |
Florida-titled boat | Florida title completed for transfer + bill of sale Florida Highway Safety |
Out-of-state titled boat | Out-of-state title completed for transfer + bill of sale Florida Highway Safety |
State that doesn’t issue titles | Current registration from that state + bill of sale Florida Highway Safety |
Federally documented boat | Documentation paperwork, and plan for Florida registration decal requirements FWC+1 |
One tiny imperfection that trips people up, the seller signs in the wrong spot or uses a nickname that doesn’t match the title. It’s annoying, and it can slow everything down.
“If the title isn’t in their hand, the money isn’t in mine.”
What changes if the boat is out of state, from a no-title state, or federally documented?
If it’s out of state, Florida generally wants the out-of-state title properly transferred to you. If the state doesn’t require titles, Florida points to using that state’s current registration plus a detailed bill of sale. Florida Highway Safety
If it’s federally documented, Florida treats titling differently (documented vessels are exempt from Florida titling), but documented vessels still need Florida registration compliance in many cases, and Florida law spells out decal placement options for documented vessels. Florida Highway Safety+2FWC+2

Where do Florida registration numbers, decals, and the HIN need to go?
Florida is picky here, and for good reason.
The Florida registration number goes on both sides of the bow, permanent, block letters at least 3 inches high, contrasting color, read left to right. Florida Highway Safety
The registration decal goes on the port side near the registration number, and old decals should be removed. Florida Highway Safety
The HIN (Hull Identification Number) must be displayed, typically branded by the manufacturer, and Florida gives placement guidance for assigned HINs too. Florida Highway Safety
What taxes and fees should you expect in Florida?

Florida lists several common costs buyers run into:
Titling fees vary (electronic vs paper vs expedited), and there’s an extra titling fee for vessels previously registered out of state. Florida Highway Safety
Title transfers also have a transfer fee, and Florida notes an additional fee if you don’t apply within 30 days. Florida Highway Safety
Sales tax depends on whether it’s a dealer sale or casual sale, and Florida even notes cases where an outboard motor and accessories may be exempt if separately itemized and priced on the bill of sale. Florida Highway Safety
If you want the cleanest checkout, itemize the bill of sale like a grown-up, boat, motor, trailer, major accessories.
What are the most common Florida title and registration mistakes buyers make?
Here are the ones that waste the most time:
Paying before seeing the title (or accepting “lost title” without a real plan).
Names don’t match (title name vs seller ID vs bill of sale).
No lien release even though the title shows a lien.
Bill of sale is too vague and missing basics like HIN, length, or full price breakdown. Florida Highway Safety
Missing the 30-day window, then scrambling and paying extra. Florida Highway Safety+1
Boat title and registration in Florida FAQ, what do people ask the most?
Can I run the boat home before I register it?
Florida gives a 30-day window after purchase, and during that time you’re expected to keep proof of purchase date onboard. Don’t treat that like a free-for-all, get your paperwork moving fast. Florida Highway Safety
What if the seller says the boat is “registered” but not titled?
Registration is not the same as a title. For many motorized boats, Florida expects both unless an exemption applies. Florida Highway Safety
If I buy from a private seller, do I still pay sales tax?
Yes, sales tax can still apply. Florida explains different tax treatment for dealer vs casual sales, including how outboard motors may be treated when itemized. Florida Highway Safety
Where do I file the paperwork in Florida?
Florida points you to a county tax collector or license plate agent office for titles and registrations. Florida Highway Safety
How do I replace a lost Florida vessel title or registration?
Florida lists forms for duplicates, including a form for duplicate registration and another for duplicate title, with fees and processing notes. Florida Highway Safety
Buying a boat in Florida should feel like a win, not a paperwork fight. If you keep it simple, title in hand, clean bill of sale, no lien surprises, you’ll save yourself days of stress and you’ll actually get on the water.
If you want to skip the headache, check out what we have available, and if you’re unsure about a specific paperwork situation, reach out and we’ll point you in the right direction.

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