Title 46 › Subtitle Subtitle II— - Vessels and Seamen › Part Part H— - Identification of Vessels › Chapter CHAPTER 121— - DOCUMENTATION OF VESSELS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - ENDORSEMENTS AND SPECIAL DOCUMENTATION › § 12119
Lets owners who are mostly in leasing or financing get a coastwise endorsement for a vessel if a few conditions are met. The vessel must otherwise qualify. The owner must send an annual certificate showing either that it is a leasing company, bank, or financial firm that holds the ship only as a passive investment, does not operate ships for hire, is not linked to any charterer, and is independent from people who control the ship; or that it meets a set of limits: the owner’s vessels are no more than 10% of its book value and no more than 10% of its revenue comes from ships; at least 70% of the tonnage carried on its coastwise vessels is “qualified proprietary cargo”; any other cargo is oil, petroleum products, petrochemicals, or liquefied natural gas; none of the vessels carry molten sulphur; and the owner had at least one such documented vessel on August 9, 2004. The certificate can apply only to tank vessels of at least 6,000 gross tons (or a qualifying towing vessel). The vessel must be under a demise charter to a U.S. citizen for at least 3 years (or a shorter time the Secretary allows). The charter and any changes must be filed with the certificate or within 10 days and are public. If a charter ends because the charterer defaulted, the Secretary may keep the endorsement in place for up to 6 months. A vessel that meets these rules is treated as owned only by U.S. citizens under U.S. law. The law defines several terms in one line each: affiliate = a person or company under common control; cargo = excludes cargo held in name only to avoid the rules; oil = as defined in the referenced law; passive investment = an owner not involved in managing the asset; qualified proprietary cargo = mainly oil/LNG/petrochemical cargo the owner (or its affiliate) actually owns or that meets certain fleet or vessel rules (including some large LNG tankers delivered after December 31, 1999 for Alaska-to-continental U.S. trade); United States affiliate = an affiliate whose main business is in the United States.
Full Legal Text
Shipping — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
46 U.S.C. § 12119
Title 46 — Shipping
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73