Title 46 › Subtitle Subtitle II— - Vessels and Seamen › Part Part B— - Inspection and Regulation of Vessels › Chapter CHAPTER 31— - GENERAL › § 3105
If a boat is using electronic navigational charts made by a government hydrographic office or that meet standards the Secretary accepts, those electronic charts count as the required charts on board. This applies to: a self-propelled commercial boat 65 feet or longer; any boat carrying more than a number of paying passengers set by the Secretary; a towing boat more than 26 feet long and 600 horsepower; and any other boat the Secretary decides needs electronic charts for safe navigation. The Secretary can exempt a boat or certain waters if e-charts are not needed, and can allow boats that operate only landward of the baseline to use software-only, platform-independent chart systems if they provide enough detail for safe navigation. Unless an international treaty says otherwise, this rule does not apply to foreign ships that are simply passing through U.S. waters and are not going to or leaving a U.S. port, including innocent passage in the territorial sea and transit through international straits.
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Shipping — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
46 U.S.C. § 3105
Title 46 — Shipping
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73