Title 46 › Subtitle Subtitle II— - Vessels and Seamen › Part Part B— - Inspection and Regulation of Vessels › Chapter CHAPTER 33— - INSPECTION GENERALLY › § 3318
Makes owners, operators, and vessels pay fines or face criminal charges for breaking safety and inspection rules. Owners, charterers, operators, agents, masters, or others in charge can be fined up to $5,000 for operating a vessel in violation of these rules. The vessel itself can also be held responsible for the fine. Knowingly making, selling, or trying to sell safety equipment that is so defective it won't do its job is a class D felony. Altering or servicing lifesaving or fire equipment for pay and intentionally making it unsafe is a class D felony. Using a device to let a boiler be put above allowed pressure, tampering with boiler gauges or warnings, or letting a boiler’s water fall below its safe level while running are class D felonies. Forging or fraudulently using required test marks or stamps, or wrongfully marking required materials, are class D felonies. Intentionally changing or destroying approved plans to deceive or hinder a U.S. official is a class A misdemeanor. Interfering with inspection of a nautical school vessel, breaking its specific rules, or being an owner or officer of a school vessel run in violation can bring a civil fine up to $5,000. Failing to give the notice required by section 3304(b) or violating section 3309(c) can bring fines up to $1,000. Running a vessel that must be inspected without its certificate can cost up to $10,000 per day, except vessels under 1,600 gross tons face up to $2,000 per day. You are not fined for that if you notified the Secretary under section 3309(c), followed all directions for inspection, and the Secretary finds unforeseen circumstances kept the inspection from happening. Ignoring a Secretary’s order under section 3311(b) can bring up to $10,000 per day. Many of the criminal acts above can also carry a civil fine up to $5,000, and the vessel can be held responsible if the violation involves the vessel.
Full Legal Text
Shipping — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
46 U.S.C. § 3318
Title 46 — Shipping
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73