Buying boat from Out of State, and having it shipped? Has anybody done it ?

Roadworker

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I am From Long Island NY and been looking and see some decent ones from other states. Has anybody done it and how do you go about it buying it without seeing and having it shipped? Any advice please are how to go about it.

thank you
 
I’ve purchased two “long distance”, a Grady in Pompano Beach and a Back Cove 29 in League City Texas. Both I had shipped to Charleston, SC.
Both boats I flew in and out for the sea trial after having both boats surveyed after executing a contract. I don’t recommend buying a boat sight unseen by the buyer. Have a contract, have it surveyed and perform a sea trial.
On the Back Cove, the sellers agent helped me secure a local shipper who I met and hired during the sea trial. The Pompano Grady I hired a Florida shipper and used his trailer since the owner kept the boat on a lift and didn’t have one.
 
I am From Long Island NY and been looking and see some decent ones from other states. Has anybody done it and how do you go about it buying it without seeing and having it shipped? Any advice please are how to go about it.

thank you
Well, I guess it's 100% your comfort level if you don't want to go see it and/or if you want a survey on it or not. As far as your shipping question... how would you get the boat to you if it wasn't shipped or driven by sea? You could go get it yourself with a trailer is the only other option.
 
I did nearly the exact same as Coastboater when buying a Sailfish out of Maryland. Only difference is that I have a good relationship with a boat hauler already and he went and got it for me when the deal was done.

Hard part for me was finding a surveyor who wasn't already at least known to the selling marina. I just relied on Google and talked to a few.
 
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I’ve purchased two “long distance”, a Grady in Pompano Beach and a Back Cove 29 in League City Texas. Both I had shipped to Charleston, SC.
Both boats I flew in and out for the sea trial after having both boats surveyed after executing a contract. I don’t recommend buying a boat sight unseen by the buyer. Have a contract, have it surveyed and perform a sea trial.
On the Back Cove, the sellers agent helped me secure a local shipper who I met and hired during the sea trial. The Pompano Grady I hired a Florida shipper and used his trailer since the owner kept the boat on a lift and didn’t have one.
Thank you for reply, my problem is i am unable to go look at boat as location are far and i have obligations here that can not be let undone . I thought having a surveyor do it and all checks out would be no need to look at it And just have it shipped up
 
I live in the Seattle area and have bought 3 different boats over about a 4 year period, all of which oddly enough were located in Maryland, and then I did the road trip myself to pick up each one. In regards to the purchase itself... the first and last boats were from dealerships/brokers and the second one was a private party. I prefer dealing with a dealership/broker, as I financed each boat and having my credit union wiring/overnighting the funds to a dealership as opposed to a private party was a bit better for my peace of mind. Also, with the boats being under contract from a dealership, if the deal were for some reason to go south, the company didn't want to release the boat or give you the funds back, then my credit union would be able to go after the dealership directly. Anyway, for the first boat I did what you're wanting to do, where I made an offer on the boat with the seller contingent upon a favorable survey, had a surveyor go out and inspect the boat for me, said that I was still interested in buying the boat after the favorable survey and basically had the surveyor acting on my behalf. We drew up a bill of sale, my credit union wire transferred/overnighted the funds to the seller and the deal was done. At that point when the funds had cleared, the boat was mine and it was then my responsibility to either arrange shipping or to pick up the boat myself in person. I checked with UShip and other companies for all 3 boats that I purchased over the years, most of the time it seemed like the shipping costs were almost double what it would cost to do the trek myself, and it would take 2-3 weeks just for them to get to the boat, and then another week to get it out here to Seattle from Maryland.

So, each time I did the trek myself, the first time it was out and back roundtrip, the second/third times I flew out, bought the boats, rented a truck/U-Haul and then trailered them back the 3,000+ miles across the country myself. Check with the two below websites and find an accredited marine surveyor that you trust and has good reviews online. Do the same with UShip and/or other shipping companies if you're wanting to have the boat shipped for you. Go with a company that you trust and also has good reviews online as well. There have been a few, one member of which was on here and another was my neighbor, where they had a company ship a boat for them and the shipping company did either minor or considerable damage to the boat, to where the one boat ended up getting totaled. The one that was totaled was a member on here that had a shipping company do a transport for him, to where the company was for some reason trailering the boat down the highway in the middle of a snow storm, flipped the boat and it ended up off the road in between the lanes of the highway. Obviously that occurred during the wintertime and tomorrow is the 1st of June, so I don't imagine that will be the case for having any snow during this time of year, but do you due diligence in looking at surveyors/shippers to do the work for you, make sure each is insured, pay the extra for the additional insurance or whatever their coverages/costs are so that you have full coverage in the event that anything happens. Or as mentioned above, depending on the location of the boat as well as your desire to do so, you could always do the trek yourself, save a few bucks and have some fun while doing so? If the boat is say 1k miles or less from you, you could always drive that yourself, saving yourself some money, do it over a long weekend or less and maybe have some fun while doing so? For my first boat, it was right before the 4th of July and I was trying to do the trek as quickly as possible. There were two different days where I put in just under 1,200 miles of driving each day, of which I wouldn't recommend doing that. But 300-500+ miles a day, especially at highway speeds shouldn't be too terribly difficult and to where as mentioned above, if it's less than 1k miles total, you could easily do that in 2 days while going 60-70 mph. Either way, good luck with the possible purchase, below are two links for sites where you can find accredited marine surveyors in the area where the boats are located. Then there's UShip.com and the thread for when I bought my Grady White back in October of 2021. Good luck!




 
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I live in the Seattle area and have bought 3 different boats over about a 4 year period, all of which oddly enough were located in Maryland, and then I did the road trip myself to pick up each one. In regards to the purchase itself... the first and last boats were from dealerships/brokers and the second one was a private party. I prefer dealing with a dealership/broker, as I financed each boat and having my credit union wiring/overnighting the funds to a dealership as opposed to a private party was a bit better for my peace of mind. Also, with the boats being under contract from a dealership, if the deal were for some reason to go south, the company didn't want to release the boat or give you the funds back, then my credit union would be able to go after the dealership directly. Anyway, for the first boat I did what you're wanting to do, where I made an offer on the boat with the seller contingent upon a favorable survey, had a surveyor go out and inspect the boat for me, said that I was still interested in buying the boat after the favorable survey and basically had the surveyor acting on my behalf. We drew up a bill of sale, my credit union wire transferred/overnighted the funds to the seller and the deal was done. At that point when the funds had cleared, the boat was mine and it was then my responsibility to either arrange shipping or to pick up the boat myself in person. I checked with UShip and other companies for all 3 boats that I purchased over the years, most of the time it seemed like the shipping costs were almost double what it would cost to do the trek myself, and it would take 2-3 weeks just for them to get to the boat, and then another week to get it out here to Seattle from Maryland.

So, each time I did the trek myself, the first time it was out and back roundtrip, the second/third times I flew out, bought the boats, rented a truck/U-Haul and then trailered them back the 3,000+ miles across the country myself. Check with the two below websites and find an accredited marine surveyor that you trust and has good reviews online. Do the same with UShip and/or other shipping companies if you're wanting to have the boat shipped for you. Go with a company that you trust and also has good reviews online as well. There have been a few, one member of which was on here and another was my neighbor, where they had a company ship a boat for them and the shipping company did either minor or considerable damage to the boat, to where the one boat ended up getting totaled. The one that was totaled was a member on here that had a shipping company do a transport for him, to where the company was for some reason trailering the boat down the highway in the middle of a snow storm, flipped the boat and it ended up off the road in between the lanes of the highway. Obviously that occurred during the wintertime and tomorrow is the 1st of June, so I don't imagine that will be the case for having any snow during this time of year, but do you due diligence in looking at surveyors/shippers to do the work for you, make sure each is insured, pay the extra for the additional insurance or whatever their coverages/costs are so that you have full coverage in the event that anything happens. Or as mentioned above, depending on the location of the boat as well as your desire to do so, you could always do the trek yourself, save a few bucks and have some fun while doing so? If the boat is say 1k miles or less from you, you could always drive that yourself, saving yourself some money, do it over a long weekend or less and maybe have some fun while doing so? For my first boat, it was right before the 4th of July and I was trying to do the trek as quickly as possible. There were two different days where I put in just under 1,200 miles of driving each day, of which I wouldn't recommend doing that. But 300-500+ miles a day, especially at highway speeds shouldn't be too terribly difficult and to where as mentioned above, if it's less than 1k miles total, you could easily do that in 2 days while going 60-70 mph. Either way, good luck with the possible purchase, below are two links for sites where you can find accredited marine surveyors in the area where the boats are located. Then there's UShip.com and the thread for when I bought my Grady White back in October of 2021. Good luck!




Thank you , i really dont want to settle . Like to find a 228 model
 
Thank you , i really dont want to settle . Like to find a 228 model

Same here, I sold my first/second boats and wanted to find something bigger, heavier and nicer. Looked at Grady White as well as Parker, Pursuit, Boston Whaler and a few other different brands of boats. I really liked the Grady White 228 Seafarer/232 Gulfstream as well as the Parker 2320, but the Parker's always seemed to be at least $10k+ more. So I settled on Grady White, looked at a 232 Gulfstream here locally and realized it was a bigger boat than what I needed it for, which is basically just trolling for salmon, checking crab pots and cruising. So, I was basically set on going with a 228 Seafarer. It took me just over a year to find my boat, of which several popped up online, I put an offer down on one from a dealership down in Florida, then pulled the offer on that, as the boat wasn't anywhere near the condition it was described to be in. Paid a surveyor to go out and inspect a boat in New York from a private party, and again that boat wasn't anywhere near the condition it was described to be in. Then, I ended up finding my boat from a Grady White dealership in Maryland, paid $26.5k for the boat, motor and trailer... have loved the boat ever since I bought her. What is your max distance, budget and so forth? I've helped probably a handful or two of people on here find their boats in the past. Just have to remember to check daily online for boats if you're seriously looking, as well as be patient and if the boat doesn't seem like the one, be willing to pass on it. I passed up on multiple boats, as mentioned above, and even paid a surveyor $650 to go out and look at the one in New York that I ended up pulling my offer on. I really didn't want to, as I had money invested into the boat, but I believe we agreed on $32.5k for the boat, motor, trailer package, but the surveyor found damage and other issues with the boat that were going to cost even more to fix. At the time, $35k was my max budget and didn't want to go above that, and I was already at $32.5k just for the boat, so I passed on that one. And I'm very much glad that I did.