Marine Survey Common Findings and Practical Remedies

From Survey Findings to Smart Fixes: Practical Remedies Every Boat Owner Should Know

A marine survey report can feel overwhelming—pages of findings, recommendations, and technical terminology. The good news? Most issues are correctable, and many remedies are straightforward when addressed early.

Below are typical remedies aligned to the most frequent survey findings. [


1. Electrical System Remedies

Typical fixes include:

  • Replacing corroded terminals and connectors
  • Securing wire runs with proper clamps
  • Installing correct circuit breakers or fuses
  • Replacing wing‑nut battery connections with marine‑grade fasteners
  • Labeling wiring and breakers properly

Owner tip: Use a qualified marine electrician familiar with ABYC standards. This is not a DIY area where shortcuts pay off.


2. Addressing Hull and Deck Moisture

Remedies depend on severity:

  • Localized moisture: drying, rebedding hardware, sealing penetrations
  • Deck soft spots: core replacement in affected zones
  • Blistering: grinding, drying cycles, barrier coats
  • Stress cracks: reinforcing mounting points or redistributing loads

Owner tip: Moisture repairs cost far less when addressed early. Survey moisture readings establish a baseline you can monitor over time.


3. Mechanical Corrections

Common remedies:

  • Replacing hoses, belts, and clamps
  • Servicing heat exchangers and exhaust components
  • Correcting fuel‑line routing
  • Updating maintenance documentation
  • Resolving minor leaks before they escalate

Owner tip: Mechanics often prioritize “runability.” Surveyors focus on long‑term reliability and safety—both perspectives matter.


4. Safety and Compliance Corrections

These are usually the fastest and least expensive fixes:

  • Replace expired flares or convert to approved electronic distress signals
  • Update fire extinguishers and inspection tags
  • Install CO detectors and smoke alarms
  • Label fuel shut‑offs and battery switches

Owner tip: Completing these items quickly can prevent insurance delays or coverage restrictions.


Prioritizing Survey Recommendations

Survey findings are usually categorized as:

  • Safety‑critical
  • Recommended repairs
  • Maintenance or upgrades

Not everything must be done at once. A good strategy is:

  1. Address safety items immediately
  2. Schedule mechanical and structural repairs during planned yard periods
  3. Budget cosmetic or optional upgrades separately

The Bottom Line

A marine survey is not an obstacle—it’s an asset. Owners who treat findings as actionable guidance, not criticism, tend to enjoy safer, more reliable boats and stronger resale value.

A well‑remedied survey report tells the next buyer, insurer, or lender one thing clearly:
This vessel has been responsibly maintained.