Federal
Requirements and Safety Tips for Recreational Boats
Visual Distress Signals
All vessels used on coastal waters,
the Great Lakes, territorial seas, and those waters connected
directly to them, up to a point where a body of water is less
than two miles wide, must be equipped with U.S.C.G. Approved
visual distress signals. Vessels owned in the United States
operating on the high seas must be equiped with U.S.C.G. Approved
visual distress signals.

These vessels are not required to carry
day signals but must carry night signals when operating from
sunset to sunrise:
- Recreational boats less than 16
feet in length
- Boats participating in organized
events such as races, regattas, or marine parades.
- Open sailboats less than 26 feet
in length not equipped with propulsion machinery.
- Manually propelled boats.
Pyrotechnic Devices
Pyrotechnic Visual Distress Signals must
be Coast Guard Approved, in serviceable condition, and readily
accessible.
- They are marked with an expiration
date. Expired signals may be carried as extra equipment,
but can not be counted toward meeting the visual distress
signal requirement, since they may be unreliable.
- Launchers manufactured before January
1, 1981, intended for use with approved signals, are not
required to be Coast Guard Approved.
- If pyrotechnic devices are selected
a minimum of three are required. That is, three signals
for day use and three signals for night. Some pyrotechnic
signals meet both day and night use requirements.
- Pyrotechnic devices should be stored
in a cool, dry location, if possible.
- A watertight container painted red
or orange and prominently marked "DISTRESS SIGNALS"
or "FLARES" is recommended.
U.S.C.G. Approved Pyrotechnic Visual Distress
Signals and associated devices include:
- Pyrotechnic red flares, hand-held
or aerial.
- Pyrotechnic orange smoke, hand-held
or floating.
- Launchers for aerial red meteors
or parachute flares.
[EACH OF THESE DEVICES HAS A DIFFERENT OPERATING
(BURNING) TIME. CHECK THE LABEL TO SEE HOW LONG EACH PYROTECHNIC
DEVICE WILL ACTUALLY BE ILLUMINATED. THIS WILL ALLOW YOU TO
SELECT A WARNING DEVICE BETTER SUITED TO THE CONDITIONS WHERE
YOUR BOAT WILL OPERATE?]
Non-Pyrotechnic Devices
Non-Pyrotechnic Visual Distress Signals
must be in serviceable condition, readily accessible, and
certified by the manufacturer as complying with U.S.C.G. requirements.
They include:
Orange distress flag
- Day signal only.
- Must be at least 3 x 3 feet with
a black square and ball on an orange background.
- Must be marked with an indication
that it meets Coast Guard requirements in 46 CFR 160.072.
- Most distinctive when attached and
waved on a paddle, boathook, or flown from a mast.
- May also be incorporated as part
of devices designed to attract attention in an emergency,
such as balloons, kites, or floating streamers.
Electric distress light
- Accepted for night use only
- Automatically flashes the international
SOS distress signal: (... — — — ...)
- Must be marked with an indication
that it meets Coast Guard requirements in 46 CFR 161.013.
Under Inland Navigation Rules, a high intensity
white light flashing at regular intervals from 50-70 times
per minute is considered a distress signal. Such devices do
NOT count toward meeting the visual distress signal requirement,
however.
Regulations prohibit display of visual distress
signals on the water under any circumstances except when assistance
is required to prevent immediate or potential danger to persons
on board a vessel.
All distress signals have distinct advantages
and disadvantages. No single device is ideal under all conditions
or suitable for all purposes. Pyrotechnics are universally
recognized as excellent distress signals. However, there is
potential for injury and property damage if not properly handled.
These devices produce a very hot flame and the residue can
cause burns and ignite flammable materials.
Pistol launched and hand-held parachute
flares and meteors have many characteristics of a firearm
and must be handled with caution. In some states they are
considered a firearm and prohibited from use.
The following are just a few of the variety
and combination of devices which can be carried in order to
meet the requirements:
- Three hand-held red flares (day
and night).
- One hand-held red flare and two
parachute flares (day and night).
- One hand-held orange smoke signal,
two floating orange smoke signals (day) and one electric
distress light (night only).
Pyrotechnic
Device Examples |

Red Flare
(hand held/day and night) |

Parachute Flare
(day and night) |

Orange Smoke Signal
(hand held/day only) |

Floating Orange Smoke Signal
(day only) |

Red Meteor
(day and night) |
Non-Pyrotechnic
Device Examples |

Orange Flag
(day only) |

Electric Distress Signals
(night only) |
All boaters should be able to signal for
help. Boaters must have current dated U.S.C.G. Approved day
and night signals for all boats operating on coastal and open
bodies of water.
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