Seller's Guide · Yacht Brokerage

How to Sell a Yacht in Florida

By Thomas Daly, Yacht Broker & Licensed Captain · Updated July 2026 · 10 minute read

Selling a yacht should be thirty to ninety days of coordinated marketing, not a year of stress. It is usually a handful of early decisions, not the market, that turn a clean sale into a slog. This guide covers the three decisions that determine your outcome, plus the process underneath them.

The Short Answer

  • Most yachts close in 60 to 120 days from listing when priced to market.
  • Overpricing 15% over market cuts your buyer pool to roughly 10%.
  • IYBA MLS + YachtWorld syndication reaches the large majority of active luxury yacht buyers.
  • Professional photography and drone footage are non-negotiable - first impression is 80% of the sale.
  • Sea trials happen after offer acceptance, not before.
  • USCG documentation status and lien payoff directly affect your closing timeline.

The three decisions that actually determine your outcome

I have listed yachts across South Florida, the Bahamas, and up the East Coast for more than a decade. Almost every frustrated seller got one of three decisions wrong at the start. Get these right and the rest of the process runs itself.

Decision 1: Brokered sale or private sale

You can sell a yacht yourself. For a smaller boat or a sale to someone you already know, a private deal can work. But once real money is on the table, the math changes fast.

FactorPrivate SaleBrokered (IYBA)
Buyer reachWord of mouth, a classified ad, maybe a Facebook groupYachtWorld, IYBA MLS, Boat Trader, broker network
Time to close6+ months, unpredictable60 to 120 days typical
Paperwork riskYou handle contracts, escrow, title yourselfStandardized forms, bonded escrow, lien search handled
Hassle factorYou field every call and showing yourselfQualified buyers only, I run showings, weekly report
CostNo commission, but you absorb the time and riskCommission paid at closing, split with cooperating broker

My recommendation: for anything at $750,000 and up, list brokered. The reach alone is usually worth more than the commission, and paperwork protection matters more as the number gets bigger. Below that, it is a closer call.

Decision 2: Where you price her

Price is the single biggest factor in how fast your yacht sells and how close to asking. This is not opinion. It is what the market shows across hundreds of hulls, and it is the chart I walk every seller through before we sign a listing agreement.

Listing priceShare of buyers who see her
+15% over market10% of buyers see it
+10% over market30% of buyers see it
Market value60% of buyers see it
-10% below market75% of buyers see it
-15% below market90% of buyers see it

Most search platforms filter by price band, so an overpriced yacht never appears in front of most buyers who want her. Overpriced yachts also help competitors sell - buyers use yours as the comp that makes a fairly priced listing look reasonable. Days on market compound too, since every thirty days she sits, confidence erodes. The right price attracts multiple buyers, and competitive offers beat stubborn asking every time.

My recommendation: price at or just under market on day one. That brings in the 75-90% of buyers who would never see an overpriced listing, and multiple interested parties do more for your final number than a high ask ever will.

Decision 3: Showings in the water or on the hard

Where you show her matters more than most sellers expect. Each option has a real case.

FactorIn-waterOn-the-hard
Buyer experienceFeels like ownership, buyer pictures life aboardFeels clinical, more inspection than sale
Bottom visibilityHidden - fine if recently servicedFull hull and prop visible - good if condition is strong
Sea trial readinessReady to run same dayRequires a splash first, adds days
Best seasonYear-round, weather permittingUseful after haul-out or storm storage

My recommendation: in-water whenever possible. It sells the lifestyle, not just the hardware, and keeps you one call away from a sea trial. On-the-hard makes sense if she is already out for service, or a clean bottom is part of the pitch.

The eight-step process underneath those decisions

Once the three decisions above are settled, the process is repeatable. Most yachts close in 60 to 120 days from signing.

1. Discovery Call

We meet on your boat or on a call. I ask about her history, refits, and your timeline. No pressure to list.

2. Market Analysis

Comparable-driven pricing using the last six months of sales, current inventory, and days on market for hulls like yours.

3. Listing Agreement

IYBA standard central agency listing. Terms, commission, and marketing budget agreed in writing.

4. Prep and Photography

Boat detail, professional photos, drone footage, and a walk-through video. First impression is 80% of the sale.

5. Launch and Market

YachtWorld, IYBA, Boat Trader, broker network outbound, paid placement, and email to my buyer list.

6. Showings and Sea Trials

Qualified buyers only. I run the showings. Sea trials are scheduled after offer acceptance, not before.

7. Offer and Survey

Written offer with a 10% escrow deposit. Marine and engine survey, then a second price talk on any findings.

8. Closing and Wire

Title transfer, lien search, escrow release, and funds to you. Typically 10 to 30 days after offer acceptance.

The Daly Group Yacht Seller's Guide - 18-page PDF playbook cover

Download the full Yacht Seller's Guide (PDF)

The 18-page playbook I hand every yacht seller. Pricing strategy, marketing plan, documentation checklist, sea trial timeline, and closing coordination - the whole file.

  • Full price derivative table
  • IYBA marketing plan template
  • Documentation checklist for USCG/state title
  • Sea trial and survey timeline
  • Closing coordination playbook

Direct download appears here after submit and a backup copy lands in your inbox. Zero spam - Thomas responds to inquiries personally.

What I need from you before we launch

A clean, well-documented yacht sells faster and for more.

Documentation checklist

Vessel registration, USCG documentation, or state title. Bill of sale from your original purchase. Any lien or loan payoff information. Full service and maintenance records, refit documentation with receipts, and a recent survey if you have one within three years.

Condition prep

Cleaned inside and out before photography. All systems in running condition for a sea trial. Personal items removed for showings. Access arranged for our team and buyers on short notice, ideally weekday mornings when the dock is calm and light is best.

Marketing channels I use

Luxury yacht buyers do not browse the classifieds. Every listing gets syndication across YachtWorld, the IYBA MLS, and Boat Trader, direct broker network outbound with co-broke terms published so brokers show her willingly, and paid placement for the first 60 days. Professional photography, drone footage, and a walkthrough video come standard, because first impression is 80% of the sale. And I send every listing directly to my owned buyer list and social channels - an audience that search engines never touch.

About Thomas Daly

Thomas Daly is a licensed yacht broker and USCG licensed captain based in Delray Beach, Florida. He has personally run the boats he lists, not just marketed them, and that hands-on experience shows up in every survey call and sea trial he coordinates. Thomas founded The Daly Group in 2017 to give South Florida clients a single point of contact for lives that cross land and sea. With over $100M closed across real estate and yachting, he represents buyers and sellers of yachts and waterfront property across Palm Beach and Broward counties.

  • FL Yacht Broker License #11793
  • USCG Licensed Captain
  • FL Real Estate License SL3381369
  • $100M+ closed across land and sea
  • Offices: Delray Beach + Pompano Beach
  • Rated 5.0 on Google

Frequently asked questions

How long does it take to sell a yacht in Florida?

Most yachts close in 60 to 120 days from listing when priced to market. Overpriced boats can sit well past that.

What commission does a yacht broker charge?

Commission is negotiated per listing and paid at closing from the sale proceeds. When a cooperating broker brings the buyer, the commission is split with them.

Do I need to use YachtWorld or can I list privately?

You can sell privately for smaller or personal transactions. Above roughly $750,000, a brokered listing on YachtWorld and the IYBA MLS reaches far more buyers and closes faster.

What does an IYBA listing include?

Syndication on YachtWorld and the IYBA MLS, broker outreach with published co-broke terms, and standardized paperwork for offers, escrow, and survey.

Do I need to be present for showings and sea trials?

No. I run showings and coordinate sea trials. You need to make the yacht available and provide a licensed captain for the trial if you are not running her yourself.

What happens if the marine survey finds problems?

Almost every yacht has findings - safety items, working systems, or cosmetic issues. I recommend a formal counter within 48 hours, typically 3 to 8% of contract price.

Are yacht sales in Florida subject to sales tax?

Generally yes, with a cap for qualifying vessels and different rules for out-of-state buyers. This is deal-specific, so I coordinate with a marine-savvy CPA on every transaction.

How does closing and title transfer work on a US-flagged yacht?

Buyer funds sit in bonded escrow. At closing, the title transfer executes, any lien is paid off, and the balance wires to you the same day, typically 10 to 30 days after offer acceptance.

Also from The Daly Group

Selling a waterfront home and the boat that goes with it?

The Daly Group is dual-licensed. If your dock is part of the sale, the Real Estate Seller's Guide walks through the coordinated way I list both - one team, one closing calendar, one point of contact.

Read the Real Estate Seller's Guide →