Licences
Rules vary by state and territory. Engine power, speed, PWC use and age limits can change what you need.
Read licence guide
alloyboats.com.au is a plain-English guide for Australians choosing, using and budgeting for recreational boats — especially practical alloy boats built for fishing, family days and coastal exploring.
Boat ownership is brilliant. It also punishes lazy planning. Sort the basics early and you save money, stress and very awkward ramp moments.
Rules vary by state and territory. Engine power, speed, PWC use and age limits can change what you need.
Read licence guideLifejackets, flares, EPIRBs, anchors and radios are not “nice to have”. They are trip-critical.
Check safety rulesThe purchase price is only the shiny bit. Add trailer, rego, insurance, servicing, fuel and storage.
Build your budgetAluminium boats are popular across Australia because they are practical. They tow easily, handle beach launches well, resist knocks around ramps and suit fishing, crabbing, camping and family cruising.
That does not mean every tinny, centre console or plate boat is right for every skipper. Hull shape, freeboard, beam, storage, motor size and where you boat matter more than pub opinions. Yep, even Uncle Gazza’s.
Use these guides as your pre-purchase checklist, pre-launch checklist and pre-family-trip sanity check.
Where people boat, what to plan, how conditions change and how to choose realistic trips.
Explore recreation guideUnderstand licences, registration, personal watercraft rules and state differences.
Understand permitsTinnies, bowriders, centre consoles, cuddy cabins, plate boats and more — compared simply.
Compare hulls
Australia has national themes but state-based boating rules. NSW, Queensland, Victoria, WA, SA, Tasmania, the ACT and NT can each set different requirements.
Use this site to learn the questions to ask. Then verify current requirements with your state or territory marine safety authority before operating a boat.
Read the disclaimer