Florida's coastline and waterways make boating, diving, fishing, and water sports a way of life. If you're one of the million-plus registered boat owners in Florida or you enjoy water sports regularly, here's how these activities affect your life insurance.
Recreational Boating
Casual recreational boating — fishing trips, cruising the Intracoastal, taking the family out on weekends — generally doesn't affect your life insurance rates at all. Most carriers consider recreational boating a normal hobby and don't charge extra for it. You should disclose your boating activities on the application, but don't expect a premium increase for typical recreational use.
Where it can get more complicated is if you do offshore fishing in deep water, participate in racing, or operate very large vessels commercially. Some carriers have specific guidelines for these activities and may charge a flat extra premium or decline coverage depending on the level of risk involved.
Scuba Diving
Scuba diving is popular in Florida's Keys and along both coasts. Recreational diving within standard depth limits (typically under 100 to 130 feet) and with proper certification usually won't affect your premiums. However, deep diving (below 130 feet), cave diving, wreck penetration diving, or commercial diving can trigger higher rates or exclusions depending on the carrier.
If you're a certified recreational diver who stays within safe limits, be upfront about it on your application. Most carriers are fine with it. If you do more extreme diving, working with an agent who knows which carriers are diver-friendly can help you find coverage without unnecessary surcharges.
Jet Skiing and Surfing
Personal watercraft use and surfing are considered standard recreational activities by most insurance companies and won't impact your rates. Even kiteboarding and paddleboarding are generally fine. The key factor is whether the activity is considered "extreme" or "competitive" — casual participation in any water sport is usually not a rating factor.
Commercial Fishing and Maritime Work
If you work on the water commercially — fishing boats, charter operations, maritime shipping — your occupation will be evaluated as part of underwriting. Commercial fishing is considered a higher-risk occupation by many carriers, and you may face elevated premiums. However, some carriers specialize in marine occupations and offer competitive rates. An independent agent can identify these carriers and shop your application accordingly.
Disclosure Is Essential
The most important thing is to fully disclose your water activities on your application. If you fail to mention that you're an avid cave diver and later die in a diving accident, your family's claim could be contested or denied. Honest disclosure ensures your policy will pay out when your family needs it.
Living the Florida water lifestyle doesn't mean paying more for life insurance. Most recreational water activities have zero impact on your premiums. Just be honest on your application, and you'll have coverage that protects your family — both on land and at sea.
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