MS_Adventure
Member
Hello All, under UK flag, are there any significant benefits/s of registering under Part 1 vs SSR? I am about to register a used vessel and will be cruising mainly in the Med then maybe Carribean in 2020.
Thanks
Thanks
SSR
Pro: cheap, simple to obtain, does the job (and no more).
Con: only available to UK residents. Confers no evidence of ownership.
Part 1
Pro: includes evidence of vessels freedom from mortgage and evidence of ownership. Available to UK nationals (and some others) wherever resident. (Used to confer a guarantee of consular assistance, but this mysteriously disappeared some years ago.)
Con: more expensive than SSR per annum; first registration requires a measurement survey, also at some expense.
FWIW, based on comments here over the years, many people buying a boat already on Part 1 seem to choose to maintain it; otherwise, the preference seems to be for SSR.
My part 1 ran out and I Changed to SSR no problems at all , but you must wait for part 1 to expire ,
thanks for the correction .:encouragement:When buying a boat, part 1 in previous owners name can be cancelled whether expired or not, we did it.
from the back of my part 1 cert:
Important Information
A Certificate of Registry is not proof of ownership.
Details of registered mortgages are not shown.
So evidence but not proof.
I'm non resident and the boat was part 1 when I bought her so a no brainer for me.
So evidence but not proof.
The SSR was indeed introduced because of the difficulty of many to supply the paper-chain of original ownership provenance required for Part 1 registration. When a more stringent effort was started to try to cut down on dubious SSR applications, the onus was reduced to only five years ownership proof for Part 1 registration. That was when I registered my own Italian-berthed yacht due to my expatriate residence. Yes, it was expensive due to the need for the tonnage survey but at least I had a local, authorized surveyor.In my opinion , and its only an opinion, if Part 1 was needed for small leisure craft they would not have introduced a simpler and less expensive way like the SSR
We had a battle renewing our SSR as we were in Panama when we noticed it had expired. We were told we would need to go to Part 1 registery as we were not resident at the time. This was incorrect. We are ordinarily resident although I havent been back in the UK for a couple of years. After a 3month battle where they had to take legal advice, they accepted that we were ordinarliy resident and we got our £25 SSR renewal.
(FWIW, entitlement to NHS healthcare has changed in precisely the same way.)
Any link to changes? An ex forumite was recently refused UK treatment by his GP, told he is no longer entitled although all was OK a year or so ago.
Any link to changes? An ex forumite was recently refused UK treatment by his GP, told he is no longer entitled although all was OK a year or so ago.
The “unique name” is usually achieved by including “.... of ....” in the registered name but not necessarily on the stern.