Sint Maarten Marine Trade Association
 

Customs & Immigration

General info

The island is a duty-free zone and therefore goods can be imported free of payment and formalities. However, restricted goods such as drugs, firearms and ammunition, explosives and so on should be declared to the authorities when clearing in.

In general, visiting yachtsmen are permitted to stay on the island for a maximum period of three months. This will sometimes vary according to your nationality and so it is best to enquire when clearing in.

Great Bay:
Immigration Department is located just outside the port gates.

Immigration Department:
Daily from: 0800 to 1800hrs

Clearance Office:
Monday to Friday: 0800 to 1200hrs and 1300 to 1630hrs
Saturday and Sunday: 0900 to 1200hrs
Closed on public holidays.
You can clear out in advance.

Simpson Bay:
The Immigration Department is located in the Police Station adjacent the channel into Simpson Bay Lagoon.

Clearance Office:
Monday to Friday: 0800 to 1200hrs and 1300 to 1700hrs
Saturday and Sunday: 0730 to 1530hrs
Closed on public holidays.
You can clear out in advance.

 

Yacht Clearing

The Dutch Side

All vessels arriving in or departing from St. Maarten waters must clear in and out with the Immigration Department. This can be done either in Great Bay or Simpson Bay.

The French Side

The procedure for clearing in and out is the same as for the Dutch side. The office is situated at the waterfront in Marigot Bay opposite Marina Fort Louis. The department is named DISSILEC, and is usually open every day from 0700 hrs to 1900 hrs. They do not monitor any VHF Ch.

 

Drugs & Firearms

In keeping with most Caribbean islands, drugs are illegal and the penalties for possession are severe. Yachtsmen caught with drugs risk losing their vessel as well as their freedom.

All firearms, ammunition and explosives carried aboard your vessel should be declared to the authorities when you clear in. Failure to do so could well result in your vessel being impounded if you are caught, together with a fine or jail sentence.

 

Customs Clearance Fees

USD 2 for boats of 1 - 99 net tons
USD 5 for boats of 100 - 499 net tons
USD 9 for boats of more than 500 net tons
 

Visa Regulations

The visa waiver program for yachts applies to the following:


• Only crew of a yacht with paid crew and paying passengers or owners on board, with a minimum length of 14.6 meters (48 feet), possessing cabins for a minimum of 6 passengers and separate sleeping quarters for the crew are eligible for stays of up to 30 days at a time with a maximum stay of 90 total days.
• The passengers must either be paying passengers, or owners and owner's guests of the relevant yacht.
• The vessel cannot be primarily a ferry or for the transport of cargo.
• Finally the crew without visas must have an internationally recognized sailor's log or Seaman's Book.


Cruising yachts with just owners/guests and no paid crew are not eligible for this program and must have visas if they are nationals of countries are on the visa required list.

Click here for the list of countries requiring a visa for the Netherlands Antilles.

For more information please contact us.



Press Release from the Department of Information Secretariat Council of Ministers of the Netherlands Antilles



Visa policy for those on board commercial yachts liberalized

After evaluation by the Netherlands-Antillean authorities it has been decided to far reaching liberalization of the visa policy for crew and passengers of commercial yachts. This is especially important for commercial pleasure yachts which call at the islands of the Netherlands Antilles. Mention can be made of the pleasure yachts which moor at the Spanish Water (Curaçao) and Simpson Bay (Sint Maarten).

In anticipation of a definitive mechanism the liberalization applies till further notice, however, till ultimately July 1, 2010. The Minister of General Affairs and Foreign Relations, Mrs. Emily de Jongh-Elhage and the Minister of Justice of the Netherlands Antilles, Mr. David Dick, have decided hereto.

Of the comprehension "commercial yacht" (luxury commercial pleasure yacht) it is assumed when it is a nautical vessel with paid crew and paid (paying) passengers on board, the size of the yacht is minimal 14.6 meters (48 feet), it possesses cabins for minimum 6 passengers and separate sleeping quarters for the crew, transporting of freight is not the main purpose of the voyage. Besides the local labor legislation must be complied with and the passengers must either be paying passengers, or owner of the relevant commercial yacht. Finally the crew must have the disposal of an internationally recognized sailor's log.

The visa policy of the Netherlands Antilles is a joint exercise of the visa work group in which are represented members of the Ministry of Justice and the Ministry of General Affairs and Foreign Relations. In specifically this framework they have worked closely with the stakeholders in the shipping sector of the Netherlands Antilles.


 

Countries requiring a visa for the Netherlands Antilles

Afghanistan
Albania
Algeria
Angola
Armenia
Azerbaijan
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Belarus
Benin
Bhutan
Bosnia - Herzegovina
Botswana
Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cambodia
Cameroon
Cape Verde
Central African Republic
China
Columbia
Comoros
Congo Democratic Republic (Zaire)
Cuba
Djibouti
Dominican Republic
East Timor
Egypt
Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Ethiopia
Federal Republic Of Yugoslavia
Fiji
Gabon
Gambia
Georgia
Ghana
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Haiti
India
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Ivory Coast
Jordan
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Kiribati
Kuwait
Kyrgyzstan / Kirghizia
Laos
Lebanon
Lesotho
Liberia
Libya
Macedonia (Yugoslavian Republic)
Madagascar
Malawi
Maldiven
Mali
Marshall Islands
Mauritania (Islamic Republic)
Mauritius
Micronesia
Moldavia
Mongolia
Morocco
Mozambique
Myanmar (Burma)
Namibia
Nauru
Nepal
Niger
Nigeria
North Korea
Northern Marias
Oman
Pakistan
Palau
Palestinian Authority
Papa New Guinea
Peru
Philippines
Qatar
Russian Federation
Rwanda
Sao Tome en Principe
Saudi Arabia
Sechellen
Senegal
Serbia - Montenegro (Yugoslavia)
Sierra Leone
Solomon Islands
Somalia
South Africa
Sri Lanka
Sudan
Swaziland
Syria
Taiwan
Tajikistan
Tanzania
Thailand
United Arabic Emirates
Uzbekistan
Vanuatu

Togo (Togolese Republic)
Tonga
Tsjaad
Tunisia
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Tuvalu
Uganda
Ukraine
Vietnam
Western Samoa
Yemen
Zambia
Zimbabwe
 

Harbour Fees

Harbor fees per week or a portion of a week:

USD 20 for boats from 8 to 13 meters in length
USD 40 for boats from 13 to 18 meters in length
USD 60 for boats from 18 to 23 meters in length
USD 90 for boats from 23 to 28 meters in length
USD 120 for boats from 28 to 33 meters in length
USD 150 for boats from 33 to 38 meters in length
USD 180 for boats from 38 to 43 meters in length
USD 210 for boats from 43 to 50 meters in length
USD 250 for boats from 50 to 75 meters in length
USD 290 for boats from 75 meters or larger

 

 

Harbour Clearance Fees

USD 5 for boats of 1 - 99 net tons
USD 10 for boats of 100 - 499 net tons
USD 20 for boats of more than 500 net tons
 

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