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It is the purpose of this guide to introduce Port State Control as an effective method for any yacht owner to make an informed decision on the quality of a prospective flag state for their yacht based on practical rather than anecdotal evidence.

Port State Control is an inspection regime for countries to inspect foreign registered vessels in port and take action against vessels that are deemed to be unseaworthy and/or outside of compliance with the requirements of applicable international conventions.

Inspections by Port State Control Officers involve checking the condition of a vessel and its equipment and checking that the vessel is manned and operated in compliance with applicable international law.

Globally Port State Control is defined by ten regional port state control regimes, namely; Europe and the north Atlantic (Paris MoU); Asia and the Pacific (Tokyo MoU); Latin America (Acuerdo de Viña del Mar); Caribbean (Caribbean MoU); West and Central Africa (Abuja MoU); the Black Sea region (Black Sea MoU); the Mediterranean (Mediterranean MoU); the Indian Ocean (Indian Ocean MoU); the Riyadh MoU and in the United States there is a regime controlled by the United States Coast Guard.

The various Port State Control regimes publish annual reports containing various statistical information including a categorisation of the quality of flag states based on their inspections.  This effectively produces various league table categorising the world’s registries in order of quality.

The Paris MoU is probably the most recognised Port State Control regime which provides an annual ranking of the world’s registries known as the “White, Grey and Blacklist”.

The list is based on the total number of inspections and detentions of vessels over the preceding 3-year rolling period for flags with at least 30 inspections in the period.

Although Port State Control in a yachting context applies to commercial yachts holding load line certification rather than private yachts the system does nonetheless provide the yacht owner of the quality of a potential flag that they might be registering to.

There are a bewildering number of registries directly and third-party service providers indirectly promoting the advantages of various yacht registration jurisdictions as the best place for an owner to register their yacht. With the registries and their promoters all claiming to be the best registration for your yachts the Port State Control tables provide a useful guide to the good, the bad and the downright ugly registration jurisdictions.

At the time of writing the Paris MoU is valid from 1st July 2025 to 30th June 2026. Port State Control authorities will use the list for determining which flags will require a greater number of inspections.

This most recent list ranks France as the best performing flag state.

To place the Paris MoU in a yachting context we have listed the more commonly encountered yacht registries in order of appearance in the table listing their rank overall and highlighted whether they appear on the White, Grey of Blacklist as follows:

White list (i.e. low risk quality flags):

6. Cayman Islands
18. United Kingdom
20. Malta
21. Marshall Islands
25. Isle of Man
37. Poland

Grey List (i.e. medium risk intermediate flag states):

48. Panama
50. Cook Islands

Blacklist (i.e. poorly performing flag states that are considered high or very high risk):

58. Saint Kitts & Nevis
60. Palau
62. Belize

Oceanskies specialises in the registration of yachts in all of the main yacht registry jurisdictions. For specific guidance or questions on any flag states please contact our yacht registration team for assistance.

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