Yachting Monthly
- Digital edition
How to prepare for your Yachtmaster Offshore exam
- Theo Stocker
- August 16, 2024
In an age of digital navigation and walk ashore pontoons, how hard can the RYA Yachtmaster Offshore be? Theo Stocker prepared to take the test to find out
Many very competent and highly experienced yachtsmen and women don’t have any qualifications at all and are content to keep it that way, but for some reason, not being a Yachtmaster bothered me. I was pretty sure I was up to the standard, but I didn’t know.
Once you’ve got the ticket, you become an RYA Yachtmaster, something I’ve wanted to do for years. My friend Andrew and I have been talking about doing it since before his son Daniel, now 16, was born. Perhaps it was time to finally get on with our RYA Yachtmaster Offshore.
Every course I have done up to this point, from RYA Dinghy Level 2 all the way up to Coastal Skipper (some 20 years ago) has been one of the RYA’s ‘course-completion’ qualifications – do the week and if you can do what’s on the syllabus, you get the ticket, signed off by your training centre.
The RYA Yachtmaster Certificates of Competence (Coastal, Offshore and Ocean), however, are run by the RYA under the authority of the Maritime Coastguard Agency (MCA) and as such, they are the pinnacle of training for amateur sailors, and the start of the ladder of commercial qualifications, required for anyone who wants to work as a professional seafarer. You have to meet the pre-entry requirements, but passing is based purely on how you fare during a potentially gruelling day-long practical exam.
It’s now 51 years since the RYA took over examining Yachtmasters from the Board of Trade (now the MCA) in 1973, and Yachting Monthly was, in a small way, involved in shaping some of the practical seamanship elements of the exam.
Clearly, a lot has changed in the intervening years – navigation technology, engines, deck-gear, marinas, and not least the boats themselves. I was eager to see how the RYA Yachtmaster scheme has changed with the times, and if, like many other aspects of sailing, it has simply become easier, or whether it is still the challenging test it always was.
The crew (L-R): Matt Sillars, Andrew Eastham, Row Staples and Theo Stocker
What was I letting myself in for?
From the outset, the RYA were keen to emphasise that Yachtmaster is not an attendance-based course, but a one-day exam in which an examiner will form an objective opinion of your abilities, and will recommend you to the RYA/MCA Yachtmaster Qualification Panel to become a Yachtmaster, or not.
Technically, no instruction is required before the exam and the theory course is not compulsory. However, taking the exam is a significant investment of time and money if you’re not confident of passing, and you will certainly need theory knowledge of the level of the RYA Yachtmaster Offshore shorebased course, with practical experience and skills to match that, to stand any chance of passing.
It is strongly recommended, therefore, that you have a few days’ preparation, ideally immediately before the exam, with the same boat and crew as you’ll have for the exam so you’re at the top of your game. You don’t want to be getting to know the foibles of a boat or crew whilst trying to exude an air of calm and knowledgeable competence.
A hearty meal every evening, and the occasional beer, keep the crew going
Many sailing schools offer places on a Yachtmaster preparation course, normally of five days, for four candidates, with two days of examination at the end of it, as only two candidates can be examined in any one 24-hour period, the exam being a marathon 8-12 hours for one person, and 10-18 hours for two. No more than four candidates can be examined at a time, as they are long days for candidate and examiner alike.
It was also made abundantly clear that while we had four days to prepare, this was not a course on which we could be taught what we needed to know; this should have been gained over our years of experience. The week’s aim was to run through the whole Yachtmaster syllabus to strip away any bluster, revealing to the cold light of day our weaknesses and bad habits.
Rough edges would be polished, but if we were learning new skills for the first time, then we probably were not quite ready for the exam just yet. No pressure!
What Yachtmaster Offshore instructor Matt Sillars says
The week is not a course to learn to be a Yachtmaster Offshore. You need to have done 90% of the work beforehand. The preparation days are about checking skills and finding where you need more work, rather than being taught skills. It’s also very difficult to fake experience and an examiner will spot someone exaggerating their skill set very quickly.
Matt helps Theo and Andrew with some last-minute revision of tidal corrections
Getting prepared for the Yachtmaster Offshore
As I prepared for the week, I quickly found I’d had significant ‘skills fade’ in my detailed knowledge of the Collision Regulations, particularly lights, shapes and sounds, and buoyage light characteristics.
You’ll need a good working knowledge not just of the most common parts of the rules, but of the whole lot, including some of the more esoteric corners of the rule book. Professional seafarers are expect to know every word verbatim; Yachtmasters need to be getting at least 80% of the lights and shapes right, and importantly be able to demonstrate that they understand them, to pass.
Article continues below…
The history of the RYA Yachtmaster scheme as it turns 50
The RYA started examining Yachtmaster candidates in 1973 but in fact the very first Yachtmaster certificates were awarded much earlier.…
12 expert skills to take you beyond Yachtmaster
Rupert Holmes outlines the skills that mark out the good sailors from the great ones, with experience and reflective learning…
The lights shown by trawlers shooting gear, towed vessels of the bizarest dimensions and sizes, and the sound signals of vessels in all sorts of pickles were initially, at best, a little foggy.
It’s easy to feel that in normal, coastal sailing you come across these intricacies so rarely as to make them irrelevant, but the point of the Yachtmaster is that you are able to operate at sea not as an amateur, but on a par with professional seafarers.
Indeed, with a commercial endorsement to your RYA Yachtmaster, you could easily be one of them, if you ever fancied a career change. Knowing the rules also diminishes the chances of ending up in front of an inquest. The detail is fiddly, but it’s not impossible to learn.
Everyone knows the motoring cone, but do you use it? And what about the other shapes?
IRPCS are something you just have to know, and it would be a real shame to fail your Yachtmaster because you hadn’t brushed up beforehand. For ease, many examiners will use packs of flip cards to test your knowledge of lights, shapes, buoyage and collision avoidance during a quiet moment on exam day. It’s not meant to be an interrogation, but if you’re getting more than two in ten wrong then the examiner won’t be able to pass you.
One little tip with sound signals are that it is easy to get overwhelmed once you start adding in all the extra sounds to the basic signals, but there are only a few distinct meanings to remember. These then get added together, but can easily be broken into their composite parts to help you decipher their meanings.
A safety brief can be tailored to your crew, their level of experience and their familiarity with your boat
Yachtmaster Offshore training
The forecast for the week couldn’t have been much better. Typically, the only day there wasn’t sunshine and a decent breeze was the day we had the photographer on board, but the rest of the time there was enough wind to get our teeth into – there’s nothing like trying to sail onto a mooring if there’s no wind, and it’s often a stiff breeze that makes marina manoeuvring tricky.
The aim for day one was to run through the full gambit of skills that would be tested in the exam for Matt to get an idea of where Andrew and I were at. With the food and kit stowed, the day began with the usual safety briefings, engine checks and discussion regarding firefighting.
Safety briefs
A good skipper will always make sure their crew have had a safety brief. If you sail with the same crew on a regular basis, you don’t need to give them the same briefing every time, but an occasional reminder of the main points is probably a good idea, as the details quickly fade. For us, the safety brief was about making sure the people we had on board knew where everything was on a boat they hadn’t sailed before.
Keep tethers and first-aid kit somewhere accessible
For a crew of novices, we would have included things like how to use a fire extinguisher and how to put on a lifejacket, but for experienced sailors, it is sufficient to show them where safety kit is, so things like tethers, fire-fighting equipment, seacocks and softwood bungs, as well as how the distress and MOB functions on this boat’s particular chartplotter and VHF radio work, are all relevant.
On deck, knowing were the MOB recovery kit, engine fire extinguisher and liferaft are is all important.
I’ve been doing engine checks for years, and it’s easy to be familiar with your engine at a basic level. Various acronyms exist to help remind you about what to check, but advice has changed recently to add in one sensible step to an engine check and that is to isolate the engine before opening the case.
You may do this already, but if you don’t, there’s a risk that in the usual melee of getting ready to set sail, someone on deck goes to start the engine while you’ve got your hand on the drive belt. Better switch off the isolator so this can’t happen until you’re done.
The acronym I found most helpful was: IWOBBLE: Isolate; Water (strainer); Oil (level and colour, engine and transmission); Belt (wear and tension); Bilges (empty); Leaks (no oil or fuel spills); Exhaust (clean, and water once the engine has started).
Every boat is different, such as MOB marking systems
It’s worth making sure any experienced sailors on your boat also know how to do some of these so that you as skipper don’t have to be the one with your head stuck in the engine bay when the engine fails on the way into harbour.
Dabs of high-vis paint on the relevant fittings can help direct you to the correct nut to loosen or tighten for each job.
In the exam, you may not have to bleed the engine, but you will need to talk through how you would handle various engine emergencies, from fires to fuel starvation, overheating and prop wraps, so spend time getting familiar with the fuel, water and cooling systems on your boat’s engine so you can point at the right bits.
Marina manoeuvres fill many cruising sailors with dread
Yachtmaster Offshore marina manoeuvres
With the boat and crew ready to go, it was time for our first go at ‘pontoon bashing’. It’s always going to be a little nerve-wracking handling a boat you don’t know well in the confines of a windy and tide-swept marina, so it’s a useful tool for the instructor to quickly get a gauge on your level of confidence and ability.
As someone who normally keeps a boat on a mooring and anchors at every available opportunity, tricky marina berths are something that I rarely visit, so this was a skill that needed a little more attention for me.
‘Parking’ can sometimes look a little boring to the outside observer, but serried ranks of expensive boats and vicious bow rollers and anchors makes this an exercise to really focus the mind. It also forces you to attempt berths that in normal sailing you would often rather avoid, but may be forced to use in a busy marina.
Check prop kick astern when alongside, then try out how the boat responds in open water
Get your bearings
To start, we took time to check the depth sounder was accurate using a leadline, and checking whether it was set to depth below the keel or below the waterline – a critical piece of information. While alongside, put the engine astern and have a look which side the prop wash emerges. The stern will kick to the other side when engaging astern.
We checked the boat’s pivot point too in ahead and astern, and how long the boat needed to get steerage in either direction. All of this can be done in open water.
Assessing the wind and tide is essential before you start a manoeuvre, factoring in what these will be doing in the berth itself, and not just out by the marina entrance. At Mercury Yacht Harbour, when the tide is in full spate, you can get a nasty diagonal cross-current across the berth, and some owners simply avoid coming or going at anything other than slack water.
Letting the boat come to a stop will show how she will want to lie.
Approaching a finger berth will be easier if it is on the outside of your turn
Tricky berths
We then tried a number of different berths of ascending difficulty – coming alongside an open hammerhead was straightforward, where slotting in between two already-moored boats took a little more planning.
Getting in and out of a large bay in which several boats are moored adds complication. In this case, with a strong westerly and an ebbing tide, I concluded it would be easier to do the whole manouevre in astern rather than switching direction and losing steerage part way through.
Don’t forget to think about how you’ll get out of the berth, how other boats will lie, and whether you want wind or sunshine in the cockpit and companionway.
Communicate to crew which lines you want let go first, before you start the manoeuvre, then keep them updated with what you’re doing
Getting into finger berths was straight-forward if they were ‘open’ berths, on the near side of the pontoon so that as the boat slides around the turn, her momentum carries her onto the berth. ‘Closed’ berths, on the far side were trickier, and often demanded going in past the berth, then either turning or reversing direction.
Switching which way you want to lie in the berth may necessitate starting the whole thing in astern rather than ahead. Be ready for this to be a spectator sport as onlookers wait for a victim like Romans in a Colosseum.
Judging what the tide and wind will do to your boat are key to marina manouevring. You also need to know which way the boat will ‘want’ to go in any given situation, and then use it to your advantage – think about stern kick, slide and pivot points.
It’s easy to think about bow and stern springs, but a midships line is one of the most useful. Drive against it in forwards while steering away from the pontoon to bring the bow in and hold the boat parallel.
Motor against a stern line to hold the boat alongside
It is also helpful to think about the ‘favoured’ side every time you enter a marina row. Given the prevailing conditions, you will be pushed to one side or the other, and you want to stay on the upwind or uptide side to keep your options open and your hull clear of the bow rollers waiting to leeward.
A ball fender is a really useful tool as it won’t roll out in the same way as a sausage fender and it has more give in it. Rig it at the point of main load before a manoeuvre.
Don’t forget to have an exit strategy if the approach doesn’t go according to plan so you can get out and try again.
It’s not cheating to have worked out in advance the tidal heights for where you will be sailing on the day of your exam (the beer is optional, but also helps)
Yachtmaster Offshore navigation
Getting a boat from A to B safely and effectively is still at the heart of the RYA Yachtmaster qualification, as it has been from its inception. The tools available to help us navigate have changed dramatically since 1973, however, and even in the last decade have been transformed.
GNSS, chartplotters, AIS, smartphones and internet access have resulted in a revolution. Many sailors have ditched paper almost entirely these days, so have the traditional navigation skills of the Yachtmaster scheme become irrelevant?
On our first evening, Matt set us homework; Andrew would take us from Hamble into the Beaulieu River and I would bring us back. Hardly a challenging trip, and one I’ve often done with little more than cursory planning. That’s not the point though, as if these were unfamiliar waters, I would need to navigate us much more accurately and actively, so this short trip was designed to test our pilotage and passage planning skills.
There was a good list of things to prepare for each day, and ahead of the exam
Definitely not cheating
Electronics and internet-based sources of information were not only allowed, but expected and encouraged for this exercise, albeit we also had to demonstrate our ability to use the ‘old-fashioned’ methods of calculating secondary port tidal heights, tidal streams and courses to steer.
While chartplotters on your phone may have freed us up from the old cliche of the skipper bobbing up and down to the chart table like a rabbit, it is equally as easy to fall into the trap of staring dumbly at our phones, driving a triangle across the screen, all but unaware of where we are in relation to the real world.
The trick is to be able to use every source of navigation information to make sense of the world around you and to sense-check that information against multiple sources of data.
It takes time to put your passage plan into the plotter and to make sure the plotter is set up to give you the information you need
It felt like cheating to be able to get tidal heights from my phone, but I also found the planning stage almost busier as a result. Many online sources of data, especially data, come from unknown origins and can vary a surprising amount, so don’t assume that what a screen is telling you is accurate data. Navionics and Admiralty EasyTides can disagree by up to an hour at times.
It’s also easy to let a machine work something out for you and suggest a route that makes sense on screen, but doesn’t work well in reality. It won’t factor in a good offing from a shallow lee shore, and nor will it care if the waypoints, and therefore the courses you’re steering, are easily identified visually from on deck. A single, long course, with an obvious headmark will be much easier for the helm to steer than lots of short ‘artificial’ courses. Secondary port calculations caused us both headaches as we dragged the process out of our long-term memory. Which way to interpolate and between which numbers is surprisingly easy to get wrong under pressure.
The strengths of paper
Inputting our plans into the chart plotter also takes time, as much from finding where all the dratted functions are in the plotter’s menu options as form the basic principles. For most plotters, planning remains something they do not do well, and using paper is often still faster and easier to get an overview of where safe water is. I’ve also yet to find a way to calculate a proper course to steer on a chartplotter yet, even for a single hour, let alone a longer passage.
When it comes to pilotage, a plotter or phone on deck is enormously helpful to see where you are. It isn’t however, the easiest way to present the essential information you need at your fingertips, and a notebook with pre prepared information is the best place to list expected tidal heights, alongside a sketch of buoys, lights, courses, radio comms and anything else you’ll need to know.
A sketch chart can quickly convey a huge amount of information
In many ways, the job of a small vessel navigator has got harder rather than easier, as more and more tools are at our disposal to use. Not only do you need to be able to read a chart and plot a fix, but you need to be able to navigate your way through multiple phone apps, plotter menus and be able to extract the right information from your radar and AIS.
It is very easy to get distracted from the main thing, which is keeping your head up and out of the boat, and for your bubble of awareness to shrink as you become more and more reliant on flicking from one screen to the next.
Coming out of Beaulieu, I was able to quickly check on my phone that although the height of tide promised on Navionics wasn’t huge, it was rising, and the Bramblemet tide guage was showing an extra 30cm of water. We would be fine.
A good crew will hold an accurate course and feed you information as you go
I’d put in a direct route, but used the cross track error function on the plotter to keep us to starboard of track, increasing our offing to windward, clear of Stansore Point and Calshot Sands. I had also tried to pick waypoints close to easily visible marks, even though this gave us a slightly longer route.
I knew we could cut the corner with an eye on Navionics once we got closer. At no point did me pulling my phone from my pocket or referring to the plotter raise any eyebrows, though I realised at the end that having been asked to plot a visual fix at some point, the objects I’d picked for a three-point fix weren’t on the chart, and I’d omitted to go back and plot a proper one.
Practising using just one of these tools to find your way forces you to get familiar with what it can do and how it works
Blind navigation
There’s nothing quite like losing one of your senses to sharpen your use of another. While the traditional ‘blind navigation’ exercises known and loved by sailing instructors are less ‘blind’ than they used to be, they are no less challenging than they ever were. They are also the best way to learn how to use one method of navigation that you might otherwise avoid if at all possible.
Over the four days, we conducted various exercises, all within a pretty small area at the bottom of Southampton Water, finding arbitrary spots of water given to us by Matt to locate. He would pick spots on the chart, and ask us navigate from one, to the next, to circle another and to stop at another.
Even on deck with all the tools at your disposal, it’s a good simulation of finding your way into an unknown narrow channel or rock-strewn harbour approach. We tried it using the charplotter route functions, just the radar, and just visual pilotage.
The harder part came when we were asked to verify one means against the other so that we had to juggle different systems in short order – information overload and unfamiliarity with the radar, plotter or phone app being the thing that was likely to distract us at the critical moment.
Using VRM/EBL from an identifiable radar target to follow a course to an unmarked position
How do you, for example, make sure that you stay precisely on a line between two imaginary points using radar alone? There is a way, it turns out, using the VRM/EBL function (Variable Range Marker/Electronic Bearing Line), by measuring to the imaginary point from a known, identifiable and charted point on the radar screen, then floating the VRM/EBL centre to this point, measuring the course and range from this point to your current location, then floating the centre back onto your known radar contact.
Simply steer to keep the object sliding along the EBL and when it reaches the intersection with the VRM, you’re there. Knowing the buttons to press to make this happen on your radar is another matter entirely and caused us many headaches.
Electronics are definitely not cheating. You’ve got to be able to use them, and to know what info you can trust and what you need to cross-reference. Navigation hasn’t really changed – you’ve still got to use multiple sources of position information to reliably work out where you are and where you need to go.
Rather than three bearing lines, it might be a GPS fix or a radar range, a depth and a transit, but relying on one source of information alone to determine your position never has been considered good seamanship.
Next month – Find out how Theo and Andrew got on with the rest of their prep week and whether they actually passed their Yachtmaster Offshore exam at the end of the week…
With thanks to the Hamble School of Yachting for the use of their Sun Odyssey 37. Hamble School of Yachting offers a range of sailing course, charters and adventures, from Competent Crew up to professional MCA qualifications.
Enjoyed reading this?
A subscription to Yachting Monthly magazine costs around 40% less than the cover price, so you can save money compared to buying single issues .
Print and digital editions are available through Magazines Direct – where you can also find the latest deals .
YM is packed with information to help you get the most from your time on the water.
- Take your seamanship to the next level with tips, advice and skills from our experts
- Impartial in-depth reviews of the latest yachts and equipment
- Cruising guides to help you reach those dream destinations
Follow us on Facebook , Twitter and Instagram.
- All Courses
- RYA Start Yachting
- RYA Competent Crew
- Novice to RYA Day Skipper
- RYA Day Skipper Fastrack
- RYA Day Skipper Practical
- RYA ICC Flotilla Course
- Sailing Refresher
- RYA Coastal Skipper Combined
- RYA Coastal Skipper Practical
- RYA Yachtmaster Coastal
- RYA Yachtmaster Offshore
- All Adventures
- New Year Sailing into 2025
- Mile Builders
- Gibraltar to Africa Weekend Adventure
- Round the Island Race
- KMT Sailing : Cultural adventures under sail
- All Yachtmaster Courses
- Professional Yachtmaster Fastrack program
- RYA Yachtmaster Theory
- Extended Yachtmaster Preparation
- Passage Making and YM Preparation Course
- Online Courses
- RYA Online Theory Course
- RYA Online VHF / SRC
- RYA PPR Online Course
- Yacht Charter Gibraltar
- Full Day Charter and Half Day Charters
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Joining Instructions
- Special Offers
- Gift Vouchers
- Pre Course Experience
- How to Get Here
- Why Choose Jolly Parrot
- Jolly Reviews
- Where We Sail
- Our Jolly Fleet
- Helping You Choose
- Where are the Parrots?
- Gibraltar Weather
- Sailing Glossary
- Jolly Links
- Terms & Conditions
- Photo Gallery
What's the difference between RYA Yachtmaster Offshore and RYA Yachtmaster Coastal?
04 March 2016
The RYA Yachtmaster qualification has long been recognised by many as the premium sailing qualification for the experienced leisure sailor. In recent times, the Yachtmaster qualification has been further defined and is now split into three subsections, namely Yachtmaster Coastal, Yachtmaster Offshore and Yachtmaster Ocean. Unlike the RYA Day Skipper qualification, all three qualifications are gained through external examination.
The holder of a Yachtmaster Coastal qualification should be competent to skipper a yacht of up to 24 metres LOA in waters up to 20 miles from a safe haven. A Yachtmaster Offshore is qualified to skipper a vessel of the same size up to 150 miles from a safe haven. Yachtmaster Ocean extends the Yachtmaster Offshore qualification and qualifies the holder to skipper a vessel of the same size and up to 200gt anywhere in the World.
As one would expect, each examination requires that the candidate have a minimum level of experience prior to the examination. Prior to the Yachtmaster Coastal examination , a candidate must have a minimum of 30 days at sea, with 2 days as skipper and at least 800 miles logged, including 12 night hours. If you hold the Coastal Skipper course certificate already then this is reduced to 20 days at sea with 2 days as skipper, 400 miles logged and 12 night hours. Half the qualifying sea time must be conducted in tidal waters.
To qualify to undertake the Yachtmaster Offshore examination , you must have a minimum of 50 days at sea, 2,500 miles logged, including at least 5 passages over 60 miles measured along the rhumb line from the port of departure to the destination, acting as skipper for at least two of these passages and including two which have involved overnight passages. The candidate must have 5 days experience as skipper. At least half this mileage and passages must be in tidal waters. All qualifying seatime must be within 10 years prior to the exam.
In both instances you will also need to hold a GMDSS short range radio certificate.
For advice on what examination you should be studying for, call our senior instructor and RYA Yachtmaster Instructor for a chat on [email protected] or call 07925 784407.
Related articles:
- What is a Yachtmaster ‘Prep Week’?
- How do I prepare for a Yachtmaster Exam?
- Why you should take your RYA Yachtmaster Exam in the Mediterranean
Other Blog Articles
Using a lead line.
27 October 2024
Isobar weather maps explained
Christmas gifts suggestions for the sailor in your life.
26 October 2024
- Practical Sailing Courses
- Theory Courses (Classroom)
- Ladies Sailing Courses
- Powerboat Courses
- Online Interactive Courses
- One Day Courses (Radar, Sea Survival, First Aid)
- Sailing Skills
- Social Sailing
- Course Joining Instructions
- Recommended Accommodation
- Competent Crew – Suggested Itinerary
- Day Skipper Practical – Suggested Itinerary
- Coastal Skipper Practical – Suggested Itinerary
- HPSS Policy Regarding Coronavirus (COVID-19)
- How to tie-up a yacht the HPSS way
- Secondary ports made easy
- 10 ways to keep your boat green
- Meet the Team
- Customer Service Award
- Hamble Point Charter Membership
RYA Yachtmaster Offshore Preparation & Exam
Student comments, latest news.
RYA Yachtmaster Offshore Prep and Exam
The RYA Yachtmaster Offshore is suitable for the more advanced skippers who have a practical ability to at least the RYA Coastal skipper practical level plus have a good knowledge of navigation, meteorology, collision regulations, safety and passage planning up to RYA Coastal Skipper / Yachtmaster shore based standard.
This preparation course is designed for those who wish to take the rya / mca yachtmaster offshore exam. the course gives potential candidates the opportunity to thoroughly revise both practical and theoretical subjects. you will spend five days onboard the yacht with one of our fully qualified professional rya yachtmaster instructors prior to taking the rya / mca yachtmaster offshore examination., sailing will be in local waters and the instructor will tailor the course to suit your own needs but from our experience, we would expect this to include: passage planning, pilotage skippering techniques, man-overboard recovery, meteorology, close quarters boat handling and pilotage in restricted visibility., we would recommend you arrive for the course already having a thorough knowledge of the irpcs collision regulations particularly in relation to lights, shapes and signals., the successful yachtmaster offshore candidate is an experienced yachtsman who has a theoretical knowledge to the level of the rya yachtmaster shore based course and will be able to skipper a cruising yacht on passages up to 60 miles from port. the rya/mca yachtmaster offshore certificate of competency is acknowledged throughout the world as the top sailing qualification..
Pre-course experience:
50 days on board sailing yachts over 24 feet, 5 non-stop passages over 60 Nautical miles (2 of which you must have skippered), 2500 miles, 5 days as skipper and 12 night hours Minimum course duration: 5 days Minimum age: 17
You should possess a theoretical knowledge to the level of the rya yachtmaster shore based course and hold an in date first aid certificate (valid for three years from date of issue) and hold a vhf licence or short range certificate – src, all of our courses allow for up to four students to be on board to ensure you receive a high level of support and tuition. our courses also include moorings, fuel, catering including the first evening plus loan of wet weather clothing..
For the duration of this course, your accommodation overnight will be onboard the yacht including the Skipper.
View our course joining instructions.
- Yacht Charters
- Testimonials
- Terms and Conditions
- Privacy Policy
- RYA Sailing Courses
- Other Courses, Offers & Events
- Course Dates & Prices
- More Information
Hamble Point Sailing School
is a trading name of Hamble Point Yacht Charters Ltd Hamble Point Marina School Lane Hamble, Hampshire, SO31 4JD
Email us to get in touch
Subscribe to our newsletter below:
Your Name (required)
Your Email (required)
Your Message
Please leave this field empty.
Yachtmaster™ Examinations
Instructor : Student Ratio – 1:3
7 day course (5 days training + examinations)
Coastal Skipper recommended
Valid First Aid Certificate
SRC (VHF) Licence
YM(Coastal): 30 days experience, 2 days as skipper, 800 miles and 12 night hours.
YM(Offshore): 50 days experience, 2,500nm and five passages over 60nm, including two as skipper and two overnight.
Recent Photos
Yachtmaster ™ Examinations Summary
An RYA Yachtmaster™ Certificate of Competence is often the ultimate aim of aspiring skippers. It is a well known, highly respected qualification worldwide, proving your experience and competence as a skipper.
There are two levels to this qualification, each with different pre-requisite mileage and experience:
- Yachtmaster Coastal – ideal for candidates with limited knowledge of long passage making
- Yachtmaster Offshore – allows holders to skipper passages of up to 150nm offshore
At RAFSA, we run this course in two phases. The first 5 days are a ‘preparation phase’ with an experienced instructor. This has no set syllabus and will aim to fine tune existing skills and knowledge over a wide range of situations and with lots of challenging boat handling experiences. A separate examiner will board for the final two days until all candidates have been examined.
2024 Courses
Course 24-11, plymouth – atlas, sun 22nd sep – sun 29th sep 2024, course 24-14, gosport – sir arthur, sun 29th sep – sun 6th oct 2024, course fees (ym).
All of our RYA courses are sponsored by the RAF Sports Charity, which allows Serving RAF personnel the opportunity to pay minimal fees. Students not currently serving can still attend, and pay a higher (but still extremely competitive) rate.
There is an extra fee charged by the RYA which will be payable on the first day of examinations.
RAFSA Serving member | £250 | £21 |
RAFSA Civilian | £450 | £231 |
Non-RAFSA Civilian | £750 | £231 |
During the course, additional costs will be incurred and shared among the students to cover on-board food, marina fees, and fuel. These costs will vary according to crew choices on victualing, instructor/crew choices on marina locations, weather and on how many crew are on-board but should be approximately £60 – £80 per person.
Our cancellation policy is that full fees are due if cancellation is within 30 days of the course start date. Cancellation prior to that will result in loss of deposit, but this can be carried forward to another course with RAFSA(O). For Serving personnel who are unable to attend for Service reasons, a full refund will be offered once confirmation is received from the individual’s chain of command.
Should the course be cancelled for reasons attributing to RAFSA, an alternative course will first be offered. If the student is unable to take this up, then the full cost of the course will be refunded. This will not include any additional costs relating to travel or subsistence.
Got a Question?
Complete our short form for a prompt response and world class tax advice.
Yes please contact me regarding mortgages
By selecting this, you agree to the Privacy Policy .
Sign in to your account
What is an rya yachtmaster offshore exam.
The RYA Yachtmaster Certificate of Competence is a much sought after qualification for skippers.
This qualification is respected worldwide.
One will be able to acquire the RYA Yachtmaster Certificate if they are able to demonstrate that they have sufficient sea-time, experience and certification in order to sit for an exam.
There are also courses that can help one to be properly prepared for the exam.
Sea Time Experience
Course duration, course content, converting from offshore sail to offshore power, qualifying passages, all my sea time was on superyachts over 24m - is that ok, how to log miles for your rya yachtmaster exam, do i need any first aid qualifications, what about commercial endorsement, stcw basic safety training endorsement, is rya yachtmaster theory required, how do i become a yacht captain, do rya yachtmaster qualified yacht captains make much money, rya yachtmaster offshore course overview.
Sea time experience is one of the most important prerequisites.
You would need to have completed the following within the last ten years:
- At least 2500 miles logged.
- Spent 50 days at sea on yachts of up to 500GT.
- At least half the sea time must have been spent in tidal waters.
- Have completed five passages of over 60 miles, of which two passages were as a skipper, and two carried out at night.
- Have at least five days experience working as a skipper.
- Hold a valid First Aid Certificate. In the case of a STCW Elementary First Aid it needs to have been issued within the last five years, whereas in the case of an RYA First Aid it needs to be issued within the past three years.
- Be in possession of a GMDSS short-range VHF radio certificate.
The course duration is generally 5 days, including the exam.
The course content will comprise key areas that will allow one to be properly prepared for the exam.
The instructor will focus on areas where one needs to improve.
Notably, night sailing and blind navigation will be practiced.
There will be an overview of the lights, signals and collision regulations, among others.
Since different ports and harbours will be visited, you will be able to get tested in different waters, and your strengths and weaknesses will be better tackled in preparation for the exam.
The Yachtmaster Offshore Exam itself will take anywhere between 8 to 12 hours for a single candidate, or between 10 to 18 hours for two.
Candidates will be met onboard by examiners who will outline what will happen during the test.
Tasks will be set for the candidates to demonstrate their abilities as skippers of offshore cruising yachts.
Candidates should be well prepared as questions on any part of the syllabus can be asked at any stage.
Examiners will be independent assessors who evaluate candidates on behalf of the UK Maritime and Coastguard Agency .
In order to convert from Yachtmaster offshore sail to Offshore Power the following will need to have been completed within the past 10 years:
- At least 1250 miles on a vessel that was between 7m and 24m in length.
- Have spent 25 days living onboard.
- Have spent 3 days as a skipper.
- Have carried out 3 passages exceeding 60 miles, of which one was as a skipper and one overnight.
There are a number of rules that need to be followed when it comes to passages that can be deemed as qualifying.
An applicant will need to have completed at least five passages which exceed 60 miles.
These five passages must have been completed on a vessel that is less than 24 metres in length.
Two of these passages need to have been overnight passages.
In addition, two of them will need to have been where one acted as a skipper.
It’s important to mention that a 60 mile qualifying passage is one where the voyage has been non-stop from the departure port A to departure port B, where A and B cannot be the same place.
The 60 mile distance has to be measured as a straight line from A to B.
The RYA will accept passages that were on board yachts over 24m in length.
However, only 50% of the qualifying sea time can be derived from such passages.
Thus, not more than 2500 miles in all, and one would need to provide a testimonial or a discharge book to confirm them.
The remaining 50% of the qualifying sea time must have been carried out on vessels which ranged between 7m and 24m.
Since so much importance is placed on passages, it’s crucial to record the miles.
Recording miles can be carried out in a RYA logbook G158, or using an Excel spreadsheet.
It’s also good to have a CV detailing one’s sea time.
When logging miles it’s important to take note of key details, including the dates of the passage or trip, the miles sailed on the various passages, the name and type of vessel, and any night hours.
Yes, you must have a valid first aid qualification in order to sit for the Yachtmaster Coastal or Offshore exam.
There are different types of first aid qualifications that are accepted, including:
- The RYA First Aid
- The STCW Elementary First Aid
- Seafish First Aid
It’s common to choose to commercially endorse the RYA Yachtmaster Coastal or Offshore exam qualification once the exam has been successfully completed.
In this case, besides holding a valid first aid and VHF certificate, one will also need an STCW or RYA Sea Survival certificate, as well as either an ENG1 medical certificate or an ML5 medical certificate .
One will also need to complete the RYA’s online PPR course.
Subsequently, one can apply for commercial endorsement through the RYA.
Following STCW Basic Safety Training , the RYA/MCA Yachtmaster Offshore certificate can be endorsed in order to allow the holder to be a skipper both on commercial as well as privately owned vessels.
This includes those exceeding 24m in length.
Yes, in order to become an RYA Yachtmaster Offshore it is highly recommended to know specific aspects of navigation and being able to handle a vessel at sea.
Thus, following a Yachtmaster Offshore Theory course is advisable to improve one’s abilities and competence.
This will inevitably improve one’s chances of successfully achieving the RYA Yachtmaster Certificate of Competence.
Becoming a yacht captain takes several years of training, experience and qualifications.
Like many careers, you’ll need to start life on a vessel working your way up.
From humble beginnings like being a deckhand to a junior crew member, the journey towards becoming a yacht captain takes years of dedication and hard work.
Our guide to becoming a yacht captain explains this process in greater detail.
Yes, the potential to make a very lucrative income is high.
A lesser experienced yacht captain can expect to make in the region of $48,000 to $98,000 per annum, whilst a more seasoned captain can make an impressive $150,000 gross per year.
So the time and effort it takes to become a skipper on a vessel has its rewards.
Furthermore, if your time at sea exceeds 183 days each calendar year, there’s the strong possibility that you could qualify for the seafarers earnings deduction which means you are not obliged to pay any income tax on your earnings.
So the above salary figures could be your final take home.
A good yacht captain will lead the crew, be a good communicator and instil confidence.
Acquiring the RYA Certificate is a demonstration that one has shown such skills along with the necessary experience.
Disclaimer: Any advice in this publication is not intended or written by Marine Accounts to be used by a client or entity for the purpose of (i) avoiding penalties that may be imposed on any taxpayer or (ii) promoting, marketing or recommending to another party matters herein.
Also on Marine Accounts
How Much Does a Yacht Captain Make?
Working as a yacht captain is a very privileged and unique employment position. In our article we explore what being a yacht captain involves and how much yacht captains make.
Patrick Maflin
How to Become a Yacht Captain
Working as a captain on a superyacht can be a very rewarding career. But how do you become a yacht captain? Our article takes a deep dive into the process.
What is RYA Competent Crew Training?
RYA Competent Crew training is a beginners level sailing course, teaching basic knowledge and skills needed to become a competent crew member on a yacht. Read on to discover why even experienced yacht crew should consider taking this foundation course.
RYA Powerboat Level 2 Certificate - A Must for Yacht Captains
Gaining RYA powerboat level 2 certification is a must for any aspiring yacht captain. In our latest article, we explore what this crucial certificate is for, what you will learn, and how you go about getting one.
Before you go...
You're about to visit a page on our legacy site. We're currently in the process of updating all our tax tools and while this page is still active please return to the main Marine Accounts site after completition.
Refer a friend and receive £50!
Upon successful completion of the referral the cash will be transferred to you.
IMAGES
VIDEO
COMMENTS
The RYA Yachtmaster® Offshore is competent to skipper a cruising yacht on any passage during which the yacht is no more than 150 miles from harbour. Full details of the …
With an RYA Yachtmaster Coastal, Offshore or Ocean Certificate of Competence you can start a career at sea. Where can you work? You'll need to have the appropriate …
The RYA Yachtmaster Certificates of Competence (Coastal, Offshore and Ocean), however, are run by the RYA under the authority of the Maritime Coastguard Agency …
A Yachtmaster Offshore is qualified to skipper a vessel of the same size up to 150 miles from a safe haven. Yachtmaster Ocean extends the Yachtmaster Offshore qualification and qualifies …
Course Overview: Preparation and brush up for the RYA/MCA Yachtmaster Offshore Certificate of Competence. Revision of advanced skippering techniques, close quarters handling under …
The RYA/MCA Yachtmaster Offshore Certificate of Competency is acknowledged throughout the World as the top sailing qualification. Pre-course experience: 50 days on board sailing yachts over 24 feet, 5 non-stop passages …
An RYA Yachtmaster™ Certificate of Competence is often the ultimate aim of aspiring skippers. It is a well known, highly respected qualification worldwide, proving your experience and competence as a skipper.
The RYA Yachtmaster® Offshore is competent to skipper a cruising yacht on any passage during which the yacht is no more than 150 miles from harbour. Full details of the exam syllabus and …
The RYA Yachtmaster Certificate of Competence is respected worldwide & a much sought after qualification by yacht skippers. Find out more in our article.
Available at Advanced Powerboat and RYA Yachtmaster® Coastal, Offshore and Ocean level, RYA Certificates of Competence are well known qualifications that are highly …