Complete reference for Ontario boaters on how to mark a pleasure craft correctly under Transport Canada's Small Vessel Regulations. What to display, where to display it, and how to get compliant.
The primary regulation governing pleasure craft marking in Canada is the Small Vessel Regulations (SOR/2010-91), enacted under the Canada Shipping Act, 2001. Part 9 of this regulation covers vessel marking for pleasure craft with a Pleasure Craft Licence.
TP 1332E (Transport Canada Technical Publication) provides supplementary guidance for formally registered vessels — it covers vessel name display, port of registry, and the marking of official ship numbers in the hull interior. For most Ontario recreational boaters with only a PCL, SOR/2010-91 is the operative regulation.
| Requirement | Specification | Regulatory Source |
|---|---|---|
| PCL number — letter height | Minimum 75 mm (3 inches) tall | SOR/2010-91 s.902(1)(b) |
| PCL number — font | Block capital Latin letters and Arabic numerals only | SOR/2010-91 s.902(1)(a) |
| PCL number — colour | Contrasting colour to the background hull surface | SOR/2010-91 s.902(1)(c) |
| PCL number — placement | Both sides of the bow, above the waterline, in the forward third of the hull | SOR/2010-91 s.902(1)(d) |
| PCL number — legibility | Clearly legible from the water at reasonable distance | SOR/2010-91 s.902(1) |
| Spacing | Letters must not be run together or obscured by hull hardware | SOR/2010-91 s.902 |
| No additional markings required | PCL vessels are not required to display vessel name or port of registry | Canada Shipping Act, 2001 / SOR/2010-91 |
A 75 mm letter is roughly 3 inches — about the height of a standard sticky note. At 10 metres distance on the water, 75mm letters are clearly readable. Numbers painted smaller than 75mm are non-compliant even if they look large at arm's length. Use a tape measure to verify. Pre-cut vinyl decals from specialist suppliers are cut to exactly 75 mm or 100 mm to remove ambiguity.
Under the Canada Shipping Act, 2001 and the Contraventions Act, failing to display a PCL number correctly is a citable offence. Officers from Transport Canada, Canadian Coast Guard, and OPP Marine Unit have authority to board and inspect pleasure craft on all Ontario waterways.
Typical enforcement approach:
The practical risk is most significant in emergencies: a vessel with illegible PCL numbers cannot be quickly identified by rescue services responding to a distress call. Clear markings are as much a safety measure as a legal requirement.
Pre-cut vinyl decals are the standard method for displaying PCL numbers. Application steps:
Do not use wax or hull protectant over new decals for at least 7 days.
Pre-cut vinyl decals at exactly 75 mm (3") or 100 mm (4") tall — compliant with SOR/2010-91. Block letter format, contrasting hull colours available. Marine-grade premium vinyl rated for 5-7 years of UV and water exposure. Made and shipped from Niagara, Ontario.
Transport Canada Technical Publication TP 1332E ("Vessel Registration and Licensing") is a guidance document that explains the requirements for formally registered Canadian vessels. It covers:
TP 1332E is primarily relevant to:
For most Ontario recreational boaters (trailered powerboats, fishing boats, Sea-Doos, pontoon boats), TP 1332E does not apply. The operative requirement is SOR/2010-91 for PCL number display.
Download TP 1332E directly from Transport Canada: tc.gc.ca/marine/licensing-registration