A denied claim at the start of summer is the outcome we prevent.
Pleasure craft is a recreational purchase, often made with enthusiasm and in a hurry to get on the water. The training prepares your team to explain winterization, engine-hour limits, and charter-use exclusions clearly — before the customer signs, not after a claim is denied.
Who at your dealership needs this
If your role includes offering, explaining, or processing any of the eligible insurance products on a pleasure craft sale, the new framework applies. The training covers the regulatory foundation and applies it to the specific dynamics of recreational vessel sales.
Products typically offered in this industry
Pleasure craft dealerships offer specialized warranty insurance, plus GAP and credit protection on financed sales. The program includes dedicated product modules for each.
Pleasure Craft Warranty
Specialized warranty insurance for boats and marine systems — engine, electrical, onboard equipment — subject to use and maintenance conditions. The primary RIA product for this industry.
GAP Insurance
Guaranteed Asset Protection for financed pleasure craft purchases — covers the difference between vessel value at total loss and the outstanding loan balance.
Credit Protection
Life, disability, and sometimes job-loss coverage tied to pleasure craft financing. Offered in some financing programs alongside the primary warranty product.
What the training prepares your team for
The industry-specific module pulls from real situations your team encounters. Customer profiles, common scenarios, and the conduct risks unique to this environment.
Typical Customers & Scenarios
- Customers purchasing a new vessel in early spring, eager to be on the water
- Customers trading up from a smaller boat to a larger one
- Customers asking how warranty insurance differs from the manufacturer's warranty
- Customers planning to operate in saltwater for the first time
- Customers who may rent the vessel to friends or family to offset costs
- Customers planning to keep the vessel in another jurisdiction (US, Mexico) seasonally
Industry-Specific Compliance Risks
- Confusing warranty insurance with the manufacturer's warranty
- Overstating coverage as "anything that happens on the water"
- Failing to explain winterization and off-season storage as coverage conditions
- Failing to disclose saltwater operation conditions or exclusions
- Failing to disclose charter, rental, or commercial use exclusions
- Not explaining engine-hour limits or other usage-based conditions
The full training framework
Six core modules covering the regulatory and conduct foundation, plus the product-specific modules for what your business offers, plus the dealership industry module.
How the program teaches the conversation
The Pleasure Craft Dealerships module includes a sample compliant conversation comparing what to say with what to avoid. Here's an example from the curriculum.
A scenario from the program
Each industry module includes scenario practice. This one is from the Pleasure Craft Dealerships module — the kind of question your team will work through.
A customer considering casual rental
Charter and rental use is typically excluded under pleasure craft warranty policies, even when informal and infrequent. The compliant response surfaces a coverage condition the customer would not otherwise know about, and lets the customer make an informed decision about whether the product fits their plans.
Frequently asked by pleasure craft dealers
Which modules will my team need to complete?
How does the training handle winterization and storage requirements?
What about customers who rent their boats out occasionally?
Does the training address freshwater vs saltwater operation?
What about our Designated Representative?
Get your dealership RIA-ready.
Join the update list to be notified when accreditation and enrolment opens.