1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
|
# ColRegs — Rules of the Road
International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea (COLREGS), 1972 with amendments. This is a summary reference; consult the official text for legal purposes.
---
## Part A — General (Rules 1–3)
**Rule 1 — Application**
Applies to all vessels on the high seas and connected navigable waters.
**Rule 2 — Responsibility**
Nothing in these rules exonerates a vessel, owner, master, or crew from the consequences of neglect. Good seamanship always applies.
**Rule 3 — Definitions**
- *Vessel* — any watercraft, including seaplanes and WIG craft
- *Power-driven vessel* — any vessel propelled by machinery
- *Sailing vessel* — under sail only; if engine is running, she is power-driven
- *Vessel engaged in fishing* — using nets, lines, trawls that restrict maneuverability
- *Underway* — not at anchor, aground, or made fast to shore
- *Restricted visibility* — fog, mist, falling snow, heavy rain, sandstorm, or similar conditions
---
## Part B — Steering and Sailing Rules
### Section I — Conduct in Any Visibility (Rules 4–10)
**Rule 4** — Applies in any condition of visibility.
**Rule 5 — Look-out**
Every vessel shall maintain a proper look-out at all times by sight, hearing, and all available means.
**Rule 6 — Safe Speed**
Every vessel shall proceed at a safe speed. Factors: visibility, traffic density, vessel maneuverability, background lights at night, radar state, sea state.
**Rule 7 — Risk of Collision**
Risk exists if the compass bearing of an approaching vessel does not appreciably change. When in doubt, assume risk exists.
**Rule 8 — Action to Avoid Collision**
- Action must be positive, made in ample time, and large enough to be readily apparent
- Course or speed changes should be large enough to be noticed
- If necessary, stop or reverse
**Rule 9 — Narrow Channels**
- Keep to the starboard side of a narrow channel
- Vessels under 20 m or sailing vessels shall not impede vessels that can safely navigate only in the channel
- Overtaking only when safe and the overtaken vessel signals agreement
- Do not cross a narrow channel if it impedes a through-traffic vessel
**Rule 10 — Traffic Separation Schemes**
- Join/leave at end; if joining from side, at acute angle
- Keep out of separation zones
- Crossing traffic does so at right angles where practicable
- Inshore traffic zones: use only if < 20 m, or sailing, or fishing
---
### Section II — Conduct in Sight of One Another (Rules 11–18)
**Rule 11** — Applies to vessels in sight of one another.
**Rule 12 — Sailing Vessels**
- Vessel on port tack gives way to vessel on starboard tack
- Both on same tack: windward vessel gives way to leeward vessel
- Port tack vessel cannot determine which tack the other is on: gives way
**Rule 13 — Overtaking**
Any vessel overtaking gives way. Overtaking means coming up from more than 22.5° abaft the other's beam. Overtaking status persists until clear and past.
**Rule 14 — Head-on Situation**
Both vessels altering course to starboard so each passes on the port side of the other. Applies when risk of collision exists and vessels are nearly end-on.
**Rule 15 — Crossing Situation**
The vessel that has the other on its own starboard side gives way (the "burdened" or give-way vessel). The stand-on vessel is on the right.
**Rule 16 — Action by Give-way Vessel**
Take early and substantial action to keep well clear.
**Rule 17 — Action by Stand-on Vessel**
- May take action to avoid collision by own maneuver alone when it becomes apparent the give-way vessel is not taking sufficient action
- Must take action when collision cannot be avoided by give-way vessel alone
- Course change to port for a vessel on your port side is avoided if possible
**Rule 18 — Responsibilities Between Vessels**
Hierarchy (higher number gives way to all above):
1. Vessel not under command (NUC)
2. Vessel restricted in ability to maneuver (RAM)
3. Vessel constrained by draft
4. Vessel engaged in fishing
5. Sailing vessel
6. Power-driven vessel underway
*Note:* Sailing and power vessels give way to NUC, RAM, constrained, and fishing vessels. A power vessel gives way to a sailing vessel.
---
### Section III — Conduct in Restricted Visibility (Rule 19)
**Rule 19 — Restricted Visibility**
- Proceed at safe speed adapted to conditions
- Have engines ready for immediate maneuver
- On hearing fog signal apparently forward of beam: reduce to bare steerage or stop
- Avoid alteration of course to port for a vessel forward of beam (except overtaking)
- Avoid alteration toward a vessel abeam or abaft beam
---
## Part C — Lights and Shapes (Rules 20–31)
### Lights (Rules 20–22)
**Rule 20 — Application**
Lights required from sunset to sunrise and in restricted visibility.
**Rule 21 — Definitions**
- *Masthead light* — white forward light, 225° arc
- *Side lights* — red (port) and green (starboard), 112.5° each
- *Stern light* — white aft, 135° arc
- *Towing light* — yellow, same arc as stern light
- *All-round light* — 360° arc
- *Flashing light* — 120+ flashes/minute
**Rule 22 — Visibility of Lights**
| Vessel size | Masthead | Side | Stern | All-round |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ≥ 50 m | 6 nm | 3 nm | 3 nm | 3 nm |
| 12–50 m | 5 nm | 2 nm | 2 nm | 2 nm |
| 7–12 m | 3 nm | 1 nm | 2 nm | 2 nm |
| < 7 m | — | — | — | 2 nm |
---
### Light Combinations to Know
**Under power (≥ 50 m):** Two masthead lights (forward lower, aft higher) + sidelights + stern light
**Under power (< 50 m):** One masthead light + sidelights + stern light
**Under sail (underway):** Sidelights + stern light only. *No masthead light when under sail.*
**Sail + engine:** Power-driven vessel rules apply — show cone (point down) by day.
**At anchor (< 50 m):** One white all-round light forward.
**At anchor (≥ 50 m):** White all-round forward + aft.
**Not under command:** Two red all-round lights (vertical). If making way: add sidelights + stern light.
**Restricted in ability to maneuver:** Red-white-red all-round lights (vertical). If making way: add masthead + sidelights + stern.
**Vessel aground:** Anchor lights + two red all-round lights (vertical).
**Towing vessel:** Extra masthead light(s) + yellow towing light instead of (or in addition to) stern light.
**Fishing (trawling):** Green over white all-round (vertical) + sidelights + stern if making way.
**Fishing (other):** Red over white all-round (vertical) + sidelights + stern if making way + white toward gear if gear > 150 m.
**Pilot vessel on duty:** White over red all-round lights.
---
### Day Shapes (Rule 28)
| Shape | Vessel Type |
|---|---|
| Black ball | At anchor |
| Black cone (apex down) | Sailing vessel with engine |
| Two black balls (vertical) | Not under command |
| Ball-diamond-ball (vertical) | Restricted in ability to maneuver |
| Black cylinder | Constrained by draft |
| Basket | Engaged in fishing |
| Cone (apex up) | Vessel being towed (if requested) |
---
## Part D — Sound and Light Signals (Rules 32–37)
**Rule 32 — Definitions**
- *Short blast* — about 1 second
- *Prolonged blast* — 4–6 seconds
**Rule 33 — Equipment**
- ≥ 12 m: whistle + bell
- ≥ 100 m: also gong
**Rule 34 — Maneuvering and Warning Signals**
| Signal | Meaning |
|---|---|
| 1 short | I am altering course to starboard |
| 2 shorts | I am altering course to port |
| 3 shorts | I am operating astern propulsion |
| 5+ shorts (rapid) | Danger / doubt signal |
| 1 prolonged | Vessel leaving berth |
**Rule 35 — Sound Signals in Restricted Visibility**
| Signal | Vessel |
|---|---|
| 1 prolonged (≤ 2 min) | Power-driven vessel making way |
| 2 prolonged (≤ 2 min) | Power-driven vessel underway but stopped |
| 1 long + 2 short (≤ 2 min) | NUC, RAM, sailing, fishing, towing |
| 1 long + 3 short | Vessel being towed (last vessel) |
| Rapid bell (5 sec, ≤ 1 min) | At anchor (< 100 m) |
| Bell + gong (≤ 1 min) | At anchor (≥ 100 m) |
| 3 strokes + rapid bell + 3 strokes | Vessel aground |
**Rule 36 — Attention Signal**
Five or more short and rapid blasts. Also a light signal of the same pattern.
**Rule 37 — Distress Signals**
Gun fired at ~1 min intervals; continuous foghorn; SOS (···−−−···); MAYDAY by voice; orange smoke; flames; parachute flare; dye; square flag + ball; high-intensity white light flashing; radio alarm signal.
---
## Part E — Exemptions (Rule 38)
Older vessels may be exempt from some lighting requirements for a period of years after the rules came into force.
---
## Quick Memory Aids
**Starboard right-of-way:** When another vessel is on your starboard side in a crossing situation, YOU give way.
**Lights mnemonic — red over green, sailing machine:** A sailing vessel shows red (port side) and green (starboard) sidelights plus a white stern light. No masthead light while under sail alone.
**The hierarchy:** NUC → RAM → Constrained → Fishing → Sail → Power
|