THE SLC

The SLC is a globally accepted sailing license by port authorities and yacht charter companies. It can be issued to any citizen of any country in the world. It is simple to get as long as you are experienced. In North America, there are many SLC instructor/assessors able to perform the required on the water assessment. There is also a growing number of instructors internationally. See the Sailing Schools and Instructors link on the NauticEd site to find an Assessor nearest you.


Because NauticEd is an officially recognized sailing education body in the United States by the United States Coast Guard and NASBLA who is the official body overseeing boating Licenses, the NauticEd SLC is an officially recognized sailing license. In Croatia for example, a license must be listed on the official ministry list. The NauticEd SLC is on the Croatian official ministry list.


Ultimately, at NauticEd, we are biased toward the SLC that we administer because of the standards we adhere to. The SLC is only awarded to those who have sufficient experience to automatically qualify to charter. When the NauticEd student's resume is charter-worthy and the student meets the proper legal conditions only then does our software issue the SLC license. Thus SLC holders are guaranteed to be accepted for charter - no surprises (like "oh you need to hire a captain for a week") on the dock in Croatia.


When you book a yacht charter with NauticEd Sailing Vacations, we run a check on your resume and license and we preclear you with the yacht charter company.


See www.nauticed.org/SLC for the details on the SLC. It shows the official recognition.


See http://www.nauticed.org/sailing-blog/how-to-gain-your-slc-mediterranean-sailing-license/ on how to get the SLC


If you are a competent sailor but undocumented, you will have no trouble gaining the SLC. Basically, you do online lessons and a one day assessment of your skills and knowledge on the water. You will not be subjected to a multi-day training that is required for the IPC. When you sign in to your student account on NauticEd, click on the curriculum button. There you will be able to see the requirements for the on-the-water assessment which generally takes 6 hours.


THE ICC

The ICC (NOT to be confused with the IPC below) is the International Certificate of Competency created by the United Nations and is an official international Sailing License. It is administered and issued by education bodies appointed by the governments who were signatories to the UN Resolution 40 which created the ICC standard. The USA and Canada did not sign the Resolution and can therefore not appoint any boating education bodies to issue the ICC. Largely, the RYA from the UK issues most ICCs worldwide.  It is generally difficult to attain the ICC in the USA because of the limited number of RYA schools that can administer the ICC requirements. Thus the SLC in the USA and Canada is a good alternative Sailing License.


THE IPC

The IPC stands for the International Proficiency Certificate. It is NOT the ICC.

The IPC was created by the US Sailing organization and subsequently then copied by ASA (American Sailing Association). It is meant to be a substitute for an official international license. Yet the IPC holds no official USA government status and therefore can be risky.


If you hold an IPC you may possibly get by with it in the Mediterranean BUT make sure that your resume is very strong and ask the yacht charter company to run the IPC by the port authorities. Some port authorities are strict to the rules that the license must be issued by an official government-recognized entity and some are more relaxed. Sometimes something official-looking can get by. 


Yacht charter companies also know that the IPC can be issued with as little as a few days of sailing training and no real skippering experience. The yacht charter company will turn you down if you do not have a worthy resume despite holding the IPC. Think about it from an insurance company's point of view if a boat is crashed the insurance company first looks at the claim and who was the skipper that the charter company gave the boat to. If the resume is too light the insurance company will not pay out on the claim. Thus charter companies check resumes as well as the sailing license.