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How Much Does a Captain's License Cost? (2026 Breakdown)
The real all-in cost of a USCG captain's license in 2026 — course, TWIC, physical, drug test, and Coast Guard fees — broken down by license, plus the hidden cost most first-timers miss.
"How much does a captain's license cost?" sounds like it should have a one-line answer. It doesn't — because the course fee everyone quotes is only a slice of the total. Between the credential application, your TWIC card, a physical, a drug test, and Coast Guard fees, the real number lands well above the sticker price. Here's the honest 2026 breakdown.
The Line Items Everyone Pays
No matter which license you go for, these costs are roughly the same:
- TWIC card — about $125. The Transportation Worker Identification Credential is required before the Coast Guard will issue your license. It's good for five years.
- USCG physical exam (CG-719K) — $100 to $250. A medical certificate from a clinic or your own physician. Price varies a lot by provider.
- Drug test (CG-719P) — $50 to $100. A DOT 5-panel urinalysis.
- CPR / First Aid certification — $75 to $150. Required for Master and most upgrades; worth having for an OUPV regardless.
- NMC fees (evaluation + exam + issuance) — roughly $140 to $245. Paid to the National Maritime Center. The total scales with the endorsements you're applying for.
- Photos, mailing, notary — $15 to $35. Small but real.
That's roughly $500 to $900 in fixed costs before you've paid for a single hour of instruction.
The Course — Your Biggest Variable
This is where licenses diverge:
- OUPV / 6-Pack: roughly $500 to $900 for an approved course.
- Master 100-Ton: roughly $1,100 to $1,800.
- Master 200-Ton: roughly $1,300 to $2,200 — it adds celestial navigation and radar.
- MMC and higher upgrades: $1,500 to $3,000+, depending heavily on the endorsements.
You can test directly at a Regional Exam Center without an approved course and skip this line entirely — but most first-timers find a course pays for itself in pass rate and saved time.
All-In Totals by License
Combining fixed costs with a typical course:
- OUPV / 6-Pack: about $1,000 to $1,800 all in.
- Master 100-Ton: about $1,600 to $2,700.
- Master 200-Ton: about $1,800 to $3,100.
- MMC: $2,000 to $4,000+, with wide variation by endorsement.
Want your specific number? The cost & timeline estimator itemizes it for your license and lets you toggle the course in or out.
The Hidden Cost: Time
The line nobody puts on the invoice is time. Gathering documents — scheduling the physical, getting your TWIC appointment, collecting sea service letters — and then waiting on NMC processing usually takes two to four months, often longer than the course itself. Plan for it so you're not surprised when the credential doesn't show up the week after you pass.
Ways to Keep the Cost Down
- Bundle the medical and drug test. Many maritime clinics do the CG-719K and the DOT test in one visit.
- Don't over-buy tonnage. Apply for the license your sea time actually supports; upgrading later is cheaper than re-doing an application.
- Study smart, test once. Re-testing costs time and motivation. A structured question bank with timed practice exams is the cheapest insurance against a retake — the Binnacle School bank covers every category, and you can map out your prep with the study plan generator.
The Bottom Line
A realistic budget for an OUPV is $1,000 to $1,800, and each step up in tonnage adds roughly a thousand dollars and a few more weeks. The course gets the headlines, but the fixed costs and the timeline are what catch people off guard. Know the full number before you start, track your sea time in parallel, and the only surprise left will be how good it feels to hold the license.
Costs are 2026 estimates in USD and vary by school, region, and endorsement. Fees paid to the Coast Guard are set by the National Maritime Center — confirm current amounts at uscg.mil/nmc. Binnacle School is not affiliated with the USCG or NMC.
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Binnacle AI is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the U.S. Coast Guard. CFR citations refer to the current Code of Federal Regulations as of publication; confirm against eCFR before filing or inspection. This article is informational and is not legal advice — consult a qualified maritime attorney for specific regulatory questions.