Set a shoreside address
Use one permanent address for your accounts instead of whichever marina you're tied to this week.
For liveaboard boaters
Marina to marina, anchorage to anchorage, your dock is never the same for long. Keep one permanent address on land and read your mail from the cockpit, wherever the water takes you.

The liveaboard mail problem
You can't put a marina you'll leave next month on your bank and insurance accounts.
Anchored out or on passage, you may go a long stretch with no way to reach mail waiting ashore.
Order a part for the boat and it may arrive at a marina you've already sailed from.
Registrations, insurance, and renewals for the vessel are exactly the mail you can't afford to miss.
How it fits life aboard
Use one permanent address for your accounts instead of whichever marina you're tied to this week.
See everything that arrived the moment you're back in range, and handle it in one sitting.
Read vessel documents and renewals instantly, without waiting for paper to catch up to your wake.
Send mail and boat parts ahead to the marina where you'll actually be.
What matters at sea
Let mail collect while you're off the grid, then forward it as one shipment to your next long stay.
Track vessel registration, insurance, and memberships so a lapse never catches you between ports.
Receive boat parts and supplies, and forward them to the marina where you'll take delivery.
See envelope photos and summaries without downloading a mountain of data on marina wifi.
A day in the life
The Hollises have cruised the Intracoastal and the islands for three seasons aboard their catamaran. Their MyEverAddress is the address on every account, no matter which anchorage they're in. After a week off the grid in the Exumas, they finally get a signal and open the dashboard: the boat's insurance renewal is due soon, a part they ordered is waiting at a chandlery back on the mainland, and there's a stack of statements. They scan the renewal, forward the part to their next marina, hold the rest to consolidate later, and get back to the water — mail handled between snorkel trips.
Worth knowing
Vessel documentation, registration, and residency have their own rules, and a mailing address doesn't settle domicile or official status on its own. Confirm what your state and documentation require.
Mail waits safely in one place while you're out of range; it's all there when you reconnect.
Setup requires identity verification and USPS Form 1583, which we guide you through.
See how it works with a fictional traveler's mail — no account needed.