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Crew Welfare

Crew welfare encompasses the physical, mental, and social wellbeing of seafarers on board, as mandated by MLC 2006. It covers working hours, rest periods, food and accommodation, medical care, shore leave, and communication access. Port State Control inspectors assess crew welfare during inspections.

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Definition

Semantic definition

Subject
Crew welfare
Predicate
refers to the MLC 2006-mandated standards that
Object
protect the physical, mental, and social wellbeing of seafarers, including rest hours, accommodation, and medical care.

Crew welfare refers to the MLC 2006-mandated standards that protect the physical, mental, and social wellbeing of seafarers, including rest hours, accommodation, and medical care.

Contents

  1. 1What is Crew Welfare?
  2. 2Rest Hours and Fatigue
  3. 3Accommodation and Living Standards
  4. 4Mental Health and Social Wellbeing
  5. 5Medical Care On Board

What is Crew Welfare?

Crew welfare encompasses the physical, mental, and social wellbeing of all seafarers working on board, as defined and mandated by MLC 2006. It covers the full range of living and working conditions: hours of work and rest, accommodation quality, food and catering, medical care, shore leave and recreation, communication access (internet and telephone), and the social environment on board. Port State Control inspectors assess crew welfare as a core element of MLC compliance. Beyond legal compliance, crew welfare directly affects vessel safety — fatigued, stressed, or poorly accommodated crew make mistakes.

Rest Hours and Fatigue

Fatigue is one of the leading human factors in maritime accidents. MLC 2006 sets mandatory minimum rest requirements: 10 hours in any 24-hour period and 77 hours in any 7-day period. These are minimums — during high-intensity operations (long passages, busy charter season), rest management requires active planning. The master is responsible for ensuring that watchkeeping arrangements and operational demands do not lead to crew fatigue. Rest hour records must be maintained and are inspected by PSC. Falsifying rest hour records is a criminal offence in most jurisdictions.

Accommodation and Living Standards

MLC 2006 Title 3 sets minimum standards for seafarer accommodation. For yachts operating commercially, this covers: minimum floor space per person in sleeping quarters; access to sanitary facilities; quality of mess rooms and recreation areas; adequate heating, cooling, and ventilation; lighting; and noise and vibration levels. Charter yacht crew accommodation must meet these standards even where it competes with guest space for premium positions on the vessel. PSCOs inspect accommodation during expanded inspections.

Mental Health and Social Wellbeing

Mental health at sea has received growing attention in the maritime industry following research documenting high rates of depression, anxiety, and social isolation among seafarers. Contributing factors: extended time away from family, limited communication ashore, social pressure of living and working in a closed environment, and lack of formal mental health support. Responsible yacht operators address mental health proactively: reasonable communication allowances (crew internet access), shore leave policy, crew social activities, and awareness of mental health resources (Sailors' Society, Mission to Seafarers). ISM Code section 6 addresses crew resources and wellbeing within the SMS framework.

Medical Care On Board

MLC 2006 requires medical care on board comparable to that available to shoreside workers. This covers: a medicine chest and first aid equipment maintained to flag state and MCA standards; a designated crew member with first aid competency; access to radio medical advice (MRCC or Telemedicine); and shipowner responsibility for medical costs arising from illness or injury on board at no cost to the seafarer. Flag state requirements for medical equipment and training vary; UK-flagged vessels follow MCA guidance; Cayman Islands and Marshall Islands have their own specifications.

Frequently Asked Questions

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Related terms

  • MLC 2006
  • Port State Control
  • STCW

Last updated: 9 May 2026

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