Most shipowners and operators manage day-to-day work in-house, and rightly so. But certain decisions carry enough financial, legal, or operational risk that an outside expert pays for itself many times over. A good maritime consultant brings pattern recognition from dozens of cases you will only face once. Below are seven real scenarios where bringing in marine advisory support is the smart move.
Seven Scenarios Where a Maritime Consultant Earns Their Fee
- Buying or selling a vessel. A pre-purchase inspection, valuation sanity-check, and Memorandum of Agreement review protect you from inheriting hidden defects or unfavourable terms.
- Entering a new trade or route. Different cargoes, ports, and flag states bring unfamiliar regulations. A consultant maps the compliance and cost picture before you commit.
- A persistent technical or fuel-consumption problem. When in-house troubleshooting stalls, an independent surveyor or technical advisor isolates root cause without internal bias.
- Preparing for a major survey, dry-dock, or class renewal. Early planning reduces off-hire days and avoids surprise findings that blow the budget.
- A dispute, claim, or charter-party disagreement. Expert assessment of laytime, demurrage, or cargo damage strengthens your position before lawyers get involved.
- Tightening operating costs across a fleet. A procurement and OPEX review often uncovers savings that more than cover the advisory fee.
- Meeting new environmental or safety rules. CII, EEXI, ballast water, and emissions deadlines need a clear, ship-specific roadmap rather than guesswork.
What a Good Consultant Actually Delivers
Beyond a report, the value is in actionable judgement: a prioritised list of what matters, what it will cost, and what to do first. The best engagements are scoped tightly so you pay for a specific outcome rather than open-ended hours. Whether you need a one-off second opinion or ongoing shipping consultancy, the goal is the same: fewer surprises and better-informed decisions. You can start with general maritime advisory to scope the problem before committing to a larger project.
When You Probably Do Not Need One
Routine voyages, well-understood maintenance, and decisions your own team has made many times rarely justify outside help. Reserve consultants for the moments where being wrong is expensive or hard to reverse. That discipline keeps advisory spend focused and its return obvious.
If any of these seven scenarios sounds familiar, talk to us before the cost of waiting grows. Book a session through our general maritime advisory service and turn a high-stakes decision into a confident one.