Afloat gives your team a live, structured view of every berth, slot and storage zone, so placement decisions are quick, accurate, and easy to communicate.
Structured Space Management
Afloat lets you create boat storage zones for pontoons, basins, hardstanding, and boat parks, then add locations (berths or slots) inside each zone. This gives you a consistent structure for managing space across the entire site.
Locations can be named, numbered, or organised by row so your team can work the way your marina already operates, without forcing a new mental model.
Visual Placement Tools
See space and assignments visually, not in spreadsheets. Each location can have a pin on Google Maps, on an uploaded site plan image, or both, making it easy to understand occupancy at a glance. This is ideal for large basins, multi-pontoon sites, or mixed storage areas.
Where needed, a berth/slot can store latitude and longitude, and positions can be captured using a phone while standing near the berth, keeping your layout accurate over time.
Afloat replaces disconnected maps, paper notes, and “who last changed this?” confusion with a clear zone-and-location system. Your team gets fast visibility, visual placement tools, and cleaner handovers between office and dockside operations.
Faster Dockside Decisions
Afloat helps your team assign boats to berths/slots with clarity, reducing uncertainty between office and dockside teams. When a placement changes, the system becomes the single source of truth.
Because boats and customers are connected in Afloat, it’s easier to confirm the right details when you’re on the pontoon, especially during busy arrival windows.
Reduce Placement Errors
Boat records can include details like measurements and type, helping your team make better placement decisions, especially when you manage mixed berth sizes or seasonal pressure on space.
By keeping placements and boat info connected, you can reduce admin churn caused by unclear notes, duplicated spreadsheets, or “temporary” placements that become permanent by accident.