Tankerman

Tankerman-PIC

Person In Charge, Tank Vessels

Tankerman-PIC (Person In Charge) is the senior tankerman endorsement — you supervise cargo loading and discharge on tank barges and ships. It is graded by cargo type (DL — Dangerous Liquid, or DLG — Liquefied Gas) and commands premium pay in the barge and product-tanker trades.

Controlling regulation: 46 CFR 13.201

Where this fits in the ladder

Sea service

None

no minimum

Est. cost

$1,225–$2,400

training + docs + fees

Timeline

Course

course-based

Sea service requirement

Documented cargo transfer operations (typically a set number of supervised loads/discharges) plus tankerman training. Day count varies by route and prior credential — verify at the NMC.

Practical assessment: Documented in-charge cargo transfer operations certified by qualified PICs.

Each day must be documented with a sea service letter showing vessel name, USCG Official Number, gross tonnage, route, position, dates, and total days served.

Track your sea service days free →

STCW training required

BST

Basic Safety Training

Personal survival, fire prevention, first aid, personal safety. Required for any mariner on an ocean or near coastal vessel.

Valid: 5 yearsCost: $500–$900STCW VI/1
TANKER

Basic Tanker Cargo Operations

Tanker familiarization for oil and chemical (or gas) cargo operations. Required for tankerman and most officers serving on tank vessels.

Valid: 5 years (with sea service)Cost: $300–$700STCW V/1-1 & V/1-2

Written exam modules

Taken at a USCG Regional Exam Center. Drill the full bank free below.

This endorsement has its own written exam, taken at a USCG Regional Exam Center. Drill the full question bank free with spaced-repetition scheduling.

Practice the Tankerman-PIC exam bank →

Application documents

TWIC Card

$125.25 · 5-year validity · TSA application + biometrics

Physical (CG-719K)

~$100–300 · Valid 12 months from exam date · Any licensed physician

Drug Test (CG-719P)

~$60–80 · Must be within 185 days of NMC receipt · SAMHSA-certified lab

Cost breakdown

STCW training$800–$1,600
Documents (TWIC, physical, drug test)$285–$505
NMC user fees$140–$295
Estimated total$1,225–$2,400

Estimates only. Excludes optional exam-prep courses, travel, and lodging. Verify current NMC fees before applying.

How to apply at the NMC

The application path is the same for every credential — only the documents and exams above change.

  1. 1

    Complete the application form (CG-719B)

    Fill out the Application for Merchant Mariner Credential (CG-719B). Small-vessel operators may document time on the Small Vessel Sea Service Form (CG-719S). List every endorsement you are applying for.

  2. 2

    Assemble your supporting documents

    Gather your TWIC, CG-719K medical certificate (within 12 months), CG-719P drug test (within 185 days), sea service letters, course completion certificates, and a copy of any current MMC. Missing or stale documents are the #1 cause of delays.

  3. 3

    Submit to the National Maritime Center

    Send the package to the NMC by email, mail, or fax, or hand it to a Regional Exam Center. Pay the applicable evaluation, examination, and issuance user fees (46 CFR 10.219) via Pay.gov.

  4. 4

    NMC evaluation

    An evaluator reviews your file against 46 CFR. If anything is missing you receive an Awaiting Information (AI) letter; once complete you get an Approval to Test (ATT) letter, valid 12 months, listing the exam modules you must pass.

  5. 5

    Take any required exams at a REC

    Schedule your modules at a Regional Exam Center within the ATT window. Each module is graded separately — passes are banked, and you retest only the modules you miss.

  6. 6

    Issuance

    Once evaluation, exams, and the safety/security (TWIC) check are all cleared, the NMC prints and mails your MMC. A credential is valid for five years.

Forms and fees are set by the U.S. Coast Guard. Confirm the current CG-719 forms and NMC user fees at the National Maritime Center before submitting.

Build your Tankerman-PIC plan

Track your credentials, log sea service days, and see exactly how close you are — free.