Intracoastal frontage plus established finger-canal neighborhoods — a deep, active boating market just north of Boca.
Delray's waterfront splits between Intracoastal-facing docks and protected finger-canal communities like Tropic Isle and Pelican Harbor. Ocean access is via the Boynton Inlet to the north or the Boca Inlet to the south, since Delray has no inlet of its own. The canal homes generally favor mid-range capacity lifts; ICW lots and the larger Tropic Isle vessels often call for more.
Low-tide depth is the variable that catches people off guard in some of the older canals here, so our on-site evaluation always measures depth at low water, not just at the moment we show up. We size capacity to exceed the boat's fully loaded weight with margin, and never the other way around.
Permits go through the City of Delray Beach; we draft, file, and manage the process so you sign once.
Every project starts with a free on-site evaluation — pilings, water depth at low tide, electrical service, and access — so the lift recommendation is based on your dock and your boat, not a phone estimate.
Because we also hold marine and general contractor licenses through South Florida Seawall, any seawall or piling work your lift needs comes from one bid and one crew — not a second contractor.
Free on-site evaluation. No high-pressure sales. Response within one business day.