SpearfishingMap

Marshall Islands

Oceania · Micronesia

Recreational and subsistence spearfishing is generally permitted in the Marshall Islands and no national recreational fishing licence is required for tourists. However, several restrictions apply. The Fisheries Act (51 MIRC Ch.2) bans destructive fishing methods (poisons, chemicals, explosives) and protects key reef species: sea turtles are tightly restricted (subsistence only, with minimum carapace sizes and a ban on taking on shore), and all shark fishing other than limited subsistence use is prohibited (the RMI is a shark sanctuary). Secondary fishing guidance (citing the Fish Harvest Regulations 2020) states it is illegal to use SCUBA or any underwater breathing apparatus while harvesting fish, day or night. Because all land is privately held under customary tenure, permission from local landowners (alap/iroij) is required for shore access, and many atolls have community-managed 'mo' (taboo) no-take or restricted-take areas and Reimaanlok conservation areas where fishing is limited or banned. Coastal waters out to roughly 5 nautical miles fall under local government councils. No authoritative statutory text explicitly naming spearguns/spears was retrieved, so equipment-specific rules are reported from secondary sources.

Restricted
Earbsa dàtaEarbsa meadhanach

Air ùrachadh mu dheireadh An t-Ògmhios 15, 2026

Frèam riaghladh

  • §Marshall Islands Marine Resources Act 1997 (51 MIRC Ch.1, P.L. 1997-60)
  • §Fisheries Act 1997 (51 MIRC Ch.2, P.L. 1997-60)
  • §Fisheries (Title 51) Amendment Act 2011 (P.L. 2011-63) - shark sanctuary
  • §Fish Harvest Regulations 2020 (per secondary sources)
Cead riatanach
Chan eil riatanach
Scuba
Toirmisgte
Coigrich
Fàilte

An lagh, verbatim

Teacsaichean laghail

Na foillseachaidhean reachdail agus riaghailteach mionaideach a tha a' riaghladh slighe-biasd an seo, air an luaidh mar a chaidh am foillseachadh, le ceangal ri gach stòras oifigeil.

01Section 214Republic of the Marshall Islands · national

Fishing with poisons or explosives

Fisheries Act 1997 (51 MIRC Ch.2, P.L. 1997-60, §32)

ENTùsail

§214. Fishing with poisons or explosives. (1) No person shall: (a) use, permit to be used or attempt to use any: (i) chemical, poison or noxious substance or material whether of manufactured or natural origin; (ii) dynamite or explosive substance or device, for the purpose of killing, taking, stunning, stupefying or disabling fish or in any way rendering fish more easily caught; (b) carry, permit to be carried, possess or control any: (i) chemical, poison or noxious substance or material whether of manufactured or natural origin; (ii) dynamite or explosive substance or device, in circumstances which indicate the intention of its use for any of the purposes referred to in paragraph (a); (c) place in the water or assist in placing in the water any: (i) chemical, poison or noxious substance or material whether of manufactured or natural origin; (ii) dynamite, or any explosive substance or device, for any of the purposes referred to in paragraph (a). (2) No person shall: (a) land, display for sale, sell, deal in, transport, receive or possess any fish or fish product taken by any means which contravenes this Section ... (3) For the purposes of this Section, the terms “poisonous”, “chemicals” and “substance” include but are not limited to hypocholorus acid or any of its salts, including bleaches commonly sold under various trade names such as Clorox and Purex, and bleaching powders, preparations containing ratenone, tephrosin or plant material from Barrington asiatica, coculusferrandianus, hura crepitans, piscidia erythrina, tephrosia purpurea and wikstremia.

02Section 215Republic of the Marshall Islands · national

Limitations on taking turtles

Fisheries Act 1997 (51 MIRC Ch.2, P.L. 1997-60)

ENTùsail

§215. Limitations on taking turtles. (1) No hawksbill turtles or sea turtles shall be taken or intentionally killed while on shore, nor shall their eggs be taken. (2) No hawksbill turtle shall be taken or killed except for subsistence fishing and where its shell is at least twenty-seven inches when measured over the top of the carapace shell lengthwise. (3) No green turtle shall be taken or killed except for subsistence fishing and where its shell is at least thirty-four inches when measured over the top of the carapace shell lengthwise. (4) Notwithstanding any provisions of this Section, the taking of sea turtles and their eggs shall be allowed for scientific purposes when specifically authorized by the Authority. (5) No person shall buy, sell, display for sale, offer for sale or otherwise market any turtle or turtle product.

03Section 209Republic of the Marshall Islands · national

Protection of certain species

Fisheries Act 1997 (51 MIRC Ch.2, P.L. 1997-60, §27)

ENTùsail

§209. Protection of certain species. (1) The Minister may, by proclamation, declare any fish as protected which are designated as endangered by international agreement on advice from the Director. (2) The Authority may make regulations regarding the management of the species protected under this Section.

04Section 229Republic of the Marshall Islands · national

Prohibition of Commercial Shark Fishing

Fisheries Act 1997 (51 MIRC Ch.2), as amended by P.L. 2011-63

ENTùsail

§229. Prohibition of Commercial Shark Fishing. Commercial shark fishing is hereby prohibited as a target fishery in the Republic of the Marshall Islands Fisheries waters. [new part and section inserted by P.L. 2011-63]

05Section 230Republic of the Marshall Islands · national

Prohibition of taking of sharks, possession, sale and trade

Fisheries Act 1997 (51 MIRC Ch.2), as amended by P.L. 2011-63

ENTùsail

§230. Prohibition of taking of sharks, possession, sale and trade. (1) No person shall catch, capture or intentionally engage in fishing for shark or any part thereof or intentionally remove the fins or tail of any shark or otherwise mutilate or injure any shark within the land or fisheries waters of the Republic of the Marshall Islands. (2) Notwithstanding subsection (1): (a) any person who holds a license or permit from the Marshall Islands Marine Resources Authority to conduct research on sharks ... shall not be subject to the penalties in this section; (b) fishing for shark for subsistence use is permitted provided that no person shall harvest shark that has been declared as protected species ... (3) Any shark that is inadvertently caught or captured, subject to subsection (2), shall be immediately released, whether the shark is dead or alive. No shark shall be retained even if caught as bycatch.

06Section 102 (Definitions)Republic of the Marshall Islands · national

Definition of recreational and subsistence fishing

Marshall Islands Marine Resources Act 1997 (51 MIRC Ch.1, P.L. 1997-60, §102)

ENTùsail

(52) ‘recreational fishing’ means non commercial fishing for leisure or relaxation and may include sport fishing; ... (60) ‘subsistence fishing’ means fishing by a citizen substantially for personal consumption, and does not include any fishing resulting or intending or appearing to result, directly or indirectly, in selling or [trading].

Cuin a ghabhas tu tumadh

Ràithean & cuingeachaidhean ùine

Ùineachan dùinte, fosgailte agus cuingichte tron bhliadhna. Daingneach an-còmhnaidh dùnaidhean gnè-sònraichte gu h-ionadail.

Chan eil dùnaidhean ràitheil air an clàradh — dearbhaich gu h-ionadail mus tum thu.

Cead iasgaich

Cead

Dè a dh'fheumas tu gus a bhith ceadaichte anns an uisge, dè a chosgas e, agus mar a gheibhear e.

Chan eil cead riatanachtro Marshall Islands Marine Resources Authority (MIMRA)
Chan eil cead riatanach
Seòrsa
No recreational fishing licence required for tourists/visitors; commercial and foreign fishing is licensed by MIMRA. Local government councils manage coastal waters (approx. 5 nm) and may set local rules.
Cosgais
unknown
Dligheachd
unknown
Mar a gheibhear e
No permit needed for recreational/subsistence reef fishing; however landowner (alap/iroij) permission is required for shore access, and local atoll councils/resource committees may regulate community conservation areas.
Ùghdarras
Marshall Islands Marine Resources Authority (MIMRA)

Uidheam & dòigh

Riaghailtean uidheamachd

Dè an uidheam a tha ceadaichte, mar a ghabhas a cleachdadh, agus na cumhaichean ceangailte.

ScubaToirmisgte

Cuingeachaidhean

  • Use of SCUBA or any underwater breathing apparatus while harvesting fish is prohibited (day or night) per secondary guidance citing the Fish Harvest Regulations 2020
  • Chemicals, poisons, noxious substances and explosives are strictly prohibited as fishing methods (Fisheries Act 1997 s.214)

No statutory text explicitly naming spearguns/spears was retrieved; freediving spearfishing is widely practised. The SCUBA-while-fishing prohibition is reported by a secondary fishing guide attributing it to the Fish Harvest Regulations 2020; the verbatim regulation text could not be independently retrieved.

Dè ghabhas tu

Crìochan glacaidh & gnèithean dìonta

Cuòtathan làitheil, meudachdan as lugha, agus gnèithean nach gabhar a-chaoidh.

Crìoch làitheil

unknown

Meudachdan as lugha

  • Hawksbill turtle (subsistence only)min 68.6 cm
  • Green turtle (subsistence only)min 86.4 cm

Gnèithean dìonta — na gabh

  • DìontaAll sharks (no take except limited subsistence and licensed research; commercial shark fishing banned - RMI shark sanctuary)
  • DìontaSea turtles incl. hawksbill and green (subsistence only, size limits, no take on shore, no sale)
  • DìontaHumphead/Napoleon wrasse (Cheilinus undulatus) - full or partial protection (secondary source)
  • DìontaBumphead parrotfish (Bolbometopon muricatum) - full or partial protection (secondary source)

Turtle minimum sizes are statutory carapace lengths converted from inches (hawksbill 27 in = 68.6 cm; green 34 in = 86.4 cm), measured over the top of the carapace lengthwise. Humphead wrasse and bumphead parrotfish protection is reported by a secondary fishing guide; statutory citation not independently verified.

Cò a dh'fhaodar iasgach

Luchd-tadhail & luchd-còmhnaidh

Mar a tha na riaghailtean eadar-dhealaichte airson luchd-tadhail cèin agus luchd-còmhnaidh ionadail.

Luchd-tadhail cèin

Ceadaichte

Riatanasan

  • Obtain permission from local landowners (customary land tenure) before shore access
  • Comply with national prohibitions (no SCUBA harvesting, no poisons/explosives) and protected-species rules
  • Respect community conservation areas and traditional 'mo' no-take/restricted zones

Cuingeachaidhean

  • Foreign commercial and foreign recreational fishing using foreign vessels is separately regulated/licensed by MIMRA

Tourists and recreational anglers reportedly do not need a fishing licence or permit (secondary source). Foreign-vessel-based fishing falls under the Fishing Access and Licensing Act (51 MIRC Ch.4).

Luchd-còmhnaidh

Subsistence/recreational fishing by citizens - no licence required

Riatanasan

  • Comply with protected-species and prohibited-method rules
  • Respect customary land/reef tenure and local council/atoll conservation rules

Buannachdan

  • Subsistence fishing exemptions; artisanal fisheries may be exempted from licensing and fees under Fisheries Act s.210
  • Subsistence take of turtles (within size limits) and subsistence shark fishing permitted (non-protected species only)

Customary marine tenure gives landowners/communities significant control over reef and lagoon access.

Càite air a' chladach

Sgìrean ceadaichte & toirmisgte

Sgìrean ainmichte a tha fosgailte no dùinte airson slighe-biasd. Faic an dealbh-iomlan air a' mhapa eadar-ghnìomhach.

Sgìrean ceadaichte

  • Recreational and subsistence reef and lagoon fishing is generally practised around the capital atoll. No national recreational licence is required, but landowner permission is needed for shore access and community-managed restricted areas may apply.

    No SCUBA/underwater breathing apparatus while harvesting (per Fish Harvest Regulations 2020, secondary source); no poisons/explosives; protected-species rules for sharks and turtles; landowner permission required for shore access.

Sgìrean toirmisgte

  • Jaluit Atoll Conservation Areamarine conservation area / Ramsar site

    Marine conservation area established 1999 (South Pacific Biodiversity Conservation Programme) and RMI's first Ramsar Wetland of International Importance; managed under the Reimaanlok community-based conservation framework with no-take / restricted-take 'mo' areas where fishing is limited or prohibited.

  • Namdrik Atoll Local Resources / conservation areacommunity-based marine managed area

    Community-managed conservation area under the Reimaanlok framework (Namdrik Atoll Local Resources Committee, 2012 Equator Prize), including traditional no-take and restricted-take 'mo' zones.

  • Network of community-based conservation areas designated under the Reimaanlok national framework, classified as Type I (managed subsistence use only) or Type II (high protection), plus traditional 'mo' areas that are no-take or restricted-take by customary access rights. Specific boundaries are set locally by atoll resource committees.

  • Bikar Atoll is one of two remote, uninhabited northern atolls protected within the Republic of the Marshall Islands' first national marine sanctuary (announced 29 January 2025), which spans ~48,000 km2 (18,500 sq mi) and is fully protected from fishing. The atoll hosts grey/reef sharks, green sea turtle nesting colonies, giant clams, Napoleon (humphead) wrasse and bumphead parrotfish. All fishing — therefore spearfishing — is prohibited.

  • Bokak (Taongi) Atoll is the second of two remote, uninhabited northern atolls protected within the Marshall Islands' first national marine sanctuary (announced 29 January 2025; ~48,000 km2), which is fully protected from fishing. It is the nation's northernmost atoll and supports its largest colony of nesting green turtles plus multiple shark species. All fishing — therefore spearfishing — is prohibited.

Suidheachaidhean air an uisge

Suidheachaidhean beò

Snapshot mara agus sìde beò faisg air àite iomraidh cladaich ann an Marshall Islands, o Open-Meteo. Bidh suidheachaidhean ag atharrachadh air feadh a' chladaich — làimhsich mar chomharra.

Mara & sìde beò faisg air Majuro Atoll lagoon and reefs (general subsistence/recreational fishing).

Suidheachaidhean

Cò ri fhaighneachd

Ùghdarrasan

Na buidhnean oifigeil a tha an urra ri iasgach agus ceadachadh.

  • Marshall Islands Marine Resources Authority (MIMRA)

    fisheries authority

    rmimimra.comPhone +692 625 8262; email inquiry@mimra.com; Majuro, Marshall Islands
  • MIMRA Coastal Fisheries Division

    coastal fisheries management

    rmimimra.comCommunity-based coastal fisheries management; coordinates with traditional leaders and local councils
  • Local Government Councils (atoll/municipal)

    local fisheries jurisdiction

    cbfm.spc.intResponsible for protection of local fisheries to approx. 5 nautical miles under the Local Government / Management and Development of Local Fisheries Act

On a thàinig seo

Stòrasan

Bidh gach tagradh air an duilleag seo a' dol air ais gu aon de na h-iomraidhean sin.

  1. [01]

    Fisheries Act 1997 (51 MIRC Ch.2, P.L. 1997-60) - official PDF

    Oifigeil
    rmiparliament.orgAir faighinn Ògm 15
  2. [02]

    Marshall Islands Marine Resources Act 1997 (51 MIRC Ch.1, P.L. 1997-60) - official PDF

    Oifigeil
    rmiparliament.orgAir faighinn Ògm 15
  3. [03]

    The Outlaw Ocean Project - Marshall Islands Global Fishing Legislation (Fisheries Act, s.214/229/230)

    Dàrna
    theoutlawocean.comAir faighinn Ògm 15
  4. [04]

    Marshall Islands Marine Resources Authority (MIMRA) - official site

    Oifigeil
    rmimimra.comAir faighinn Ògm 15
  5. [05]

    SPC Coastal Fisheries & Aquaculture (CBFM) - Marshall Islands country page

    Oifigeil
    cbfm.spc.intAir faighinn Ògm 15
  6. [06]

    Fishing in Marshall Islands 2026 (recreational fishing guide) - SCUBA ban, no-licence, landowner permission, protected species

    community
    fishingworldguide.comAir faighinn Ògm 15
  7. [07]

    Reimaanlok: A National Framework for Conservation Area Planning in the Marshall Islands (Baker et al., 2011)

    Dàrna
    onlinelibrary.wiley.comAir faighinn Ògm 15
  8. [08]

    Smithsonian Magazine - new marine protected area / Jaluit Atoll conservation context

    Dàrna
    smithsonianmag.comAir faighinn Ògm 15
  9. [09]

    U.S. All Islands Coral Reef Committee - RMI jurisdiction (shark sanctuary, Reimaanlok)

    Dàrna
    usallislandscommittee.orgAir faighinn Ògm 15

Notaichean rannsachaidh

Spearfishing itself is not separately named in the statutory texts retrieved; it is legal in practice as freediving/subsistence reef fishing and no recreational licence is required. Key restrictions come from: (1) Fisheries Act 1997 s.214 (no poisons/chemicals/explosives - verbatim, official); (2) s.215 turtle protections and s.229-230 shark sanctuary (verbatim, official); (3) a secondary fishing guide stating SCUBA/underwater breathing apparatus harvesting is banned under the Fish Harvest Regulations 2020 - this specific regulation text could NOT be independently retrieved and should be verified with MIMRA; (4) customary land/reef tenure requiring landowner permission for shore access; and (5) Reimaanlok community conservation areas and traditional 'mo' no-take zones (e.g. Jaluit, Namdrik) with locally-set boundaries. Humphead wrasse and bumphead parrotfish protection is reported only by the secondary guide. Coordinates for atolls are approximate atoll centroids from general geographic references, not from legal instruments. Confidence is medium: core prohibitions are backed by verbatim official statute, but equipment-specific (SCUBA) and some species rules rest on secondary sources, and no seasonal closures specific to spearfishing were found.

Fuirich ùrachadhInntrigeadh tràth

Thoir fios dhomh nuair a dh'atharraicheas riaghailtean Marshall Islands

Cuiridh sinn post-d thugad nuair a thèid ràithean no riaghailtean Marshall Islands ùrachadh nar cruinneachadh dàta.

Thoir fios dhomh mu

Gun spama — rabhaidhean atharrachaidh a-mhàin. Dì-chlàraich uair sam bith. Chan eil sinn a-riamh a' reic do phost-d.