Marine Electrical in Mississippi
Browsing all marine service providers in Mississippi. We're still tagging shops by service type — for now, listings below cover the full Mississippi marine industry.
Marine electrical work is its own discipline — saltwater corrosion, galvanic isolation, and DC-AC system integration all matter in ways automotive electrical doesn't. Look for an ABYC-certified marine electrician (American Boat & Yacht Council) for anything beyond basic wiring. Common jobs: battery bank upgrades to lithium, shore-power inlet replacement, navigation electronics installation, and corrosion troubleshooting.
Marine service providers in Mississippi
No exact electrical matches yet — these are the major marine shops in Mississippi.
Captains Choice Yacht Sales and Brokerage
UnverifiedBoat Shop · Repair services
3834 Highway 25, MS
Duncan Marine
UnverifiedBoat Builder · Repair services
6694 MS Hwy 25, Brandon, MS 39047
Eastport Marina
VerifiedMarina
892 County Road 956, Iuka, MS 38852
+1 662-423-6972Website
Eastport Marina
VerifiedMarina
892 County Road 956, Iuka, MS 38852
+1-662-423-6972Website
Aqua Yacht Harbor
UnverifiedMarina
3832 Hwy 25, Iuka, MS 38852
Bay St Louis Municipal Harbor
UnverifiedMarina
MS
Bay-Waveland Yacht Club
UnverifiedMarina
MS
Grand Harbor Marina
UnverifiedMarina
MS
Greenville Yacht Club
UnverifiedMarina
MS
Keesler Marina
UnverifiedMarina
MS
Ocean Springs Inner Harbor
UnverifiedMarina
MS
Ocean Springs Small Craft Harbor
UnverifiedMarina
MS
Frequently asked questions
- What does ABYC certification mean?
- The American Boat & Yacht Council certifies marine technicians on standards specific to boats — DC/AC integration, corrosion, fuel systems, etc. ABYC-certified electricians follow industry-recognized safety standards that insurance companies often require for major work.
- Should I switch my boat batteries to lithium?
- Lithium (LiFePO4) batteries weigh ~70% less than equivalent AGM, last 5–10x longer, and recharge much faster. Trade-offs: 3–4x upfront cost and a properly designed charging system to avoid damage. Most marine electricians recommend lithium for boats spending significant time off-shore-power.