Skip to content
Back to Glossary

Glossary

Jones Act

The Jones Act prohibits any non-US ship from participating in US trade lanes (including Puerto Rico).

Jones Act

What is the Jones Act?

The Jones Act is section 7 of the Merchant Marine Act of 1920 that prohibits any non-US built or non-US flagged vessel from participating in trade between points of the United States. Named after its sponsor Senator Wesley Jones, the Jones Act also extends employer liability of US vessel employee injuries. 

Under the Jones Act, all vessels whose trading voyage begins anywhere in the US and delivers anywhere in the US (including Puerto Rico) must be built in the US, staffed by US crews, and owned by US citizens or corporations.

The Jones Act is administered by MARAD (United States Maritime Administration), an agency within the US Department of Transportation.

Learn More 

Related Help Articles

What are Ocean Alliances? 

Ten Checks for China Trade Compliance 

Related Glossary Terms

General Average  

ISPS Code (International Ship and Port Facility Security Code) 

Resources

Jones Act - Cornell Law Legal Information Institute

What Every Member of the Trade Community Should Know About: Coastwise Trade: Merchandise - CBP

准备好开始了吗?

Flexport makes shipping your cargo transparent, reliable, and affordable