Garmin is pitching a tidy little revolution for one of boating’s oldest — and most dangerous — problems. Its new OnBoard system replaces the traditional coiled kill-cord with wearable wireless tags that talk to your chartplotter, drop an instant MOB (man-overboard) waypoint the moment a tag disappears, sound alarms, and can even cut the engine if the person who fell in was wearing the captain tag. It’s the kind of idea that sounds obvious in hindsight: take a safety device people sometimes forget to use, make it passive, and stick the smarts into the things boaters already rely on.
At its core, the OnBoard package is two things: a small central hub that ties into your boat’s electrical system and NMEA 2000 network, and a set of Bluetooth-style MOB tags you give to crew, kids, or even a dog. Garmin says a single system supports up to eight tags, and that setup, pairing, and tag management happen directly from compatible ECHOMAP and GPSMAP chartplotters, so you don’t need a separate phone app to monitor the network. If the hub loses contact with a tag or the tag leaves the system’s defined “safe zone,” the chartplotter drops an MOB waypoint and audible alarms kick in.
The company clearly thought about the real-world ways people use boats. Tags can be assigned roles: only the tag marked as “captain” will trigger an automatic engine shutdown if it goes overboard; passenger tags are mainly for fast detection and alerting. There’s also a physical button on the captain tag that lets an operator stop the engine proactively if they see someone slip or a child wander too close to the swim platform — essentially a manual preemptive kill switch built into the wearable. Those are small design decisions that change how you might actually rely on the system in a tense moment.

Price and availability are straightforward: Garmin lists the OnBoard starter kit at about $499.99 with extra MOB tags at roughly $149.99 each, and the system is shipping now in many markets. Garmin and multiple marine outlets recommend professional installation by a qualified marine installer, since the hub needs to be wired into your engine cutoff wiring or ignition circuit to be able to stop the motor. That install cost and integration step is worth flagging upfront — it’s not a simple plug-and-play accessory in every boat.

The safety pitch rests on two linked ideas: people forget or neglect kill cords, and when a boat continues under power after a person goes in the water, the results can be catastrophic. U.S. law already requires operators of many smaller recreational boats to use an engine cut-off link while on plane or above displacement speed, and manufacturers must meet ABYC A-33 standards; Garmin’s manuals and product statements emphasize that OnBoard is designed to meet those industry standards and that proper installation and powering of the hub are essential to remain compliant. In short, the product is aimed at both improving everyday safety and meeting the regulatory box many small-boat owners already need to tick.
That “proper installation” caveat matters for risk management. Garmin’s documentation explicitly warns that the OnBoard engine cutoff system has to be powered and configured correctly to meet the ABYC A-33 standard — if the hub isn’t powered while engines run, or you don’t keep a captain tag paired and connected, the system won’t meet the compliance criteria. The manuals also spell out how to bypass and re-enable the cutoff in an emergency, and stress test the installed system before you trust it in anger. Those are the sort of manufacturer responsibilities that should make any installer and owner pause for a careful checkout.
Every new safety tool brings edge cases. Wireless detection can be fast and flexible, but it’s not a get-out-of-responsibility-free card. The system depends on wireless connectivity, correct role assignment, the hub being powered, and reliable wiring into the engine control path — any of which, if done badly, could leave you with alarms but no cut-power, or worse, an unintended shutoff. Garmin builds in temporary disable features (so you can swim or snorkel off the stern without an automatic shutdown) and a way to manually disable the cutoff after a trip-over event, but those conveniences must be used correctly. The company and reviewers stress that OnBoard is an extra layer — not a substitute — for lifejackets, safe helm practices, lookouts, and basic seamanship.
The user experience angle is a big part of Garmin’s bet. Old-school lanyards require someone to actually clip the cord every time the helm changes hands; users don’t always do that. A passive wearable that simply has to be turned on and worn lowers the friction for compliance, which, in theory, should reduce the number of runaway-boat incidents and propeller strike injuries. Garmin points to routine features — an automatic MOB waypoint on your chartplotter and an audible alarm the moment something goes wrong — that convert a chaotic moment into a marked GPS position and an engineered response. That kind of digital breadcrumbing is precisely what search-and-rescue crews and calm, practiced skippers want in the first minutes after an incident.
There’s also a product-ecosystem argument: for people already running Garmin ECHOMAP or GPSMAP units at the helm, OnBoard feels like an obvious extension. Integration into a familiar display reduces another potential failure mode — a confusing user interface in a high-stress situation — because the MOB information shows up where you already look for navigation and sonar. For owners without Garmin chartplotters, the system still connects to a boat’s engine wiring and NMEA 2000 network, but the simplicity benefits are clearest for existing Garmin ecosystems.
Critically, the OnBoard rollout shows the industry moving toward sensor-driven safety stacks rather than single-use mechanical fixes. Other companies have experimented with wireless kill switches for years; what makes Garmin’s iteration notable is the chartplotter integration, the captain/passenger role logic, and the clear focus on meeting ABYC and federal expectations for cut-off devices. That matters to dealers and yards, because a solution that meets standards and fits neatly into existing electronics packages is easier to specify, install, and support.
If you’re thinking about buying one, practical advice: budget for professional installation, test the system thoroughly with your installer present, keep at least one captain tag on the helm when engines are running, and practice the bypass/restart routine so you’re not fumbling during a stress event. And remember the simplest, oldest piece of advice: no electronic system can replace a properly fitting lifejacket and good lookout practices. OnBoard reduces a layer of human error; it doesn’t remove the need for careful seamanship.
So what’s the verdict? For tech-forward anglers, family boaters, and anyone who swaps helms between guests, Garmin OnBoard looks like a meaningful, thoughtfully engineered step forward: it preserves the safety function regulators demanded, removes some of the daily friction that keeps lanyards unused, and folds MOB detection into the instruments crews already consult. But the benefits are conditional — good installation, disciplined use, and an acceptance that this is a complementary layer in a broader safety system. If Garmin’s rollout encourages more people to be protected without having to remember a tiny coiled cord every time they head out, that alone makes OnBoard worth watching.
If you want deeper technical reading, Garmin’s OnBoard owner’s manual explains the ABYC-related installation points and bypass procedures in detail, and multiple marine outlets ran hands-on and initial coverage during the launch that highlight practical fit-and-finish and market positioning. For anyone installing it, those documents are essential pre-read.
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