How Long Does It Take to Get a Seaman Book?
How long does it take to get a seaman book? is One of the most common questions for new and experienced crew members alike, The answer isn’t universal—it depends heavily on whether you are applying through your home country’s national maritime authority or opting for an international open registry. While some fast-track flag states can issue digital temporary clearances in a matter of hours, receiving your physical Seaman’s Identification and Record Book (SIRB) typically takes anywhere from a few days to several weeks.
A seaman book typically takes 1 to 10 working days through most open registries (Panama, Liberia, Marshall Islands, Palau), while national documents like the Indian CDC or Philippine SIRB can take 2 to 4 weeks. Actual time depends on the flag state, document completeness, and whether you apply through an authorized agent.
If you’ve been offered a position on board — or your joining date is approaching — the processing time of your seaman book is the one deadline you can’t negotiate. No book, no sign-on. This guide compares realistic processing times across the major flag states, explains what actually causes delays, and shows the fastest route services for seafarers applying from the UAE.
Quick Comparison: Seaman Book Processing Times by Flag
Flag State | Typical Processing Time* | Expedited Option | Validity |
Panama | 3–5 working days | Yes (~24–72 hrs) | 5 years |
Liberia | 10–25 working days | Yes (~24 hrs) | 5 years |
Marshall Islands | 1–14 working days | Yes | 5 years |
Palau | 1–2 working days | Often same-day | 5 years |
Honduras | 3–15 working days | Limited | 5 years |
Belize | 2–5 working days | Yes | 5 years |
India (CDC) | 2–4 weeks | No | 10 years |
Philippines (SIRB/SRB) | 3 days–2 weeks | Walk-in same-day possible | 10 years |
UAE | 2–15 working days | Yes-48 Hours | 5 Years |
*Working days from complete application submission via an authorized agent. Estimated ranges.
What Actually Determines Your Processing Time
Four factors move the needle more than the flag itself. First, document completeness — a missing medical certificate or an expired STCW certificate is the single most common cause of rejection and resubmission, adding one to two weeks. Second, the channel you apply through: authorized agents with direct registry access consistently process faster than postal or embassy routes. Third, registry workload, which spikes around crew-change seasons. Fourth, verification checks — some registries verify your certificates with the issuing authority before printing, which is why a clean, consistent document set matters more than paying for expedited service.
Open Registries: The Fast Lane
Panama Seaman Book
Panama is the world’s largest ship registry, and its seaman book is the most widely requested document we process. Through an authorized agent, expect roughly 3–5 working days; expedited electronic processing can cut this to 24–72 hours. You’ll need a valid passport, medical certificate, STCW basic training certificates, and a photo. Validity is five years.
Liberia Seaman Book
Liberia runs one of the most digitized registries, and it shows: 10–25 working days is typical, with 24-hour expedited service available. Liberia’s document (often issued as a Seafarer’s Identification and Record Book) is broadly accepted and a strong choice when your joining date is tight.
Marshall Islands Seaman Book
Expect 1–14 working days through an agent. The Marshall Islands registry is known for stricter certificate verification, so ensure your STCW documents are current and consistent with your passport details before applying.
Palau, Honduras and Belize
Palau has built a reputation as one of the fastest options — 1–2 working days, sometimes same-day— making it a popular fallback for urgent sign-ons. Honduras (3–15 days) and Belize (2–15 days) are steady mid-range options frequently used for offshore and smaller tonnage fleets.
National Documents: Slower, But Sometimes Required
Indian CDC
The Indian Continuous Discharge Certificate is issued by the Directorate General of Shipping, and only to eligible applicants who meet DG Shipping’s training requirements. Realistic timeline: 2–4 weeks, with no meaningful expedited route. If you’re an Indian national working on foreign-flagged vessels, you may hold both an Indian CDC and a flag-state seaman book — a common setup among crew we place.
Philippine SIRB
MARINA issues the Seafarer’s Identification and Record Book. Walk-in applicants in the Philippines can sometimes receive it same-day to within two week; applying from abroad through an embassy typically stretches to two weeks or more.
UAE Seaman Book
For service on UAE-flagged vessels, the seaman record book is issued through the federal maritime authority, typically within 2–15 working days from Ministry of Energy and Infrastructure (MOEI). Requirements include valid residency, medical fitness, and STCW certification.
Applying from Dubai: The Fastest Route
If you’re based in the UAE, you don’t need to travel to a flag state or queue at an embassy. Authorized agents in Dubai hold direct processing access to the major open registries — which is how a Panama or Liberia book gets issued in days, not weeks. The process at Atomiq Group works in three steps: we pre-check your documents against the registry’s current requirements (catching the errors that cause 90% of delays ), submit directly to the registry, and hand you the issued book — often within the same week.

