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The ship construction regulation Turkey adopted in January 2026, formally titled the Regulation on the Construction, Modification, Maintenance and Repair of Ships and Watercraft, represents the most significant overhaul of maritime construction law Turkey has enacted in over a decade. Published in the Resmi Gazete (Official Gazette) on 14 January 2026, the Regulation imposes a unified framework of permits, technical file obligations, inspection protocols and personnel qualifications on every yard performing physical works on vessels within Turkish territory, including free zones. For shipyards, contractors, shipowners commissioning new builds or repairs, and the in-house counsel advising them, the compliance window is already running.
Before working through the detailed analysis below, practitioners should prioritise the following action items mapped against the Regulation’s compliance timeline. This checklist applies to any entity constructing, modifying, repairing or maintaining a ship or watercraft within Türkiye.
The Regulation applies wherever physical construction, modification, maintenance or repair works are carried out within the borders of the Republic of Türkiye. This expressly includes organised industrial zones and free trade zones, a critical point for yards operating in major hubs such as Tuzla, Yalova and Altınova. Industry observers note that including free zones closes a compliance gap that previously allowed certain repair operations to proceed under lighter oversight. The Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure is designated as the competent authority for issuing permits and conducting oversight.
The Regulation’s scope extends to commercial vessels, passenger ships, cargo carriers, fishing vessels, yachts and recreational craft meeting the applicable size thresholds. Foreign-flagged ships brought into Turkish yards for substantive repair or modification fall squarely within scope, making this a key consideration for international shipowners selecting Turkish yards. Military and naval vessels are generally subject to a separate supervisory regime under the Ministry of National Defence and are excluded from the Regulation’s standard permit and inspection framework. Certain small recreational craft below prescribed length thresholds may benefit from simplified notification procedures rather than the full permit regime.
| Entity / Activity | Applicability Under 2026 Regulation | Key Obligations / Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| New construction (domestic & foreign-flag) | Applies where physical works are performed in Türkiye (including free zones) | Permit from authority; technical file; class society witness tests; completion certificate |
| Repair & maintenance (commercial vessels) | Applies when substantive modification or repair is carried out in Türkiye | Pre-inspection; conformity certification; qualified personnel evidence; routine maintenance may require notification only |
| Military / naval vessels | Usually excluded or subject to special regime | Separate supervisory regime, consult Ministry of National Defence |
| Yacht refit & recreational craft | Included above prescribed size thresholds | Full permit & certification requirements apply; smaller craft may follow simplified notification |
Does the new Regulation apply to ship repair and maintenance as well as new construction? Yes. The Regulation explicitly covers construction, modification, maintenance and repair. Shipyards performing any of these activities on vessels within Türkiye must comply. The only distinction lies in the depth of procedural requirements: routine maintenance may be subject to simplified notification, whereas substantive repair or structural modification triggers the full permit, inspection and certification cycle.
Under the previous framework, permits for shipyard operations were governed by a patchwork of Ministry circulars and classification society requirements. The 2026 Regulation consolidates these into a single authorisation pathway administered by the Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure. Yards must obtain an activity permit before commencing any covered works. The permit application requires submission of a comprehensive technical file covering facility capabilities, equipment inventories, safety management documentation and evidence of classification society recognition. The likely practical effect is that yards which previously operated under informal arrangements will face an initial administrative burden, but the standardised process should ultimately reduce ambiguity and speed up subsequent renewals.
The Regulation mandates that yards employ or contract qualified naval architects, marine engineers and certified welders whose credentials meet the standards specified in the Regulation’s annexes. Key personnel must be registered with the relevant professional chambers and hold current certification. For foreign principals engaging Turkish yards, verifying that personnel qualifications are current and properly documented is now both a regulatory obligation and a critical construction law risk-management step. Failure to maintain qualified personnel records may result in permit suspension.
The Regulation introduces structured hold-points at which class society surveyors, or in certain cases Ministry inspectors, must witness and approve critical construction or repair stages before work may proceed. These hold-points cover hull structural integrity, machinery installation, electrical and fire-safety systems, and sea trials. The ship repair regulation Turkey framework mirrors these requirements for significant modifications, requiring post-repair testing and survey before the vessel returns to service.
| Activity | Required Inspections / Certifications | Responsible Body |
|---|---|---|
| New construction, keel laying to launch | Design approval; stage inspections (hull, machinery, systems); sea trial witness test; completion certificate | Authorised class society + Ministry of Transport |
| Structural modification | Pre-modification survey; design-change approval; post-modification inspection; amended classification certificate | Authorised class society + Ministry of Transport |
| Substantive repair | Pre-repair condition survey; material-conformity check; post-repair inspection; return-to-service certificate | Authorised class society |
| Routine maintenance | Notification to authority; maintenance log entry; periodic class survey (per classification schedule) | Yard (self-certified); class society oversight at scheduled intervals |
Yards preparing their first application, or renewing an existing permit, under the ship construction regulation Turkey framework should assemble the following documentation:
The Regulation places significant emphasis on traceability. Every material used in construction or repair, steel plates, coatings, machinery components, must be traceable to its source through documented supply-chain records. Digital logbooks recording daily progress, inspection outcomes, non-conformity reports and corrective actions are now the expected standard. The ship maintenance regulation provisions require that maintenance logbooks be retained for a minimum period (aligned with classification society rules) and made available to the authority or class surveyors upon request.
The following roadmap summarises the key dates that shipyards and contractors should build into their compliance programmes:
The 2026 Regulation creates obligations that flow directly into the contractual relationship between the yard and the shipowner or contractor. Existing contracts drafted before January 2026 are unlikely to account for the new permit, inspection and certification regime. The practical consequence is that parties must now review and, where necessary, amend their agreements to avoid disputes over responsibility for regulatory compliance.
The following areas demand particular attention in ship construction contracts Turkey practitioners are reviewing:
The Regulation’s emphasis on material traceability and certified workmanship supports a strengthened warranty framework. Contracts should include express warranties that all works will comply with the Regulation, relevant class rules and the approved technical file. Latent-defect clauses should specify the discovery period, the notification mechanism and the yard’s remediation obligations, including the obligation to maintain the documentation trail that the Regulation now mandates.
The following clauses are provided as illustrative drafting starting points. They are not legal advice and should be adapted to each project’s circumstances with the assistance of qualified counsel.
The most effective dispute strategy is prevention. The Regulation’s documentation requirements, technical files, digital logbooks, material traceability records, photographic and video evidence of inspections, create a contemporaneous evidence base that, if properly maintained, dramatically strengthens a party’s position should a dispute arise. Practitioners recommend the following stakeholder relationship management (SRM) protocols:
The Regulation is Turkish law and applies regardless of the governing law chosen for the contract. Parties are free to select a foreign governing law for their commercial terms, but they cannot contract out of the Regulation’s mandatory inspection, certification and permit requirements. This has practical implications for jurisdiction clauses: if a dispute involves allegations of regulatory non-compliance, Turkish courts may have concurrent or exclusive jurisdiction over certain administrative aspects, even if the commercial dispute is arbitrated elsewhere. For a deeper understanding of how international arbitration hearings are structured, parties should consider seat-selection carefully.
For shipbuilding and repair contracts governed by the 2026 framework, industry observers expect a growing preference for arbitration over litigation, given the international character of many projects. Key drafting considerations include:
The Regulation empowers the Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure to impose a range of administrative sanctions on non-compliant yards. The enforcement framework operates alongside, not in replacement of, class society oversight.
| Trigger | Potential Penalty / Administrative Action | Enforcing Body |
|---|---|---|
| Operating without a valid activity permit | Suspension of operations; administrative fine; referral for prosecution | Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure |
| Failure to maintain qualified personnel | Permit suspension; requirement to cease works until personnel deficiency is remedied | Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure |
| Non-compliance with inspection hold-points | Administrative fine; order to halt construction/repair until inspection completed | Ministry + authorised class society |
| Inadequate documentation / material traceability failure | Warning; administrative fine; potential permit revocation on repeat offence | Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure |
| Falsification of records or certificates | Permit revocation; criminal referral; class society withdrawal of recognition | Ministry + public prosecutor; class society |
The role of class societies, principally Türk Loydu for Turkish-flagged vessels and internationally recognised bodies such as ClassNK for foreign-flagged vessels, is central to the inspection regime. Class societies conduct witness tests, issue classification certificates and report non-conformities to the Ministry. Yards should appoint a dedicated liaison officer to coordinate concurrent class society and regulatory inspections, ensuring that survey schedules are synchronised and that any non-conformity raised by one body is immediately communicated to the other.
A European shipowner contracts a Tuzla yard to build a 90-metre commercial vessel under a foreign flag. Under the 2026 Regulation, the yard must obtain an activity permit covering new-construction works, submit the vessel’s technical file (including design approval from the owner’s designated class society), and schedule all hold-point inspections with both the class society and the Ministry. The contract is amended to include a certificate condition-precedent clause tying delivery to issuance of the Completion Certificate. Material traceability records for all steel plates are maintained in a digital logbook accessible to the owner’s representative. The project governance framework includes fortnightly progress meetings, an early neutral evaluation clause for technical disputes, and ICC arbitration seated in Istanbul.
A Turkish-flagged cargo vessel enters a free-zone yard for engine overhaul and hull-plate renewal. The yard confirms that the Regulation applies notwithstanding the free-zone location. A pre-repair condition survey is conducted by Türk Loydu. The yard submits a repair plan and material specifications to the Ministry. Post-repair inspection confirms structural integrity and machinery performance. The return-to-service certificate is issued, and the vessel’s classification certificate is endorsed. The yard’s digital logbook records all stages, providing a contemporaneous evidence base in case of any future warranty claim. For practitioners seeking broader context on regulatory frameworks in Türkiye, it is worth noting that the country’s approach to construction regulation increasingly mirrors EU-aligned standards.
The 2026 Regulation on the Construction, Modification, Maintenance and Repair of Ships and Watercraft marks a structural shift in how Türkiye governs its shipbuilding and repair industry. For yards, the message is clear: the era of fragmented compliance under Ministry circulars and informal arrangements is over. For shipowners and foreign principals, the Regulation offers greater predictability and a standardised quality framework, but only if contracts are drafted to reflect the new obligations. Early indications suggest that the Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure intends to enforce the Regulation vigorously, and industry observers expect supplementary circulars to arrive throughout 2026 to address transitional questions.
Practitioners who invest now in permit applications, personnel audits, digital recordkeeping systems and contract amendments will be well positioned. Those who delay face permit suspensions, administrative fines and, perhaps most costly of all, protracted disputes in which incomplete documentation undermines their position. For shipyards and contractors seeking to connect with qualified maritime construction law specialists, the compliance window under the ship construction regulation Turkey framework is open but narrowing.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ceren İşcioğlu Ulutürk at Uluturk Attorney Partnership, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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