
The enclosed harbour provides good protection from all directions except from the northwest. Although tidal, with an approach that dries half a mile out from the harbour’s entrance, daylight access is made straightforward by a well-marked channel leading to the harbour entrance. A night entry is possible, but inadvisable for newcomers.
Keyfacts for Ryde Harbour
Facilities
Nature
Considerations
Protected sectors
Approaches
Shelter
Last modified
June 23rd 2025 Summary* Restrictions apply
A good location with straightforward access.Best time to enter or exit
The Eastern Approaches to the Solent and the run-up to Southampton WaterFacilities
Nature
Considerations
Position and approaches
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Haven position
This is the outer or port side of the entrance that exhibits a light by night 2 FR (vert) 7m 1M
What are the key points of the approach?
Use Eastern Approaches to the Solent and the run-up to Southampton Water
as your guide for sailing along the eastern and northeastern shores of the Isle of Wight. Vessels converging on the entrance will find nothing in the way of local hazards by staying in reasonable soundings and following the marks.
Not what you need?
Click the 'Next' and 'Previous' buttons to progress through neighbouring havens in a coastal 'clockwise' or 'anti-clockwise' sequence. Below are the ten nearest havens to Ryde Harbour for your convenience.
Ten nearest havens by straight line charted distance and bearing:
- Ryde Roads - 1.2 nautical miles WNW
- Seaview - 2.1 nautical miles ESE
- Wootton Creek (Fishbourne) - 2.3 nautical miles W
- Stokes Bay - 2.8 nautical miles N
- Priory Bay - 2.8 nautical miles ESE
- St Helens Duver - 3 nautical miles ESE
- Bembridge Harbour - 3.1 nautical miles SE
- Haslar Marina - 3.8 nautical miles NNE
- Osborne Bay - 4.1 nautical miles WNW
- Gunwharf Quays Marina - 4.1 nautical miles NNE
These havens are ordered by straight line charted distance and bearing, and can be reordered by compass direction or coastal sequence:
- Ryde Roads - 1.2 miles WNW
- Seaview - 2.1 miles ESE
- Wootton Creek (Fishbourne) - 2.3 miles W
- Stokes Bay - 2.8 miles N
- Priory Bay - 2.8 miles ESE
- St Helens Duver - 3 miles ESE
- Bembridge Harbour - 3.1 miles SE
- Haslar Marina - 3.8 miles NNE
- Osborne Bay - 4.1 miles WNW
- Gunwharf Quays Marina - 4.1 miles NNE
Chart
What's the story here?
Ryde HarbourImage: Michael Harpur
Ryde is a seaside town on the northeast coast of the Isle of Wight and is the island's largest urban area. The conspicuous Ryde Pier, fronting the town and extending nearly a ½ mile to seaward, is the terminus of a High-Speed passenger ferry to Portsmouth, and a hovercraft terminal is situated at the foot of the pier's eastern side. Ryde Harbour is situated on the seafront further east of the hovercraft terminal beyond a leisure complex development area. It is predominantly a leisure harbour with berths for 150 vessels, including 70 visitors.
Ryde Harbour has space for seventy visitorsImage: Michael Harpur
The harbour dries to about 2.3 metres and is only suited to smaller vessels that can take to the bottom. A yacht carrying a draft of 1 metre should find the harbour accessible from approximately 2½ hours before to 2 hours after high water. Vessels drawing up to 1.5 metres can come in on a neap tide, and a marginally deeper draft will need to work Spring tides.
Ryde Harbour dries at low waterImage: Michael Harpur
The approach channel across Ryde Sands also dries out for a ½ mile from the harbour's entrance.
The approach bears 202° Magnetic and is well marked by port and starboard navigational buoys. The entrance is lit after sunset.
The approach channel dries over Ryde SandsImage: Michael Harpur
Ryde Harbour Berthing fees, Short-term stays, one tide only (under 8m): £10.00, one tide only (over 8m): £15.00, 1 day, (under 8m): £20.00, one tide only (over 8m): £25.00 [2025]. It is advisable to contact the berthing master before any intended stay as the harbour can get busy, especially on a fine summer weekend.
Harbour office situated at the foot of the pierImage: Michael Harpur
Staff are usually available 24 hours a day during the season and can be contacted on
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Ryde Pier marks the harbour's locationImage: Michael Harpur
Ryde Harbour situated just under a ¼ of mile south eastward of the pierImage: Michael Harpur
Ryde Pier makes the harbour area visible from a considerable distance. At night, the pier is lit by three sets of lights: 2FR (vertical) and FY fog. Vessels converging from the west should stand well off the head of Ryde Pier so as not to hamper the high-speed ferry service.
Ferry alongside Ryde PierImage: Tim Sheerman-Chase via CC BY 2.00
Channel marker buoy aground Ryde SandImage: Claire Kay via CC BY-SA 2.0
The primary hazard for all vessels approaching Ryde Harbour from the east, or indeed this part of the island, is the great expanse of Ryde Sand that has left many leisure craft standing.
It is essential to keep well clear of Ryde SandImage: Claire Kay via CC BY-SA 2.0
Ryde Sand extends more than a mile from the island's northeast corner and dries to 2 metres. The most dangerous part of Ryde Sand is its northern edge. This arches out between Ryde Pier and the 'Ryde Sands' red port beacon, Fl.R.10s, that marks its northeast point. This section is very steep-to and must be approached with great caution. To the southeast of this beacon and around to Nettlestone Point, the sands are more irregular and shoal more gently. A careful watch on the sounder whilst keeping outside the 2-metre contour should see a vessel clear of the dangers in this part.
No Man's Land FortImage: Mark Wordy via CC BY-SA 2.0
Vessels converging from the east should pass to the north of No Man's Land Fort using the small boat channel between the fort and Ryde Sands. In all cases, keep at least 200 metres outside the Red Piles of Ryde Sand at all times.
Holy Trinity Church's spire, the left (eastmost) of the town's two mostprominent spires
Image: Tim Sheerman-Chase via CC BY 2.00
The buoyed channel as seen from the entrance to the harbourImage: Michael Harpur
The channel dries at low water to 1.5 metres, and it is marked by 3 starboard hand and 3 port hand unlit navigational buoys. The marks describe a course of 197° T, or 202° M, to the harbour entrance. The helmsman should maintain a careful watch for cross currents at near high water when Ryde Sands is well covered, as the streams run almost uninterrupted over the shallows and are very strong.
The buoyed channel over Ryde Sand merely serves as a traffic separation corridorImage: Marcin Chady via CC BY-SA 2.0
It is important to be aware that the buoyed channel over Ryde Sand is in no way dredged or deeper. The sole purpose of the channel is to confine the harbour's traffic into a 'safe water' path of access that is clear of the fast-moving Ryde to Portsmouth hovercraft service. Outside of this, the hovercrafts, operating from their terminal at the foot of Ryde Pier, have absolute right of way. Vessels should always stay in the channel to avoid an unwanted encounter with the hovercrafts.
The harbour's northeast facing entranceImage: Michael Harpur
From the first buoys of the channel, the entrance is about a ½ mile away. Although the town and pier are readily obvious, the small harbour itself is difficult to distinguish on approaches. The harbour lies 400 metres east of the foot of Ryde Pier. It is protected east round to north by the arm of a substantial breakwater and on the west by a seafront development that features two large leisure complexes. The conspicuous large modern ice rink building immediately west of the entrance helps position the harbour's entrance to the northwest.
Ryde Harbour as seen from the eastImage: Michael Harpur
The entrance exhibits lights at night: two fixed red lights (vertical) on the port side 2 FR (vert) 7m 1M, and one flashing green light on the head of the breakwater on the starboard side Fl.G.3s 7m1M. There are 6 metre-high metal masts at each side of its entrance, and the starboard-hand breakwater has a tide gauge. Turn into port as soon as the port-hand breakwater is abeam.
Ryde Harbour as seen from its northwest endImage: Michael Harpur
The wooden piles fixed to the inner breakwaterImage: Michael Harpur
Long and fin-keel yachts can dry out on a flat sandy bottom against the wooden piles fixed to the inner breakwater. The piling is more closely spaced near the ladders, and the harbour provides fender boards.
Why visit here?
Ryde occupies the site of a fishing village called La Rye or La Riche, and was first recorded in 1257' La Ride'. It derives its name from the Old English word 'ryde', or' rithe', which means a small stream.
Depiction of a 1545 French invasion of the Isle of WightImage: CC0 1.0 Universal
Human inhabitation of this area dates back to the Neolithic period. Archaeological finds in the area include a late Bronze Age urnfield, used for the cremation and interment of ashes, and a hoard of 12 Bronze Age palstaves, a type of axe, was found here. Shards of Roman or Iron Age pottery have also been uncovered, indicating that it may have been the site of a Roman cemetery. The Norman lords who occupied the Island at the time knew it as La Rye or La Riche.
Tomkins 1795 engraving of Ryde HarbourImage: CC0 1.0 Universal
It was recorded in 1341 that the fishing hamlets of Ryde, Cowes and East Cowes were the three ports by which you could enter and leave the Island. An inability to accommodate deep-draft merchant vessels is thought to have been the reason why Newport was not one of the island's primary landing areas. This indicates that Ryde had significant trade and transport in the Middle Ages, even though it could only have been a small hamlet. Ryde, however, did not provide a natural harbour, and it is possible that the medieval port was actually at Barnsley Harbour to the west of Seaview. Whatever the case, in 1377, the French burnt the village to the ground as part of the ongoing aggression associated with the Hundred Years War; Newtown and Yarmouth were also attacked at that time.
Ryde Pier c.1823 -55Image: CC0 1.0 Universal
In 1574, a packway, or track, was built to move goods from the shore of what was then called Lower Ryde, at the bottom of the hill and by the sea, up the hill to a small farming community situated on the brow of the hill, called Upper Ryde. Upper Ryde was then a typical medieval open field system with farmsteads which were being divided and enclosed. In the following century, boats known as Ryde Wherries, moderately sized passenger and cargo boats with a long overhanging bow, were providing a fairly regular service between Ryde and Portsmouth. Later, a road was built directly from the shore to the village green of the developing hamlet of Upper Ryde, creating what is today St Thomas's Street. In 1656, the population of both Upper and Lower Ryde was calculated to be about 220.
Landscape near Ryde, with the harbour in the background (right)Image: CC0 1.0 Universal
By the late 18th century, Lower and Upper Ryde, which had essentially been two separate small medieval communities, had come together and were united in 1780, which would later be called Union Street, to mark the 1800 'Act of Union'. By then, the sprawling fishing village of Ryde was slowly transforming into a fashionable resort that was being developed with many fine houses by local landowners William and Jane Player. It was noted in 1791 that Ryde had 'a number of pretty houses about this place, which are inhabited in the summer season by very respectable families'. These early patrons raised the town's social standing, and it began to attract wealthy visitors in the early part of the 19th century. Ryde's convenient position in relation to the mainland was the primary reason for its development.
HMS Racer aground on Ryde Sands in 1871Image: CC0 1.0 Universal
In 1796, the large sailing vessel Packet was introduced to provide a daily return trip, and by 1811, two return journeys were available. The establishment of Yelf's Hotel in the same year began the commercial life of Union Street. Travellers were at first dependent on the tides to leave the Island, and so many of the new buildings in the town's early development were the various inns and pubs, which provided a waiting place for visitors and traders. But this tidal constraint was far from ideal because, at low water, Ryde's gently shelving beach left a vast expanse of mud. This forced vessels to anchor half a mile offshore, and passengers were brought in a rowboat, from which they were then dragged through the mud before being transferred by horse and cart. The procedure most famously described by Fielding, in 1754… I was at last hoisted into a small boat and being rowed pretty near the shore, was taken up by two sailors, who waded me through the mud and placed me on the land' . This came to an end when Ryde's extensive pier was opened in the summer of 1814.
Ryde Pier during the Victorian PeriodImage: CC0 1.0 Universal
The pier was 527 metres long and was, and still is, a timber-planked promenade. A lengthening of the structure in 1824 and 1833 enabled it to be used at all states of the tide. The extensive new pier allowed travellers to come ashore safely and comfortably; when it opened, Ryde acquired its name as the 'Gateway to the Isle of Wight'. Finally, the last major constraint to the town's further development was overcome. From this moment on, the town expanded rapidly, and it has been estimated that 300 houses were built between 1811 and 1831; between 1827 and 1832, the Town Hall, St Thomas's Church and Brigstocke Terrace were all built. In 1825, steamboats replaced the wherries on the Portsmouth to Ryde service. The population of Ryde mirrors these developments; in 1795, it was 600, in 1811 - 1600, and in 1851 - 7147.
Ryde Pier during the Victorian Period Image: CC0 1.0 Universal
By then, the Isle of Wight had become increasingly popular as a place to visit, largely thanks to the patronage of Queen Victoria. The royal family's 1845 purchase and move to Osborne House, Queen Victoria's and Prince Albert's coastal retreat at East Cowes, promoted further Victorian development, including an array of villas and gardens at Ryde. Ryde's popularity and prestige were particularly heightened by its proximity to Osborne House. Prince Albert laid the Royal Victoria Yacht Club's foundation in 1846 (now the Prince Consort). After Prince Albert's death in 1861, Queen Victoria retreated to Osborne House, but she was still a frequent visitor to the town, Queens Road being named for her.
Ryde Pier todayImage: Michael Harpur
The arrival of the railway to the mainland ports, the regular services of steamboats to Ryde and the improving roads all brought Rye to its heyday . Thus, in 1860, Black's Picturesque Tourist and Road and Railway Guide Book through England and Wales declared… 'The town of Ryde is now a considerable and beautiful town, surrounded with groves, villas, and cottages.'. It continued to flourish during the Victorian era and became the island's favoured watering place.
Ryde's convenient position in relation to the mainland remains centralImage: Michael Harpur
The construction of railway lines on the Isle of Wight in the 1860s would initiate a decline in its popularity. The new Isle of Wight lines had the unintended consequence of allowing visitors to easily and conveniently leave Ryde and travel to other island resorts on the railway network. Notably, Sandown, Shanklin, and Ventnor, which was the first town to develop purely as a holiday resort from around 1830, all began to flourish. All of the isle's other newly developing main resorts boasted much better beaches than Ryde.
Ryde's Victorian past is evident in its buildingsImage: Michael Harpur
During the 20th century, tourism continued to be of primary economic importance, although it declined somewhat towards the end of the century. After the Second World War, large numbers of summer holidaymakers arrived on day trips or dispersed to other resorts throughout the Island. However, as the car's popularity increased, Ryde, which did not have facilities for unloading and loading vehicles, saw visitor numbers decline. Likewise, as foreign holidays became popular in the 1970s, tourism decreased further.
Ryde remains a popular resort town with ample to amuse the youngImage: Michael Harpur
Today, Ryde remains a popular resort, and with a population of approximately 30,000, it is also the Island's largest town. Evidence of Ryde's once grand status can still be seen in its elegant Victorian housing, seafront Esplanade, promenade, pier and entertainment facilities. Ryde Pier is a listed structure, the fourth longest pier in the United Kingdom, and the oldest.
There is ample amusements adjacent to the harbour Image: Michael Harpur
From a boating perspective, and for most Solent-based sailors, Ryde is more associated with the terrors of Ryde Sands and its drying marina. Consequently, it is, to the largest part, overlooked. Yet it is truly an excellent location for boats that can take to the bottom with a young family.
The beach is immediately behind the marina breakwaterImage: Michael Harpur
The long sandy beach is right next to Ryde Marina, and if the weather is not attractive enough for the beach, there is the adjacent ice rink, bowling alley, and all sorts of entertainment, not to mention a golf course to the west of Ryde.
Ryde Sand can be its most attractive featureImage: Ronald Saunders via CC ASA 3.0
Outside of this, there is plenty to explore in this once-grand Victorian seaside town.
What facilities are available?
Fresh water is available on the pontoons but no power. Harbour facilities are limited but it does have shower and toilet facilities, and rubbish disposal. The ablutions block is protected by a combination lock, the number for which can be obtained from the harbour master. Ryde’s harbour is focused on leisure and it has no yard or engineering capabilities. Vessels in need of assistance can make use of local island capabilities of which there is an abundance.The closest outlet to the harbour for gas is Hursts in Union Street Ryde, during shop opening hours, and fuel by jerry can be obtained from a choice of garages. Ryde, the largest town of the island, has an abundance of pubs, shops and restaurants. It has all the essentials such as a post office and pharmacy on the High Street, and supermarkets spread out around the town. Likewise all the major banks can be found along the High Street, most with cash machines.
Regular bus services run from Ryde to Cowes and Newport along with all the island tourist destinations. The regular ferries of course go straight to Portsmouth directly connecting with mainline rail services to London and beyond.
Any security concerns?
This is an open harbour where normal security precautions should be adhered to.With thanks to:
Michael Harpur S/Y Whistler.Aerial view of Ryde seafront
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