RepairYachts
Rigging · SD · 10 marine listings

Yacht Rigging in South Dakota

Browse marine providers across South Dakota. Standing and running rigging — inspection, replacement, and tune-ups.

About this service

Standing rigging (wire shrouds and stays) is what holds the mast up. Running rigging (sheets, halyards, control lines) is what makes the sails work. Both have predictable lifespans — standing rigging 10–15 years, running rigging 5–10 — and both fail in expensive, often catastrophic ways when ignored. A qualified rigger can inspect, tune, and replace rigging at a small fraction of the cost of a dismasting.

Marine providers in South Dakota

9 shown

No exact rigging matches yet — these are notable marine shops in South Dakota. Many marinas and yards offer rigging without naming it explicitly.

Dan O's Marine

Boat Shop · Repair services
SD

Dan O's Marine

Boat Shop · Repair services
SD

Donlin Marine

Boat Shop · Repair services
SD

Doug's Anchor Marine

Boat Shop · Repair services
SD

Evolution Powersports

Boat Shop · Repair services
SD

Platte Marine Center

Boat Shop · Repair services
SD

Swenson Brothers Marine

Boat Shop · Repair services
303 East Glen Avenue, Chamberlain, SD 57325
✓ Verified

Sheridan Lake Marina

Marina
16451 Sheridan Lake Road, Rapid City, SD 57702
+1 605 5742169Website

Lewis & Clark Marina

Marina
SD

Related reading

Frequently asked

How often should standing rigging be replaced?
Stainless steel standing rigging on a regularly-sailed cruising boat should be replaced every 10–15 years even without visible damage — fatigue cracks at swage fittings are invisible until they fail. Insurance underwriters increasingly require documented rigging inspection or replacement after 15 years.
What does standing rigging replacement cost?
For a typical 40-ft cruising sailboat, full standing rigging replacement (all wire, swages, and turnbuckles) runs $4,000–$10,000 in 2026 depending on rig configuration (sloop, cutter, ketch), wire diameter, and labor market.
How often should a rig be tuned?
After major weather events, after re-stepping the mast, and annually as part of spring commissioning. Most riggers offer tune-as-you-sail service where they ride along on the first sail of the season to fine-tune in actual sailing conditions.