RepairYachts
Sail repair · KS · 37 marine listings

Sail Repair & Sailmaking in Kansas

Browse marine providers across Kansas. Sail repair, recutting, and new sail design for cruisers and racers.

About this service

A good sail loft can recut, restitch, and re-cover sails for far less than the cost of new ones — and a well-cut sail makes a sailboat noticeably faster, easier to handle, and safer in heavy weather. Most cruising sails benefit from a once-every-3-years inspection and minor service; racing sails closer to annual. New sail design is its own discipline — modern lofts use measured boat data and computer modeling to match sail shape to the actual hull and rig.

Marine providers in Kansas

12 shown

No exact sail repair matches yet — these are notable marine shops in Kansas. Many marinas and yards offer sail repair without naming it explicitly.

✓ Verified

Mid Kansas Marine

Boat Shop · Repair services
517 East 4th Avenue, Hutchinson, KS
+1-620-665-0396Website

Mid Kansas Marine

Boat Shop · Repair services
KS

U.S. Boatworks

Boat Shop · Repair services
930 Osage Avenue, Kansas City, KS 66105
✓ Verified

Jayhawk Marina

Marina
26353 Jayhawker Drive, Paola, KS 66071
+1 913-557-9900Website
✓ Verified

Rock Creek Marina

Marina
KS
Website

Blue Valley Yacht Club

Marina
KS

Clinton Lake Marina

Marina
KS

Hart Marina

Marina
KS

Lake Perry Yacht and Marina

Marina
KS

Linn County Park Marina

Marina
KS

Linn Valley Lakes Boat Ramp

Marina
KS

Lovewell Marina

Marina
KS

Related reading

Frequently asked

How long do cruising sails last?
Dacron sails on a regularly-used cruising boat typically last 8–12 years before serious degradation; less in tropical climates with constant UV exposure. Premium laminate sails (carbon, aramid) often last 5–8 years for cruising use. Annual UV cover replacement extends life significantly.
When is a sail beyond repair?
When the cloth tears at the slightest load, when seams unzip rapidly after restitch, or when the sail has lost its original shape (typically when it can no longer hold its design draft position). At that point, the cost of repair approaches the cost of a recut or replacement.
What does a new mainsail cost?
A high-quality cruising mainsail for a 35–40 ft sailboat typically runs $3,500–$7,500 in 2026, depending on cloth type (Dacron vs. laminate), construction (cross-cut vs. tri-radial), and loft. Custom one-design racing sails are higher.