No one drops anchor expecting to wake up drifting toward a reef. But weather changes and tides reverse. Knowing what to do if your anchor drags at night turns a jarring alarm at 3 AM into a situation you can handle calmly.
This guide covers how to spot the early signs, what steps to take on deck, and how to reset the anchor and get it holding again.
The first place to check is the chartplotter or GPS screen. A boat on a well-set anchor swings in a natural arc or figure-eight pattern. If the trail shows a steady line heading in one direction, that's a drag.
Watch the anchor chain too. If it keeps going from taut to slack in a rhythm that doesn't match the wind or current, something's off. A chain under normal swing tension behaves predictably, but a dragging anchor sends inconsistent feedback up the rode.
Checking bearings against fixed landmarks, buoys, or other boats helps confirm what's happening. If those bearings keep moving in one direction and don't sway back, the anchor has lost its grip on the seabed.
One thing many boaters don't realize is that an anchor alarm can trigger from GPS signal loss, not from the boat moving. Before assuming the worst, check whether the GPS momentarily dropped its connection.
Move the device closer to a hatch or window and see if the alarm clears on its own. Every boat picks up satellite signals differently, and knowing the best reception spot on the vessel is part of anchoring safely.
If the boat feels like it's moving or something looks off, treat it as an anchor drag and respond right away.
Starting the engine early is one of the most critical steps. Batteries are already under load from alarms and electronics. Waiting too long risks draining them at the worst possible moment.
Start the engine and let it idle. There's no need to throttle up yet. Having propulsion ready means the boat can respond to whatever comes next, whether that's holding position or motoring to a new anchorage.
A handheld spotlight or bright flashlight is a non-negotiable piece of overnight anchoring gear. Without one, judging distances to shore, rocks, or nearby vessels is nearly impossible after dark.
Scan the area and answer these three questions:
The answers determine the next move. If there's immediate danger, skip the reset attempt and pull the anchor.
In a lot of cases, an anchor drags from picking up debris or never fully setting in the first place. A Rocna or plow-type anchor in sand or mud usually holds well, but even those can foul on weed or loose gravel.
Before hauling everything up, try a few adjustments:
Always use the engine, not the windlass, to manage the boat's position. The windlass is there to lift the anchor rode. It isn't rated to pull the vessel through rough weather conditions.
If the anchor won't reset, or if the boat keeps drifting toward a hazard, it's time to move. Pull the anchor, motor to a backup spot, and deploy with more scope than before. Back down harder at the throttle to dig the flukes in and confirm a solid set.
Every anchoring plan should include a second location scouted before sunset. Bottom conditions change with the season, and sometimes the first spot just doesn't hold.
When choosing a new anchorage, look for deeper water with a different seabed type.
If the first spot was loose gravel, try finding firm sand or packed mud. A Danforth or kedge as a second anchor can also add holding ability if weather conditions keep deteriorating.
Before anyone steps onto the bow, they should wear life jackets. No exceptions. Use a headlamp to keep both hands free, and have a knife within arm's reach.
Communicate with anyone else aboard in a loud, calm voice. Rigging jacklines before sunset is a habit that pays off during exactly these moments. Clip in, move slowly, and keep one hand on the boat at all times.
The best time to deal with a nighttime drag is before the anchor even goes over the bow. Here's what to do on arrival and before turning in for the night:
There's only so much a guide like this can do. Anchoring gets into your muscle memory after a few nights on a real yacht, with a captain watching over your shoulder and coaching through every step.
At Sailing Virgins, students spend seven full days aboard a modern cruising yacht in beautiful destinations.
The liveaboard format packs roughly 100 hours of on-the-water experience into a single week, including anchoring drills, night watches, and emergency response scenarios.
The ASA-certified courses run from ASA 101 for beginners all the way to ASA 106 for advanced offshore sailors.
Every certification requires practical sailing hours, written knowledge, and instructor sign-off on demonstrated competencies. All of that gets completed during the liveaboard week.
Every Sailing Virgins liveaboard course puts students through real anchoring scenarios aboard a modern cruising yacht.
The best way to learn what to do if your anchor drags at night is to practice it under a captain's watch, and that's exactly what a Sailing Virgins liveaboard week delivers.
Browse the upcoming courses and book your spot!