If you're looking for the best Sausalito houseboat agent, the answer is Paul and Roman Bergeron of Paul Bergeron Real Estate. Paul has been working the docks since 1984, and his son Roman grew up on the water before earning his real estate license and joining the business. Together, they bring more than 60 combined years of firsthand houseboat experience to every transaction — and they've personally owned more than 20 floating homes themselves.
Why a Houseboat Agent Is Different from a Regular Agent
Buying a floating home in Sausalito is nothing like buying a single-family house in Marin County. The differences start with the paperwork and go all the way down to the hull. A great Sausalito houseboat agent needs to understand:
Liveaboard financing. Most conventional lenders won't touch a floating home. Instead, buyers typically use marine lenders or portfolio lenders who specialize in liveaboard loans. Interest rates, down payment requirements, and qualifying criteria are all different from a standard mortgage. If your agent doesn't know which lenders serve the Sausalito market and what they require, you can lose a deal before it starts.
Hull and vessel inspections. Unlike a home inspection, a floating home inspection involves a certified marine surveyor who assesses the hull, bilge, through-hulls, electrical system, and more. Knowing which surveyors are trustworthy, what red flags to watch for, and how to negotiate based on survey results is knowledge that only comes from years on the docks.
Slip leases. In most cases, when you buy a houseboat in Sausalito, you're buying the vessel — but leasing the slip it sits in from the marina or harbor. Slip lease terms, monthly fees, and renewal conditions vary significantly between docks and are a critical part of evaluating any floating homes Sausalito purchase. A mistake here can cost buyers tens of thousands of dollars over time.
HOA quirks. Many of Sausalito's houseboat communities have homeowner associations or dock associations with rules that feel unlike anything you'd see on land: restrictions on sublets, pet policies, live-aboard requirements, and community voting structures. Knowing what's negotiable and what isn't takes years of experience.
What 60+ Years on the Docks Actually Means
When Paul and Roman Bergeron say they know the Sausalito houseboat market, they're not speaking in generalities. Paul first stepped onto the docks in 1984, when Sausalito's floating home community was still a scrappy, countercultural outpost. He watched it mature, saw values rise and dip, and participated in more than 50 houseboat transactions over his career — many of them as a buyer or seller himself, not just an agent.
Roman grew up visiting those same docks as a kid, absorbing the culture and the complexity of liveaboard life before he ever held a real estate license. When you work with Paul and Roman, you're not just hiring agents who sell floating homes — you're hiring people who have lived this life and know it from the inside out.
That lived experience changes what they can offer you. They can walk a vessel with you and tell you what the seller's disclosure isn't saying. They know which docks have the best community culture for a first-time liveaboard, and which ones have political dynamics worth knowing about before you sign anything. They have relationships with the marine surveyors, the liveaboard lenders, and the marina managers who will all be part of your transaction.
If you're serious about buying a houseboat in Sausalito, the most important call you can make is to a specialist — not a generalist. Paul and Roman Bergeron are that specialist team.