U.S. Virgin Islands Territory Land and Marine Boundaries

The U.S. Virgin Islands occupies a defined geographic envelope in the northeastern Caribbean, bounded by both terrestrial limits and a layered set of marine jurisdictional zones that carry distinct legal, economic, and regulatory implications. These boundaries determine which body of federal and territorial law governs resource extraction, navigation, environmental enforcement, and property rights. The full territorial picture — spanning the main islands, smaller cays, and surrounding waters — is more complex than a simple coastline description suggests.


Definition and Scope

The U.S. Virgin Islands consists of 3 principal islands — St. Croix, St. Thomas, and St. John — along with Water Island and approximately 50 additional smaller cays and islets. The total land area is approximately 133 square miles (U.S. Census Bureau, Geographic Area Measurement), making it one of the smallest U.S. insular areas by land mass. St. Croix, at roughly 84 square miles, accounts for the largest share.

The marine boundaries extend outward from the coastline in distinct concentric zones, each governed by a different jurisdictional framework:

  1. Internal waters — bays, harbors, and enclosed coves; fully subject to territorial and federal law.
  2. Territorial sea — extends 3 nautical miles from the baseline; USVI exercises sovereign jurisdiction over navigation, fishing, and environmental enforcement within this band.
  3. Contiguous zone — extends from 3 to 12 nautical miles; the U.S. federal government may enforce customs, fiscal, immigration, and sanitation laws.
  4. Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) — extends to 200 nautical miles from the baseline; the United States exercises sovereign rights over natural resource exploration and extraction, as established under the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (16 U.S.C. § 1801 et seq.).

The baseline from which these zones are measured is determined in accordance with the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), which the U.S. applies as customary international law despite not having formally ratified the convention.


How It Works

Terrestrial boundaries within the USVI are administered through a combination of federal land management and territorial property law. The Virgin Islands Organic Act of 1936 (49 Stat. 1807), as revised in 1954, established the basic constitutional and administrative framework under which land rights and governance operate. Federal land within the territory is primarily managed through the National Park Service, which administers approximately 15,000 acres on St. John — roughly 60 percent of that island's total land area — under Virgin Islands National Park authority.

Marine jurisdiction functions under a dual-authority structure. The territorial government retains primary enforcement authority within the 3-nautical-mile territorial sea for matters such as commercial fishing licensing and coastal zone management. Beyond that belt, federal agencies — including the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the U.S. Coast Guard — exercise authority over the EEZ. The Caribbean Fishery Management Council, established under the Magnuson-Stevens Act, sets fishery management plans specifically applicable to USVI waters.

The coastal zone is administered under the USVI Coastal Zone Management Program, which operates with federal approval under the Coastal Zone Management Act of 1972 (16 U.S.C. § 1451 et seq.), coordinated through NOAA's Office for Coastal Management.

For broader context on how these geographic and jurisdictional boundaries fit into the territory's overall administrative structure, the U.S. Virgin Islands Territory Reference provides a structured entry point into territorial governance topics.


Common Scenarios

Several categories of activity directly engage the USVI boundary framework:

For detailed administrative records on territorial governance, the U.S. Virgin Islands Government Authority Reference covers the institutional structure of territorial agencies, their legal mandates, and the interaction between federal and territorial regulatory bodies — an essential resource for researchers and professionals working on boundary-related compliance or permitting questions.


Decision Boundaries

The distinction between territorial sea and EEZ is the most consequential jurisdictional line for practical purposes. A 3-nautical-mile boundary separates activities subject to USVI territorial law from those governed solely by federal law. This line is not always physically marked and requires geodetic calculation from established baselines published by the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA).

A second critical distinction exists between incorporated and unincorporated territory status. The USVI is classified as an unincorporated territory under the Insular Cases doctrine. This classification affects how constitutional protections apply and, by extension, how boundary-related property rights — particularly submerged lands claims — are adjudicated. The unincorporated territory framework for the USVI provides additional analysis of that classification and its legal consequences.

Terrestrial boundary disputes between private landowners and the federal government — particularly adjacent to National Park Service holdings on St. John — are resolved through U.S. District Court for the Virgin Islands, which exercises jurisdiction under 48 U.S.C. § 1612.


References