Before I purchased my current boat, I had a surveyor go out and inspect a different 228 Seafarer for me, I believe it was a 2002 or 2003. The surveyor sent me like 100 pictures of the moisture readings, issues with the boat, damage to the boat and so on, which of course the seller played dumb to or didn't mention before. With that particular boat, the two areas with the most amount of water intrusion were the bow cleats as well as back near the stern. The surveyor mentioned that the boat had probably been stored in the water for a good deal of its life. I ended up passing on that boat, not because of the moisture levels, but because there was damage back near the transom of the boat that the seller didn't mention before the surveyor went out to look at it. Between that, the seller's asking price being too high for the condition that it was in as well as a few other things, I ended up passing on that boat altogether. I think like Fishtales mentioned that most all boats will have some amount of moisture reading on the reader, I think a lot of it just depends on how much and where they are located at. Fortunately my new boat is solid and even though I was pissed at the time that I spent $600+ on a survey where I didn't end up buying the boat, I'm very much glad that I waited for the one I purchased. The one I bought is newer, nicer and most importantly it was almost $10k cheaper. Are you looking at possibly purchasing another boat or just wondering? I know you can buy the moisture readers on Amazon or just about anywhere else... a cheap one starts at around $10 but a nice one is more like $40 on all the way up to several hundred dollars. I'm sure they're definitely worth their value though if you're considering purchasing another boat though, and a decent one at around $35-40 seems like it's definitely worth the investment.