Buying Your Next Lake Boat: New or Pre-owned?

Buy new or buy used? That’s a tough call for a boat buyer, especially a first-timer. There’s no right or wrong answer. It all depends on you: your tastes, your budget, your mechanical aptitude.

What makes your smile wider? A mint condition new prize or a bargain cleverly bought and burnished? Some say the sweet spot is a used boat that is a couple of years old, bought from a dealer you trust, but you decide what is best for your lake home. Here are some pointers from both sides.

5 Reasons to Buy New

  1. Who doesn’t like stuff shiny and new? No need to wonder how the boat’s been used or misused, or if it’s been adequately winterized and commissioned. There is no history to uncover, because you’ll write this boat’s on-water biography.
  2. You can buy exactly what you want and not just what’s on the pre-owned market. You’ll be getting the latest, greatest technology — the stuff people gather to drool over.
  3. If something does go awry, you’ll have a manufacturer’s warranty to back you up. That warranty is served by the selling dealer, which is a good reason to buy nearby.
  4. You can rig it the way you want with the latest gear selected precisely for your purpose. Unless you buy a boat-and-motor combo with the lowest-offered powerplant, it’s probably a satisfying match.
  5. You don’t have to get an answer to the most troubling question: Why is this used boat for sale?

5 Reasons to Buy Pre-Owned

  1. Bucks! Someone else has covered the 25 to 33 percent depreciation that takes place when a new boat is towed off the dealer’s lot. With a used boat, you get more boat for fewer dollars, lower cost per year of ownership, and less on the line if you decide a different style or size boat would better serve you.
  2. It sounds funny, but there’s peace of mind in knowing you’re not going to put the first scratch or ding in the boat.
  3. Any initial bugs in boat or motor have likely surfaced and been dealt with. For reassurance, and before signing, get a marine survey (see National Association of Marine Surveyors or Society of Accredited Marine Surveyors). Marine surveyors see what you can’t and look where you won’t. First, get a survey. Then smile and buy, whittle down the price, draft your own to-do list, or walk away.
  4. You get time-tested technologies. If a manufacturer brought out a bad boat or balky motor, the Internet and other sources will wave you off.
  5. You can choose a style of sale — from the trade-in or used stock of a dealer, who has to cover overhead but has a reputation to guard and a service bay; from a broker, who has reduced overhead costs; or from a private seller, who may be most motivated.

Original post by DiscoverBoating.com

Posted by Scott Freerksen “The Lake Guy”

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