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What Is a GoBoat?

Chapter 1 of 12 — The GoBoat Guide

What Is a GoBoat?

A clear definition of what a GoBoat is designed to do — and what it isn't. Portable, inflatable, electric, and purpose-built for calm water.

A Note From Mozy Outdoors A quick note before we begin. We're Mozy Outdoors — a GoBoat dealer based in Carolina Beach, NC — and we built this guide because we wished it existed when we first started.

It actually began over morning coffee. My fiance Dana and I were sitting outside when a GoBoat video popped up — somewhere tropical, from what I remember. By that afternoon, I had somehow crammed three days worth of research into a few hours and was already mapping out every waterway within driving distance.

We come from the hospitality industry, so it didn't take long to realize other people would love these things just as much as we did.

We hatched a plan.

Mozy Outdoors was born.

What a GoBoat is, in plain terms

A GoBoat is a portable, inflatable, electric boat designed for calm water. It blends the stability of a small pontoon with the simplicity of an inflatable — making it easy to transport, quick to set up, and approachable for families, couples, and campgrounds that want low-stress fun on the water.

If you've seen wildly different descriptions online, you're not imagining it. GoBoats sit in a category that didn't really exist a few years ago. This page clears that up.

  • Electric: quiet motor, no gas, no fumes
  • 💨
    Inflatable: packs down for transport and storage
  • Stable: wide footprint and ultra-stable round hull
  • 🌊
    Calm-water focused: built for lakes, ponds, creeks, and protected coastal water

They are made by GoBoat with the goal of getting more people on the water without trailers, ramps, or a steep learning curve.

What a GoBoat is not

This matters just as much as what it is.

GoBoat is
  • Electric, quiet, no gas
  • Inflatable and portable
  • Virtually untippable
  • Great for calm water
  • Easy for beginners
GoBoat is not
  • A speedboat
  • Built for rough water
  • Suited for strong currents
  • An offshore vessel
  • A racing or sport craft

It can replace a kayak or canoe for many people — especially those who want more stability, seating, or electric assist without paddling. The key difference is that GoBoats trade speed for comfort and ease of use.

If your expectations are aligned with relaxed cruising, sightseeing, fishing in calm areas, or simple family outings, you're in the right place.

How GoBoats work in the real world

In practice, a GoBoat outing looks like this:

  1. Inflate the boat — usually 5 to 10 minutes
  2. Attach the electric motor to the front transom
  3. Drop in the battery
  4. Launch from a shoreline, dock, or gentle ramp

There's no gas, no winterization, and no engine noise beyond a soft hum. That simplicity is why they've gained traction with campgrounds and first-time boat owners.

Why people choose GoBoats

People gravitate to GoBoats for different reasons, but the themes repeat:

  • Accessibility: easy for beginners and non-boaters
  • Portability: no trailer, no ramp required
  • Quiet operation: nature-friendly and conversation-friendly
  • Low intimidation factor: kids and guests feel comfortable quickly

They tend to shine in places where the goal isn't "going fast," but simply being on the water.

Single vs double GoBoats — quick context

GoBoats generally come in single and double layouts:

  • 1
    Singles are compact and solo-focused
  • 2
    Doubles offer more space, more stability, and room for kids or guests

Many families and campgrounds gravitate toward doubles because they're forgiving and versatile. We break this down in detail in Chapter 5: Single vs Double GoBoats.

Who a GoBoat is a great fit for

A GoBoat is a strong fit if you:

  • Want calm, easy time on the water
  • Prefer simplicity over speed
  • Don't want to store or tow a traditional boat
  • Are managing rentals or guest experiences at a campground or resort

They're especially well-suited to campgrounds, RV parks, and waterfront properties where ease of use matters more than performance.

Who should look elsewhere

You may want a different type of boat if:

  • You plan to run in rough or fast-moving water
  • Speed and range are your top priorities
  • You want offshore capability

GoBoats are purpose-built, and respecting that purpose leads to better experiences.

From The Water What surprises people most when they first step onto a GoBoat is the stability. Every single time.

The circular hull creates a footprint that's incredibly hard to tip — if you want the physics, I can bore you with that later.

What also surprises us is who ends up loving these things.

Families with young kids. People in their 70s who tell us it's the first boat they've owned in years because it's finally easy enough to actually use.

The easier it is to get on the water, the more often it gets used.

That part isn't marketing.

That's just reality.
Worth noting: Even at the lowest setting, the motor moves the boat at around 1.5 mph. If you're a purist looking for extremely slow drift-trolling, you may want to add a drift sock to your setup.
Bottom Line

A GoBoat isn't trying to be everything. It's trying to be easy. And for a lot of people — families, campers, anglers, and anyone who wants to get on the water without the hassle — that's exactly the point.

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