Kayaks
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Top Picks
How we choose: The best kayaks highlighted here were selected based on 160 reviews of 106 products. Our top picks are those that are readily-available in the United States and have received the highest overall ratings from reviewers.
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Wilderness Systems Pungo 120
Super stable and tracks well. This is a great kayak for touring around lakes and rivers. Great for beginner paddlers and beyond.
Reasons to Buy
- Stable
- Tracks well
- Easy to adjust foot pegs
- Seat is comfortable
- Included kayak console
Reasons to Avoid
- Water tight hatch not perfectly water tight
- Kayak console can be in the way of long legs sometimes
I've been a canoer my entire life but decided that my big 15' canoe was a bit too heavy for me to man-handle alone so I sold it and bought the 12' Wilderness Systems Pungo 120 kayak which weighs about 49 pounds (30 pounds less than my old canoe). I had never sat in a kayak before and I was a little nervous about how different it might be from my canoeing experience. My concerns were misplaced though because this kayak is very user friendly. Getting in and out of it is a breeze. The cockpit opening is HUGE and the boat is so stable I had no trouble standing up in the kayak on the water while holding onto nothing to help me get in/out.
Read more: Wilderness Systems Pungo 120 reviews (4)
Oru Kayak Bay ST
Folds up to take up very little space; is lightweight and portable (don't need a special rack on my car).
Reasons to Buy
- Folds up so it doesn't take up lots of space
- Lightweight
- Portable
- Tracks pretty well
Reasons to Avoid
- Will sink if flipped without ballast bags
- Tricky to unfold/refold without practice
Folds up to take up very little space (approximately 30" x 30" x 10"); is lightweight (~25 lbs) and portable (don't need a special rack on my car), fits inside a Ford Taurus' trunk (I have fold down seats in the back but it'll fit in a taurus without those seats too). Can be [semi-easily/inexpensively] checked on a plane! Folds out to ~25'. Tracks fairly straight in water. Can be tricky to unfold/refold without practice, but the Oru company's online videos are helpful. Material is similar to the white plastic corrugated material that post office bins are made out of.
Read more: Oru Kayak Bay ST reviews (2)
Advanced Elements Lagoon1
This inflatable folding kayak is portable on buses and inside SmartCars and by small people. A very dependable recreational kayak, well-made with a terrific warranty. Available from the manufacturer, some stores, and West Marine stores and website.
Reasons to Buy
- I can carry all my gear, boat and all, everywhere.
- Tough materials in a good design
- Affordable but not flimsy
- Good customer service and online discussion forum
Reasons to Avoid
- Recreational boat is not a high-speed 20-ft sea kayak
- This is a real boat and it can get you far away from shore when a storm blows in
- Small for carrying camping gear; get the Expedition model instead
The Lagoon is my favourite kayak of the several different boats I own. I've used an older version of the Lagoon for eight years without it failing. It's still a reliable, convenient recreational kayak. Here's a photo of me using it for the first time, in 2006. This 9'6" kayak is very stable, very confidence-building, very responsive to the paddler's moves. Hundreds of times it's been inflated and used, then deflated and put away. I've banged it into docks, run it up onto rocky beaches, and waves shuffled me across barnacled rocks without any damage beyond a few light scratches on the outside of the outer hull.
Read more: Advanced Elements Lagoon1 review (1)
Sea Eagle Explorer 380x Pro Package
Extremely versatile, portable, easy to use "water SUV" that is perfect for any type of adventure one could imagine.
Reasons to Buy
- Very stable; almost impossible to tip over
- Lightweight (the lightest in its category)
- Huge buoyancy (750 lbs/340 kg)
- Maneuverable; easy handling
- Very rugged
Reasons to Avoid
- Not the fastest kayak out there
- No splash protection
- Not the most convenient to portage
This review is for the Sea Eagle Explorer 380X Pro package. The major difference between Pro and Deluxe is the seats: I like Pro seats much better but for more information look it up at the manufacturer website. I've been using this kayak for three seasons now and the fourth season is approaching. The quality of the kayak itself is fairly good: the body/hull is intact and holds up well but some accessories that came with the kayak had been replaced during the warranty period. Specifically, paddles and the foot pump are the weakest links.
Read more: Sea Eagle Explorer 380x Pro Package review (1)
Sea Eagle Sport 370
Very good for flat water, but challenging for fishing.
Reasons to Buy
- Portability
- Size
- Price
Reasons to Avoid
- Difficult to customize
UPDATE 8/28/16: Took the SE370 down Bear River in Colfax, Calif., for some low key white water. She stood up just fine, bounced off rocks and made the requisite hard turns to avoid bad spills. Came to a screeching halt at one point when we didn't clear a big rock. The kayak stopped dead, I went flying forward, and the seat pulled loose (but didn't leave the boat). I got settled back down, bounced the boat free and I was off again. No damage to the kayak at all. Overall, an excellent experience on my first experience with any kind of white water. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I bought this kayak for fishing at my local reservoir.
Read more: Sea Eagle Sport 370 reviews (2)
Wilderness Systems Tarpon 140
A versatile, high quality kayak built to last a lifetime.
Reasons to Buy
- Stable for size
- Comfortable
- Tracks well
- Efficient
- Adaptable
Reasons to Avoid
- Heavy
- Hatches Leak
The Wilderness Systems Tarpon 140 is not marketed as a lightweight boat, so I'm not going to deduct points because it's heavy, but know that it is. The Orbix hatches used on these boats look really cool and are convenient to open and close; but they all leak which some people consider a really big deal. I don't. Kayaking is a water sport. That means I and my stuff will probably get wet. Stuff I don't want wet I put in a dry bag; easy. You may feel differently. So that's the bad. Now that we've gotten that out of the way, let's talk about the good.
Read more: Wilderness Systems Tarpon 140 reviews (3)
Old Town Vapor 10
Best for lakes and slow rivers, for anyone wanting an easy little boat with plenty of room for gear.
Reasons to Buy
- Easy to maneuver
- Holds a lot of gear
Reasons to Avoid
- The seat needs padding.
Been out in this 10-foot sit-in kayak for several trips this spring including a short camping trip upriver. This one has plenty of room for gear including a dry hatch in back with a lockable rubber top that holds a small flexible cooler, a duffle bag, and room for more stuff crammed in the crannies. There's room behind the seat for a sleeping bag, room between your feet for more gear, and a installed criss-cross bungee kit on front of the kayak that can hold two chairs in bags. It has a couple of hooks and smaller little bungees around the cockpit to attach handy things like camera or phone.
Read more: Old Town Vapor 10 reviews (6)
Perception Prodigy 13.5
A most excellent kayak for flat and mostly calm waters (rivers, lakes, and bays). Very stable with plenty of room for a companion, whether a larger dog or most tweens and younger. Excels at kayak camping.
Reasons to Buy
- Overall a really nice, solid, stable, and roomy kayak
- Plenty of room for your four-legged buddy
- Tracking is good without a rudder; rudder is bonus and recommended
- Seat is comfortable and adjustable
- Rear hatch is great when camping or for items not needed when paddling
Reasons to Avoid
- Large, heavy, and awkward (land mobility)
- No spray skirt available (that I'm aware of at this time)
- Split rails for rudder paddles may not cover optimal location
- Advertised 'front hatch' is simply open storage accessed from inside the cockpit, no actual hatch
- Some advertisements list a skeg but there is no skeg available
- Optional rudder MSRP is as much as adding the same rudder on after-market
- Lack of accessories
Don't be fooled by the Cons, this is an awesome kayak if you are serious about bringing your buddy with you, kayak camping, or both. It also works just fine for a short solo paddle as well, although so do plenty of other kayaks. Marketing. I fault copy/paste marketing folks for having bad info out there regarding this kayak. Half the ads I saw and some reviews listed a skeg, when in fact no skeg is available. How can you trust a review that is nothing more than a copy of the company's marking materials in the first place? Accessories.
Read more: Perception Prodigy 13.5 review (1)
More Kayaks
Trailspace reviewers have shared 160 reviews of 106 different kayaks. Narrow your search and view more specific kayak recommendations in these categories:
Recreational Kayaks
Sit-on-Top Kayaks
Touring Kayaks
Whitewater Kayaks
Fishing Kayaks
Inflatable Kayaks
Folding Kayaks
All Paddling Gear
Other Types of Paddling Gear
Find more paddling gear reviewed in these related categories:
Canoes
Rafts
Stand-Up Paddle Boards
+7 more types
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