Alaska Wild Rentals

Alaska Boat Guides

Compare Kaboats, inflatable jet boats, aluminum jet boats, and aluminum prop boats to find the right rental for your destination, experience, group, and Alaska adventure.

Choose by Boat Type

One Boat Does Not Fit Every Alaska Waterway

Alaska offers shallow rivers, braided channels, protected lakes, large freshwater systems, coastal bays, and remote backcountry destinations. The best boat depends on where you plan to go and what you need the boat to carry.

This guide compares the four main boat categories available through Alaska Wild Rentals. Each category includes different models and sizes, but the general strengths, limitations, and recommended uses remain similar within that boat type.

Boat Categories

Choose a Boat Guide

Start with the type of water you plan to use, then consider passenger count, cargo, towing, and operator experience.

Quick Comparison

Which Boat Type Is Best?

Boat Type Best Water Best Uses Portability Experience Level
Kaboats Protected lakes and calmer waterways Fishing, camping, family recreation High Beginner to intermediate
Inflatable Jet Boats Shallow rivers and braided waterways Fishing, hunting, camping, remote access Moderate to high Intermediate
Aluminum Jet Boats Larger shallow rivers Heavy loads, hunting, river travel Trailer required Intermediate to experienced
Aluminum Prop Boats Lakes, deeper rivers, protected coastal water Fishing, sightseeing, family recreation Trailer required Beginner to experienced
01

Portable Motorized Inflatables

Kaboat Guide

Kaboats combine the portability of an inflatable boat with the narrow shape and outboard capability of a small skiff.

Best For

  • Protected lakes
  • Calmer river sections
  • Kenai River trips with an approved motor
  • Camping and fishing
  • Small groups
  • Customers with limited towing capacity

Main Advantages

  • Lightweight and portable
  • Easy to tow or transport
  • Simple outboard operation
  • Lower fuel consumption
  • Easy launching
  • Useful for multiple destinations

Important Limitations

  • Propeller needs adequate water depth
  • Not designed for shallow gravel bars
  • Limited cargo compared with larger boats
  • More affected by strong wind
  • Not intended for rough marine water
  • Weight must be carefully distributed

What Is a Kaboat?

A Kaboat is longer and narrower than a traditional inflatable dinghy. The design provides more usable interior length and allows the boat to move efficiently with a small propeller-driven outboard.

Kaboats are a strong option for anglers, campers, couples, and small families who want a motorized boat without towing a heavy aluminum boat. They are also useful for customers visiting several lakes or waterways during the same trip.

Where Kaboats Work Well

Kaboats are generally best on protected freshwater where the operator can avoid strong current, breaking waves, large boat wakes, shallow gravel, submerged timber, and exposed coastal conditions.

Good choices may include:
  • Road-accessible lakes
  • Protected fishing areas
  • Calm portions of larger rivers
  • Campground and cabin access
  • Short recreational trips
Avoid using them for:
  • Extremely shallow braided rivers
  • Technical whitewater
  • Strong surf or exposed marine routes
  • Heavy moose-hunting loads
  • Long crossings in poor weather
Best match: Choose a Kaboat when portability, simple operation, and protected-water fishing matter more than heavy cargo capacity or shallow-river performance.
02

Portable Shallow-Water Boats

Inflatable Jet Boat Guide

Inflatable jet boats combine a durable inflatable hull with jet propulsion for shallow rivers, gravel-bottom waterways, hunting access, and remote Alaska travel.

Best For

  • Shallow rivers
  • Braided waterways
  • River fishing
  • Remote hunting access
  • Camping and gear transport
  • Backcountry exploration

Main Advantages

  • No exposed propeller
  • Shallow-running capability
  • Stable inflatable tubes
  • Good load capacity
  • Portable compared with rigid jet boats
  • Useful on many Alaska rivers

Important Limitations

  • Still requires enough water to float
  • Jet intake can collect gravel or debris
  • River reading requires experience
  • Performance changes with heavy loads
  • Inflatable hull needs careful handling
  • Not automatically suitable for marine water

How Inflatable Jet Boats Work

Instead of using a propeller below the motor, a jet outboard draws water through an intake and pushes it rearward. This removes the exposed propeller and allows the boat to travel through shallower water than a similar prop boat.

The inflatable tubes provide stability and buoyancy, while reinforced bottoms help protect the boat from normal river use. Some models have rigid or metal-protected bottoms designed for demanding Alaska rivers.

Where Inflatable Jet Boats Work Well

These boats are well suited for waterways such as the Susitna drainage, Deshka River, Yentna River, suitable Interior rivers, and other approved shallow-water routes.

Good choices may include:
  • Shallow river fishing
  • Gravel-bar camping
  • Moose and bear hunting access
  • Transporting remote camp equipment
  • Exploring braided channels
Extra caution is needed around:
  • Sweepers and submerged trees
  • Sharp rocks and dry gravel
  • Extremely shallow intake conditions
  • Heavy downstream current
  • Overloaded hunting trips
Important: A jet boat does not eliminate shallow-water risk. Gravel, sand, rocks, and debris can damage the intake, impeller, wear ring, and cooling system.
03

Rigid Shallow-Water Boats

Aluminum Jet Boat Guide

Aluminum jet boats provide a rigid hull, greater durability, and strong cargo capability for larger river trips.

Best For

  • Larger shallow rivers
  • Heavy fishing equipment
  • Hunting camps
  • Transporting harvested game
  • Longer river trips
  • Experienced river operators

Main Advantages

  • Rigid and durable hull
  • Strong load-carrying ability
  • Good deck space
  • Easy cargo organization
  • Shallow jet propulsion
  • Well suited for repeated river use

Important Limitations

  • Heavier than inflatable boats
  • Requires a capable tow vehicle
  • Can strike or stick on gravel bars
  • More difficult to recover remotely
  • Load greatly affects draft
  • Requires river-reading experience

Why Choose an Aluminum Jet Boat?

Aluminum jet boats are built for customers who need more rigid-hull durability, deck space, and cargo capacity than a smaller portable boat can provide.

They are especially useful for hunting, extended river trips, transporting coolers and camp equipment, or carrying several adults and a substantial load. The rigid floor also makes it easier to move around and organize gear.

Where Aluminum Jet Boats Work Well

Aluminum jet boats are generally best for larger rivers with enough water to support the loaded hull. They may be used on approved sections of the Susitna, Yentna, Tanana, Yukon, and similar waterways depending on the boat and current conditions.

Good choices may include:
  • Multi-day river trips
  • Heavy hunting loads
  • Remote cabin transportation
  • River fishing with several anglers
  • Transporting large coolers and fuel
Consider another boat when:
  • The river is extremely narrow
  • Portability is essential
  • The tow vehicle has limited capacity
  • The launch is undeveloped or difficult
  • The route requires carrying the boat by hand
Best match: Choose an aluminum jet boat when you need shallow-river capability combined with a rigid hull and greater cargo space.
04

Fishing and Recreation Boats

Aluminum Prop Boat Guide

Aluminum prop boats are versatile fishing and recreation boats for lakes, deeper rivers, protected coastal waters, sightseeing, and family adventures.

Best For

  • Large lakes
  • Deeper rivers
  • Protected coastal bays
  • Fishing and trolling
  • Family sightseeing
  • Camping and beach access

Main Advantages

  • Efficient propeller performance
  • Stable fishing platform
  • Comfortable seating
  • Good speed and range
  • Easy trolling control
  • Useful for many recreational trips

Important Limitations

  • Propeller extends below the motor
  • Needs deeper water than a jet boat
  • Vulnerable to rocks and gravel
  • Marine routes require experience
  • Wind can create dangerous conditions
  • Not intended for braided shallow rivers

Why Choose an Aluminum Prop Boat?

Propeller-driven aluminum boats offer efficient performance in deeper water. They are often easier on fuel than jet-powered boats and provide strong speed, trolling control, and overall versatility.

Depending on the model, these boats may be suitable for lakes, deeper freshwater systems, Resurrection Bay, Prince William Sound, Kachemak Bay, and other approved protected coastal areas.

Where Aluminum Prop Boats Work Well

Good choices may include:
  • Kenai Lake
  • Skilak Lake
  • Big Lake
  • Lake Louise
  • Resurrection Bay
  • Prince William Sound
Avoid using them for:
  • Extremely shallow rivers
  • Exposed gravel bars
  • Technical braided channels
  • Unknown shallow water
  • Unapproved offshore routes
  • Conditions beyond the operator’s experience
Marine reminder: A boat may be capable of operating in coastal water without every coastal route being safe. Weather, waves, tides, operator experience, distance, and the specific boat must all be considered.

Selection Checklist

How to Choose the Right Rental Boat

1

Where Are You Going?

Identify the exact river, lake, bay, launch, and planned route.

2

What Will You Carry?

Include passengers, fuel, coolers, camping gear, hunting equipment, and possible harvested game.

3

How Experienced Are You?

Be honest about river navigation, marine boating, launching, towing, and handling changing conditions.

4

What Can You Tow?

Confirm your vehicle’s towing capacity, hitch, wiring, brakes, and ability to handle the selected trailer.

5

What Conditions Are Expected?

Consider river levels, wind, waves, current, tides, cold water, and the distance to shelter.

6

How Remote Is the Trip?

Longer and more remote trips require additional fuel, communication, navigation, repair supplies, and emergency planning.

Before You Launch

Review the Alaska Boating Safety Guide

Learn about life jackets, cold-water survival, river hazards, marine conditions, float plans, emergency communication, loading, fuel, launching, and towing.

Read the Boating Safety Guide

Common Questions

Boat Guide FAQ

Which boat is easiest for a beginner?

A Kaboat or smaller aluminum prop boat on a protected lake is generally easier for a beginner than a jet boat on a braided river or a boat operating in marine water.

Which boat is best for shallow rivers?

Inflatable jet boats and aluminum jet boats are the primary shallow-river options. The best choice depends on the route, load, portability needs, and experience of the operator.

Which boat is best for a moose hunt?

Inflatable and aluminum jet boats may be suitable for approved river-based moose hunts. Aluminum jet boats generally provide more rigid deck space, while inflatable jet boats offer greater portability.

Which boat is best for Seward?

An approved aluminum prop boat is generally the best option from our fleet for suitable trips inside Resurrection Bay.

Which boat is best for Prince William Sound?

An approved aluminum prop boat is generally the primary choice. The exact route, forecast, experience, passenger load, and boat model must be reviewed.

Are jet boats safe in any shallow water?

No. Jet boats still require enough water to float the loaded hull and feed water into the intake. Rocks, gravel, sand, logs, and debris can damage the jet system.

Can I take a prop boat on a river?

Prop boats may work on deeper rivers and protected sections, but they are vulnerable to shallow gravel, rocks, submerged timber, and rapidly changing channels.

Can Alaska Wild Rentals recommend a boat?

Yes. Send us your dates, destination, passenger count, cargo, towing vehicle, experience, and planned activities.

Need Help Choosing?

Tell Us About Your Trip

The fastest way to get a useful recommendation is to provide your exact destination, rental dates, number of passengers, towing vehicle, boating experience, and estimated cargo.

Call or Text

907-302-1775

Speak directly with Alaska Wild Rentals about your route, equipment, and availability.

Send Trip Details

Contact Alaska Wild Rentals

Use our contact form to send your dates, destination, group information, and delivery request.

Explore Alaska Your Way

Find the Right Boat for Your Adventure

Choose from portable Kaboats, shallow-running inflatable jet boats, durable aluminum jet boats, and aluminum prop boats for Alaska lakes, rivers, fishing trips, hunting camps, and coastal adventures.