

If you've been around boating long enough, you start to notice patterns. And one of the biggest ones is this: spring boat buying in Vermont is the window where everything lines up at once — the selection, the time, and the season still ahead of you. At Woodard Marine, this is when the floor feels genuinely wide open. Not rushed. Not pressured. Just the full lineup, ready to explore and match to how you actually want to spend your summer.
A lot of people assume buying a boat in Vermont early is about getting ahead of everyone else. It's really not.
It's about giving yourself the full summer.
That means more time on the water, more flexibility in how your boat is set up, and more chances to use it the way you actually pictured when you first started thinking about it.
Because once summer hits, things move fast. Schedules fill. And before you know it, you're already deep in the season with half of it behind you.
The goal isn't just to buy a boat — it's to build the kind of summer you actually remember.

Just last season, a family came in with their minds mostly made up.
They started by looking at a runabout — something simple, something familiar. As we talked, we asked a straightforward question: how are you planning to use the boat the most?
The answer shifted everything.
Wakeboarding came up almost immediately. We asked if they'd ever looked at a Moomba wake boat. The answer was no — and they didn't know what made one different.
We showed them the Moomba Max. Features like Zero Off cruise control let you dial in speed down to a tenth of a mile per hour — so the rider gets a consistent, controlled pull every time. The dad stopped mid-conversation: "Wait, so it's not just holding speed, it's holding exact speed?" That's usually the moment it clicks.
A traditional runabout surges forward once it hits planing speed. A wake boat holds it — cleaner wake, better experience for everyone behind the boat.
👉 See our current wake boats in Vermont
They looked at the layout and realized it handled a full crew, wakeboarding, tubing, and family days all in one setup. By the end, they landed somewhere completely different than where they started — and it was exactly right.
That's the advantage spring gives you. Space to ask the right questions, explore options you didn't know existed, and decide based on how you'll really use the boat — not just what looks good at first glance. The buyers who get it right the first time are almost always the ones who came in before they felt like they had to.
We see this every year. Families and couples drive in from Lake George, from Burlington and the Lake Champlain corridor, and from across the Adirondacks. They're not panicking. They're planning.
They want time to walk through different models, layouts, and options, compare them side by side, and make sure what they choose actually fits how they spend time on the water — not just how it looks on the lot.
That geographic spread matters because Vermont's lakes all feel a little different on the water. What works on Lake Champlain isn't always the same answer as what works on Lake Bomoseen or a smaller mountain lake. Getting that conversation right early — before the season locks in — makes a real difference.
We're also seeing more buyers coming over from New York as boating regulations have changed. As of 2025, New York requires all operators to hold a boating safety certificate regardless of age — so if you're planning to get on the water this season, it's worth reviewing the current requirements through the BoatUS Foundation for Boating Safety and Clean Water before heading out. A lot of buyers are using the transition as the nudge they needed to finally make a move on a boat they've been thinking about.
If you're coming from the Lake George area and also considering a WaveRunner, it's worth checking out:
👉 PWC for Sale Near Me | Why Vermont Is Worth the Drive Near Lake George
This is consistently the best time to buy a boat in Vermont, and the buyers who come in now — whether they're searching for boats for sale near Lake George or Burlington — are the ones who get the full season.

Most buyers don’t walk in saying, “I need a pontoon” or “I need a runabout.” They walk in thinking about how they want their summer to feel. That’s where this starts to come together.
If your best days on the water involve a cooler, a playlist, and nowhere to be — this is usually where people land. Easy, comfortable, built for groups, and built to stay out all day.
If your summer revolves around riding, surfing, or pulling people behind the boat, this is where the conversation shifts. These boats are built around performance—and once you’re on one, you feel it right away.
For Vermont lakes, versatility matters. Lund builds boats that let you fish seriously in the morning and still enjoy the rest of the day without feeling limited.
This is where a lot of families end up—because it does a little bit of everything well. Simple, comfortable, and easy to enjoy without overthinking it.
Not sure which boat fits your lake? Our guide to the best boats for Lake Bomoseen, Lake St. Catherine, and Lake Dunmore breaks down exactly what works on each one — so you're not guessing when you get to the floor.
This time of year, you're not just picking a hull — you're choosing how your summer actually plays out.
You might step onto the Regal LS2 bowrider for sale in Vermont and start picturing a morning run across Lake Bomoseen with a small group. Or get on the Moomba Craz wake boat for sale in Vermont and realize the setup matters just as much as the water — that the surf sessions you've been imagining are closer than you thought.
Then there’s something like the Lund 1775 Adventure Sport, where flexibility is the whole point — fishing at dawn, tubing mid-afternoon, and still making it home for dinner without feeling like you had to choose between the two.
And if you're not certain yet, spring is also the time of year when you can actually get on the water and experience different setups before you decide. That matters more than most buyers expect.
We see the same thing with WaveRunners — on the surface, they can look similar, but how they ride is completely different. This guide helps make sense of it: 👉 2026 Yamaha WaveRunner Comparison Guide

We've been selling boats on Vermont's lakes for over 65 years. When someone asks us what the best time to buy a boat in Vermont is, we answer with a grin — before you think you need to.
One thing we stand behind without exception: every boat we carry is built to perform. There's no wrong choice in the lineup.
What makes the difference is finding the one that fits your summer:
Buying a boat in Vermont this time of year simply gives you the space to get that right — without pressure, without the season already running.
Not quite ready to decide? Come walk the floor. No appointment needed, no pressure — just a chance to see what fits before the season gets away from you.

That’s exactly why we put together the Saving Summer – Spring Sales Event.
Not to manufacture urgency—but because the moment is real.
The lake is opening up. The full lineup is here and ready - see what's available at Woodard Marine. And you have the time to make the right call—before summer makes it for you.
Summer always shows up faster than people expect.
The difference is whether you're ready for it—or already out there enjoying it.
Right now, you have the time to choose it.
Spring is typically the best time, when selection is strong, and you still have the full boating season ahead to enjoy it.
Buying before summer gives you more time on the water and more flexibility in choosing the right setup for how you plan to use it.
It depends on how you spend your time—pontoons for relaxing, wake boats for surfing, fishing boats for versatility, and runabouts for all-around use.
Many buyers do. It often comes down to selection, availability, and finding the setup that best fits your needs.


