
How to Choose the Right Size Boat Lift for Your Boat: UK Sizing Guide
Selecting the right boat lift comes down to three measurements: your boat's weight, its width (beam), and the water depth where you'll moor it. Get any of these wrong, and you'll either buy equipment that can't support your boat or overspend on capacity you don't need. This guide walks you through the calculation step by step so you buy the right size first time.
Why Size Matters
An undersized lift will struggle under load, potentially damaging your boat or failing entirely when you need it most. An oversized lift costs more upfront and takes up unnecessary space on your mooring, but won't harm your boat. The real risk is underestimating—and on the UK's inland waterways and coastal moorings, where tidal height changes and water conditions vary seasonally, getting this right protects both your investment and your peace of mind.
Step One: Find Your Boat's Weight
This is the single most important figure. Your boat's dry weight (sometimes called displacement) is different from its loaded weight with fuel, water, equipment, and passengers aboard.
Where to find dry weight:
- Check the manufacturer's specification sheet (usually in your boat's documentation or online via the builder's website)
- Look on the boat's registration plate or nameplate, often found in the cabin or on the transom
- Contact the manufacturer directly if you've inherited an older vessel and lack paperwork
What you'll see listed: For displacement hulls (the majority of UK leisure boats), weight is quoted in kilograms. For example, a typical 25ft family cruiser weighs 4,000–6,000 kg dry. A narrowboat might be 15,000–20,000 kg. A speedboat of similar length can weigh half as much.
If you've added significant equipment since purchase—a hardtop, extra batteries, or permanent moorings furniture—add 5–10% to the manufacturer's figure to account for modifications.
Step Two: Measure Your Boat's Beam
Beam is the maximum width of your boat measured from side to side at the widest point. This matters because boat lifts have width limitations. If your boat is wider than the lift's capacity, it simply won't fit, no matter how strong the lift is.
How to measure:
- Use a tape measure from the outside of the hull on one side to the outside on the other
- Measure at the boat's widest point (usually amidships, towards the middle)
- If your boat has rubbing strakes or fenders, measure around them
- Record the figure in metres
Typical UK beam widths:
- Small leisure boats (17–20ft): 2.0–2.5m
- Mid-size family cruisers (24–28ft): 2.8–3.2m
- Narrowboats: 2.07m (this is the standard limit for UK canal locks)
- Larger cruisers and houseboats: up to 4m
Most residential boat lifts accommodate beams up to 3.5m. Wider vessels may need custom installations or mooring arrangements.
Step Three: Check Your Water Depth
Boat lifts need sufficient water depth to operate effectively. In the UK, this varies dramatically depending on location.
Measure at different seasons:
- Record the water level at your lowest point (usually winter for inland waters, lowest tide for coastal moorings)
- Check with your mooring authority or local harbour office for historical high and low water data
- For tidal locations, account for both spring tides (maximum range) and neap tides (minimum range)
Boat lifts typically require:
- A minimum of 0.5m below your boat's lowest point when resting on the lift
- An additional 0.3–0.5m of clearance for the lift mechanism itself
So if your boat draws 0.8m of water and water depth drops to 1.2m in winter, you'd have only 0.4m of clearance—likely insufficient. You'd need a shallower-draft option or a different mooring.
Step Four: Calculate Required Lift Capacity
Once you have weight and beam, selecting the right lift capacity becomes straightforward.
The basic rule: Lift capacity must exceed your boat's dry weight by at least 15–20%. This safety margin accounts for:
- Fuel and water tanks when full
- Passengers and crew
- Equipment and provisions
- Any doubt in your weight estimate
Example calculation:
- Boat dry weight: 5,500 kg
- Safety margin (20%): 1,100 kg
- Minimum lift capacity required: 6,600 kg
Round up to the next standard size. Most manufacturers offer lifts in 2-tonne, 3-tonne, 4-tonne, 5-tonne, and 6-tonne increments. For this example, you'd choose a 7-tonne lift.
Common Sizing Mistakes
Underestimating weight: Many boat owners rely on old paperwork or rough estimates. Weigh your boat at a commercial scale if possible (most boat yards can arrange this for £30–60). It's the cheapest insurance you'll buy.
Ignoring fuel and water: A full fuel tank on a 30ft cruiser adds 500–800 kg. A full freshwater tank adds another 200–400 kg. These compounds quickly.
Forgetting seasonal variation: Water levels in UK inland waterways can drop 30–50cm from summer to winter. A lift that works in July might not function safely in February.
Confusing beam with overall length: Beam width is what matters for fit, not length. A long, narrow boat fits through narrower lifts than a short, wide one.
Boat Type Quick Reference
Different vessel types have predictable sizing patterns:
- Narrowboats: 15,000–20,000 kg, 2.07m beam (fixed by UK canal specifications)
- Day cruisers (17–22ft): 2,000–4,000 kg, 2.2–2.6m beam
- Family cruisers (25–30ft): 5,000–8,000 kg, 2.8–3.2m beam
- Fishing boats: typically lighter relative to length (higher power-to-weight ratio)
- Houseboats: heavier per metre than conventional cruisers; check specific build specs
Final Check
Before purchasing, contact three boat lift suppliers with your exact figures: dry weight, beam width, water depth (minimum and maximum), and mooring type (canal, river, coastal). Ask each for a written recommendation. They'll identify any practical constraints specific to your location and may suggest alternatives you hadn't considered.
The right size lift requires just these three measurements. Measure carefully, add a safety margin, and you'll have a system that protects your boat for years without unnecessary expense.
More options
- Electric Boat Lift & Hoist Systems (Amazon UK)
- Hydraulic Marine Hoist Units (Amazon UK)
- Boat Davit & Swivel Crane Systems (Amazon UK)
- Marine Anti-Rust & Maintenance Products (Amazon UK)
- Aluminium & Galvanised Dock Hardware (Amazon UK)