Belly boat pumps: hand, foot, and electric picks

Pumps for belly boats.

A belly boat pump is not glamour gear, but a slow pump costs you the first 15 minutes of a fishing session and a warm-up sweat inside your waders. We tested three pumps across 46 inflations at the ramp: dawn launches on Green Mountain, mid-day inflations at Kootenay pull-outs, and one truck-bed session at Yellowstone.

Fished for 46 sessions on Green Mountain, Kootenay, Yellowstone ramps

The three pumps worth buying

Classic Accessories Manual Hand Pump

6.5/ 10

$22, plastic barrel, dual-action. Ships with most Classic Accessories boats.

Verdict: Fine as a backup that lives in the truck. Not the pump you want to run every launch.

Honest shortcoming: Takes seven honest minutes to fully inflate a Cumberland. That is six minutes of standing in cold air with wet hands.

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NRS 4D Foot Pump

8.6/ 10

$45, dual-chamber foot pump, whitewater-grade. Inflates a two-chamber belly boat in about four minutes without breaking a sweat.

Verdict: The right hand-powered pump for anglers who do not want to carry a battery.

Honest shortcoming: The Boston valve adapter is a friction fit; if you launch in wind it can pop off mid-stroke and cost you a chamber.

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OutdoorMaster Shark 12V Electric Pump

9.0/ 10

$90, 12V cigarette-lighter powered, digital pressure auto-shutoff at 1.5 PSI. Runs a Cumberland to full in three minutes.

Verdict: The pump we reach for now. Buy the extended alligator-clip cable so you can run off the battery post if your accessory socket is dead.

Honest shortcoming: Loud enough to spook fish if you inflate on the water. Inflate at the truck, not the launch.

Check price on Amazon · Check price at Cabela’s

How to pick

  • Backup only: Classic hand pump. Keep it in the truck.
  • Pack-in launches: NRS 4D foot pump. No battery to fail.
  • Drive-in launches: OutdoorMaster Shark. Three minutes and you fish.

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