Sea-Doo Fish Pro Apex PWC For Sale
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The Sea-Doo Fish Pro Apex 300 is the top-tier fishing personal watercraft in Sea-Doo's lineup, built on the full-size ST3 platform and offered as a 2025 limited-edition model that may run for this single model year. It combines the angling hardware of the Fish Pro Trophy with the windscreen and bow rail of the Explorer Pro, aimed at serious freshwater and river fishermen who want a watercraft that handles like a small boat at low speed. Dry weight is listed at 978 pounds, climbing past 1,100 pounds once battery, fluids and a full tank are added, and it carries a 600-pound cargo capacity for a rider plus passenger or a rider and a full load of gear.
This is Sea-Doo's first supercharged Fish Pro, using a supercharged Rotax 1630 engine making 300 horsepower, a step up from the naturally aspirated 170 used on earlier fishing models. Top speed runs to about 68.5 mph, with one run reaching 70 mph, and straight-line acceleration pulls hard from mid-range speeds. Fuel consumption at average cruising speed sits around 4 to 4.25 gallons per hour from the 18.5-gallon tank, varying with altitude, load and throttle use. The ST3 hull tends to wander, so Sea-Doo fitted a hydraulic steering damper with three settings; tightening it adds weight to the bars and reduces constant corrections, while loosening or switching it off restores a more playful feel.
The helm centers on a 9-inch Garmin Echomap full-color touchscreen fish finder with transducer, larger than the 7-inch unit on the Trophy, showing the bottom, fish activity, live data and GPS waypoints for marking spots and navigating home. A 7.8-inch multifunction display handles vehicle data through tactile diamond pads. The touchscreen locks out above 5 mph for safety, responding only at a standstill or under that speed. Cruise control holds a set speed against the closed throttle position, and a slow-speed mode offers nine increments topping out around 5 to 6 mph for no-wake zones and hands-free trolling.
The deck carries the extended Fish Pro platform, angled foot rests at the top of the gunwales, and a 13.5-gallon LinQ cooler and live well combo with a washdown pump controlled by a dedicated toggle set to on, intermittent timer or off. Seven rod holders mount around the cooler and up front, alongside a gunwale-mounted collapsible anchor with its own cleat and a mesh drying bag. Spring-loaded pop-up cleats sit at the stern, an industry-style touch borrowed from traditional boating, and a cup holder is included. The intelligent debris-free system reverses the driveshaft to clear weeds from the intake without getting in the water. Front storage measures 25 gallons and stays accessible while seated.
A swivel pedestal seat with a backrest mounts to the rear platform; an electronic trigger detects the rider on it and limits the machine to trolling speeds of roughly 18 mph. Collapsible, adjustable handlebars add about 3.5 inches of reach and tilt across five points of articulation, raising high enough for a 6-foot-2 rider to stand and ride comfortably. The element-deflecting windscreen rides on a shock-absorbing perch, folds forward on a hinge and includes a small vent flap, though it can distort the water surface through polarized lenses. Colors include a matte deep forest green, called Nori green, paired with silver and Shark gray badging.
Pricing makes the Fish Pro Apex 300 the most expensive Sea-Doo to date at $24,500, and with freight and taxes buyers should expect closer to $30,000 out the door. The package gives you standard gear that would cost more to replicate on a Trophy, Fish Pro Sport or GTX 300. The most-cited gap is the absence of a factory trolling motor, which limits precise positioning in wind, current or tight ponds despite the boat-style swivel seat, something to weigh against the convenience of faster runs to fishing spots and easier off-season storage than a bass boat.
Currently, there are 2,277 boats available for sale for Sea-Doo boats. Prices range from $750 to $57,199, with an average listing price of $20,506. The inventory includes 1,981 new boats and 296 used boats. The fleet is comprised of 2,277 powerboats. 2 boats have been added to the marketplace in the past month. Popular boat types include All PWCs, Pontoon, Other, and Jet. boats are most popular in Jonesboro, Elmhurst, Somerset, Rochester, and Millsboro. There have been 7,848 boats listed on MarineSource that have sold in the past year. May is the most common month for new and used boats to be added to MarineSource, so be sure to check back regularly. May is the most common month for boats to sell, so be sure to beat the rush! The most common activities for boats are family fun, watersports, day cruising, and freshwater fishing. Most boats contain gps, sonar, depth sounder, heated interior, and bow rail. boats tend to have an average of 1 engine. It is common for boats to have Rotax engines or Sea-Doo engines or ROTAX engines.
This is Sea-Doo's first supercharged Fish Pro, using a supercharged Rotax 1630 engine making 300 horsepower, a step up from the naturally aspirated 170 used on earlier fishing models. Top speed runs to about 68.5 mph, with one run reaching 70 mph, and straight-line acceleration pulls hard from mid-range speeds. Fuel consumption at average cruising speed sits around 4 to 4.25 gallons per hour from the 18.5-gallon tank, varying with altitude, load and throttle use. The ST3 hull tends to wander, so Sea-Doo fitted a hydraulic steering damper with three settings; tightening it adds weight to the bars and reduces constant corrections, while loosening or switching it off restores a more playful feel.
The helm centers on a 9-inch Garmin Echomap full-color touchscreen fish finder with transducer, larger than the 7-inch unit on the Trophy, showing the bottom, fish activity, live data and GPS waypoints for marking spots and navigating home. A 7.8-inch multifunction display handles vehicle data through tactile diamond pads. The touchscreen locks out above 5 mph for safety, responding only at a standstill or under that speed. Cruise control holds a set speed against the closed throttle position, and a slow-speed mode offers nine increments topping out around 5 to 6 mph for no-wake zones and hands-free trolling.
The deck carries the extended Fish Pro platform, angled foot rests at the top of the gunwales, and a 13.5-gallon LinQ cooler and live well combo with a washdown pump controlled by a dedicated toggle set to on, intermittent timer or off. Seven rod holders mount around the cooler and up front, alongside a gunwale-mounted collapsible anchor with its own cleat and a mesh drying bag. Spring-loaded pop-up cleats sit at the stern, an industry-style touch borrowed from traditional boating, and a cup holder is included. The intelligent debris-free system reverses the driveshaft to clear weeds from the intake without getting in the water. Front storage measures 25 gallons and stays accessible while seated.
A swivel pedestal seat with a backrest mounts to the rear platform; an electronic trigger detects the rider on it and limits the machine to trolling speeds of roughly 18 mph. Collapsible, adjustable handlebars add about 3.5 inches of reach and tilt across five points of articulation, raising high enough for a 6-foot-2 rider to stand and ride comfortably. The element-deflecting windscreen rides on a shock-absorbing perch, folds forward on a hinge and includes a small vent flap, though it can distort the water surface through polarized lenses. Colors include a matte deep forest green, called Nori green, paired with silver and Shark gray badging.
Pricing makes the Fish Pro Apex 300 the most expensive Sea-Doo to date at $24,500, and with freight and taxes buyers should expect closer to $30,000 out the door. The package gives you standard gear that would cost more to replicate on a Trophy, Fish Pro Sport or GTX 300. The most-cited gap is the absence of a factory trolling motor, which limits precise positioning in wind, current or tight ponds despite the boat-style swivel seat, something to weigh against the convenience of faster runs to fishing spots and easier off-season storage than a bass boat.
Currently, there are 2,277 boats available for sale for Sea-Doo boats. Prices range from $750 to $57,199, with an average listing price of $20,506. The inventory includes 1,981 new boats and 296 used boats. The fleet is comprised of 2,277 powerboats. 2 boats have been added to the marketplace in the past month. Popular boat types include All PWCs, Pontoon, Other, and Jet. boats are most popular in Jonesboro, Elmhurst, Somerset, Rochester, and Millsboro. There have been 7,848 boats listed on MarineSource that have sold in the past year. May is the most common month for new and used boats to be added to MarineSource, so be sure to check back regularly. May is the most common month for boats to sell, so be sure to beat the rush! The most common activities for boats are family fun, watersports, day cruising, and freshwater fishing. Most boats contain gps, sonar, depth sounder, heated interior, and bow rail. boats tend to have an average of 1 engine. It is common for boats to have Rotax engines or Sea-Doo engines or ROTAX engines.
Insights and Analytics for Sea Doo Boats for Sale
Updated June 30, 2026
2,277
total Sea Doo boats for sale
2
Sea Doo boats for sale added in the past month
7,848
Sea Doo boats for sale sold in the past year
$20,506
is the average listing price of Sea Doo boats for sale
Market Activity
The busiest month for Sea Doo boats for sale is May, with 294 boats added and 1k boats sold
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