Tritoon or pontoon. That’s the first fork in the road for most Lake Marion buyers, and it trips people up more than it should. Both pontoon boats and tritoon boats float on flat decks, seat a crowd, and handle a lazy afternoon of tubing just fine. But the differences show up fast once you’re actually on the water — in how it rides, what it costs, what it’ll pull. Here’s what actually separates them, and how to figure out which one fits your family.
Key Takeaways
- A tritoon has three logs under the deck instead of two. That third log changes everything else on this list.
- Tritoons cost more. They also hold value better and ride smoother once Lake Marion gets choppy.
- Pontoons are cheaper to buy, cheaper to run, and plenty of boat if you’re not chasing speed.
- How many people you carry and how late in the day you’re out — those two things usually decide it for you.
- Crest builds pontoons and tritoons, and Meares Marine carries Xcursion models too — the only dealer on the lake.
What This Guide Covers
Structure, specs, ride, cost, and which one actually fits how you use Lake Marion. Read it straight through or skip to what you need — the questions section near the bottom is where most people end up making the call.
What’s the Difference Between a Pontoon and a Tritoon?
Two logs versus three. That’s the whole mechanical story.
A pontoon rides on two aluminum tubes running under the deck. Add a third one down the center, and you’ve got a tritoon. Simple change. Big consequences.
More logs mean more buoyancy. More buoyancy means the boat can carry a bigger motor without squatting in the water. Pontoons commonly run in the 90 to 225 horsepower range depending on size; tritoons run higher on average, often starting around 150 HP and climbing well past that on bigger models. Discover Boating has a good breakdown of how boat size and horsepower pair up if you want the full picture. That extra headroom is why a tritoon can pull a wakeboarder, and a smaller pontoon usually can’t.
Crest builds both configurations on similar deck plans, so the seating and layout look about the same in either case. The center log is the difference. Everything else on this page traces back to it.
Tritoon Specs: Weight, Width, and Capacity
Heavier. Wider. Rated for more people. That third log and the bigger motor it carries both add weight, and the extra beam width from the center tube pushes the boat wider than a comparable two-log pontoon.
Capacity follows the same logic — more flotation and more horsepower mean a tritoon is typically Coast Guard-rated to carry more passengers than a same-length pontoon with a smaller motor. Exact numbers depend on the specific model, though. Every boat has its own capacity plate. Call us, and we’ll pull the real figures for whatever Crest or Xcursion model you’re looking at — matters for your trailer rating, matters for your lift, matters more than the brochure number.
performance on water
Performance on the Water: Handling, Speed, and Ride Quality
Lake Marion gets rough. Not dangerous-rough, but choppy enough by early afternoon to change what “comfortable” means.
A pontoon rides flat in calm water. Nice, stable, easy. But once the chop builds — and on a summer weekend it will — that two-log hull starts to pound and sway.
A tritoon’s center log cuts through the chop rather than riding over it. Drier ride. Smoother ride. Faster to plane, too, and it holds a straighter line at speed, which matters if you’ve got someone on a tube behind you.
Morning coves, slow speed, back at the dock by noon? A pontoon handles that without complaint. Out all day, open water, pulling gear? The tritoon earns its keep.
Cost Comparison: Pontoon vs. Tritoon Pricing
Tritoons cost more. Third log, bigger motor — both add to the sticker price and the fuel bill.
But they hold resale value better. Buyers want the performance. And a tritoon planing efficiently at speed can cover more ground per gallon than a pontoon fighting the same chop, even burning more fuel per hour.
Budget’s the real deciding factor for a lot of families. Meares Marine finances both pontoon and tritoon models in-house — worth checking before you rule the tritoon out on price alone. Our guide to financing a boat in South Carolina walks through loan terms and what lenders actually look for.
Which Boat Fits Your Lake Marion Lifestyle?
Two kinds of customers walk through our door.
The first wants quiet mornings — fishing, slow cruises around the coves near Manning and Santee, home before the wind picks up. That’s a pontoon family. Lower cost, less upkeep, plenty of boat for that pace.
The second wants to be out there all day. Afternoon chop, open water, someone on a tube behind the boat. That’s a tritoon family, every time. It’s not about who’s willing to spend more. It’s about matching the boat to what the lake actually does once the sun’s been up a few hours.
How to Decide: Questions to Ask Before You Buy
Browse pontoon boats and tritoon boats to see what’s in stock right now, then answer these honestly:
- How many people are usually on board?
- Are you towing a tube, a skier, or a wakeboarder?
- Morning boater, or are you still out there at 2 pm?
- What’s the real budget, financing included?
- Can you carry the fuel and maintenance costs each season?
Answer those five, and the boat usually picks itself.
What You Stand to Gain (or Lose) With the Wrong Choice
Buy a pontoon expecting tritoon performance, and you’ll find out the hard way — first choppy afternoon, wet ride, kids unhappy. Buy a tritoon you didn’t need, and you’re paying for horsepower you’ll rarely use.
Get it right up front. Saves money. Keeps the boat off the trailer and on the water where it belongs.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a tritoon better than a pontoon?
Depends on the lake day you’re picturing. Rougher water, more people, more power — tritoon wins. Calm mornings and a tighter budget — pontoon’s plenty of boat.
Is a tritoon faster than a pontoon?
Yes. More horsepower headroom means faster to plane and a higher top end, boat-for-boat.
How much does a tritoon boat weigh?
More than a comparable pontoon — the third log and bigger motor add weight. Check the capacity plate on the specific model, especially if you’re matching it to a trailer.
What’s the best boat for Lake Marion specifically?
See the lifestyle section above — it comes down to speed needs and how late you’re typically out. Both boats do fine here.
Which brand does Meares Marine sell?
Crest pontoons and tritoons, plus Xcursion models. Only dealer on Lake Marion carrying all three.
About Meares Marine
Only dealer on Lake Marion with boats floating right at the dock — not a lot on pavement somewhere. Patrick Meares started Meares Marine in 2014, and since then it’s grown into the most trusted name on the lake: #1 Marina and Boat Repair Shop per the Manning Times, Best of Clarendon 2024 in the Boat Dealership category. Authorized for Crest, Xcursion, and Stingray. Authorized Yamaha service center, too. Come test drive on real open water, not a parking lot.
See the Difference for Yourself
Reading about it only gets you so far. Come feel it. Schedule a test drive on Lake Marion and run a pontoon and a tritoon back-to-back before you decide anything. Call (803) 478-2527, or just stop by — 2058 Lake Shore Drive, Manning, SC.