May is one of the best months to be on Sarasota Bay. Snook are waking up, cobia are still in the passes, redfish are tailing on warm flats, and the water clarity is excellent. It’s also the month when many anglers start thinking about upgrading their setup, and one of the fastest-growing upgrades in the kayak fishing world right now is the electric motor.
At Economy Tackle, we’ve been watching the electric motor movement gain serious momentum, especially among Sarasota’s experienced anglers and those who want to fish longer days without the physical demands of paddling. If you’ve been curious about adding an electric motor to your kayak or buying a motor-ready kayak, this guide is for you.
For more, visit our complete guide to kayak fishing in Sarasota Bay.

Why Electric Motors Are Catching On with Kayak Anglers
The core appeal is simple: you get the access and stealth of a kayak with the effortless range of a motorized boat. But the reasons anglers are making the switch go deeper than that.
Covering More Water
Sarasota Bay is roughly 35 miles long. A paddle kayak angler can realistically cover 3–5 miles in a productive fishing morning. With a small electric motor, that range expands to 8–15 miles, letting you reach spots that are too far to paddle to, the far grass flats off Casey Key, the deeper points of Roberts Bay, the mangrove islands south of Midnight Pass, and still have energy to fish them hard.
Hands-Free Fishing
This is the game-changer for most anglers. When you’re fighting current, working into a headwind, or trying to hold position on a moving tide while casting to tailing redfish, paddling and fishing simultaneously is genuinely difficult. An electric motor handles the positioning so your hands stay on the rod. Many anglers describe the first day fishing with a motor as the day kayak fishing “clicked” for them.
Accessibility for All Anglers
This is something we hear often at Economy Tackle, and it matters: electric motors have made serious kayak fishing accessible to anglers who might otherwise be sidelined. Shoulder injuries, knee replacements, back problems, or simply the reality of aging, none of these have to end your fishing career when a small, quiet electric motor can do the paddling for you. The fishing remains every bit as technical and rewarding; you’re just letting technology handle the transportation.
Types of Electric Motor Setups for Kayaks
Customer Favorite Kayak + Motor Combinations
At Economy Tackle, we’ve helped a lot of customers find the right kayak and motor pairing. Here are three setups our customers keep coming back to.
Crescent Crew Tandem + Bixpy Transom Mount
The Crescent Crew tandem paired with the Bixpy transom mount and motor creates a fun and versatile setup for relaxing days on the water. The Crew offers comfortable frame seating, excellent stability, and the flexibility to easily convert from a tandem to a solo kayak. Combined with the simple-to-install Bixpy motor system, paddlers can explore farther, cruise with ease, and spend more time enjoying the adventure with less effort. It’s a particularly popular combo for couples and fishing buddies who want to share a boat without sacrificing comfort or range.
Hobie Kayaks + Bixpy Drivewell Adapter
Hobie kayaks are a great choice for anglers who want to explore the water with ease, offering a smooth, efficient ride and hands-free pedal power that makes every trip more enjoyable. Paired with the Bixpy drivewell adapter, paddlers can swap their pedal drive for quiet motor power in seconds — adding effortless range and versatility without changing boats. It’s an ideal upgrade for Hobie owners who want the option to motor across open water on longer trips to Sarasota Bay’s more distant flats.
Hottest Trending Setup: Bonafide XTR130 + Newport Motor
The Bonafide XTR130 paired with a Newport electric motor is one of the hottest fishing kayak setups we’re seeing right now — and for good reason. Choose between two powerful Newport motor options: the NT300 with traditional tiller steering or the NK300 pedal-drive steering system, depending on your preference. Anglers get a stable, motor-ready fishing kayak built for performance and all-day adventures on the water. Its fully riggable platform even allows for the addition of a tandem swivel seat, making it easy to bring along a friend, partner, or fishing buddy. Newport electric motors also provide a quiet, clean, emission-free alternative to traditional gas-powered motors — a big plus in Sarasota Bay’s manatee-rich waters.
Pedal + Motor Combo: Native LTE 10 + Bixpy
The new Native LTE 10 paired with Bixpy motors offers one of the most versatile setups on the water right now. What makes it unique: the Bixpy motor fits directly into the drive well alongside the pedal system, meaning you can pedal and run the motor at the same time, or switch between the two on the fly, without having to swap either system out. This is a key difference from setups like the Hobie + Bixpy combination, where you have to fully remove the pedal drive before dropping in the motor. On the Native LTE 10, both are always ready. Pedal quietly through tight mangrove creeks and shallow flats, engage the motor to push through a headwind or cruise between spots, or run both together when you need maximum range. It’s the ultimate do-everything kayak setup for serious Sarasota Bay anglers.
What to Know Before You Buy
Battery: The Most Important Decision
Your motor is only as good as your battery. The good news: most of the motors we carry at Economy Tackle are sold in kits that include a lithium battery, so you’re set up right from the start. One important note: the Bixpy motor is a self-contained system and can only be used with the Bixpy battery — it’s not compatible with third-party batteries.
Florida Kayak Motor Regulations
In Florida, a kayak with a motor attached is classified differently from a human-powered kayak. Key rules:
- Registration: A kayak with any motor (electric or gas) must be registered with the Florida DHSMV as a motorized vessel
- Lighting: A motorized kayak must display proper navigation lights at night
- Idle speed zones: Motorized kayaks are subject to the same idle speed and no-wake rules as any other motorized vessel, including manatee protection zones
- Fishing licenses: No change, same fishing license requirements apply
Stop by Economy Tackle, and we’ll walk you through exactly what’s required for your specific setup before you hit the water.
Weight and Portability
The biggest practical consideration for most kayak anglers is the total weight of the motorized setup. A 12-foot fishing kayak weighs 55–85 lbs. Add a transom-mount motor and battery, and you’re looking at 90–130 lbs total. That’s a significant solo carry for loading and unloading at a ramp.
Lithium batteries reduce this considerably. Kayak carts and wheeled ramp dollies help with the ground transport. Many anglers back a truck or trailer to the water’s edge. It’s worth thinking through your launch routine before committing to a motor setup.
Best Sarasota Bay Spots for Electric Motor Kayak Fishing
The electric motor opens up spots that are simply too far for practical paddle fishing:
- North Bay Flats (from Ken Thompson Park): Motor north along the ICW to reach the extensive flats north of the Ringling Bridge, a 2-mile paddle becomes a 10-minute motor run
- Roberts Bay South end: The far southern reaches of Roberts Bay near Casey Key are excellent but require a long paddle; motors make this realistic in the morning
- Jim Neville Preserve / Midnight Pass area: Launch from Turtle Beach, motor south to the preserve, then cut the motor and drift-fish the flats quietly
- Myakka River: Launch from the Upper Myakka Lake boat ramp and motor out to target remote waters in search of bass, snook, and tarpon
Come Talk to Us at Economy Tackle
Whether you’re looking to add a motor to your existing kayak, buy a new motor-ready rig, or just want to understand your options, we’re happy to walk through it with you.
Visit Economy Tackle at 6018 N. Tamiami Trail, Sarasota. May is a great time to get set up before the full summer season hits. Come in and let’s talk motors.
For more, visit our ultimate guide to kayak fishing in Sarasota Bay.



