Best Fish Finder for a Small Boat (2026) — A Buyer's Guide for Center Consoles Under 25 Feet
Choosing a fish finder for a small boat is mostly about not overspending. Here's the right size, sonar tier, and brand for the typical 18–25 ft recreational center console — and what to skip.
By Sebastian · Published March 10, 2026 · Updated May 15, 2026
Affiliate disclosure: Cast & Cruise is reader-supported. We may earn a commission on purchases made through our links, at no extra cost to you. We only recommend gear we would buy ourselves.
| Unit | Score | Price | Screen | Sonar | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Garmin EchoMap UHD2 93sv | 9.0 | $1,299 | 9 in | CHIRP + UHD ClearVu + SideVu | Best overall |
| Lowrance HDS Live 9 | 8.8 | $1,499 | 9 in | Active Imaging 3-in-1 | Better sonar, higher price |
| Humminbird Helix 9 G4N | 8.5 | $1,099 | 9 in | MEGA Imaging+ | Sonar champ, weaker maps |
| Garmin EchoMap UHD2 73sv | 8.6 | $899 | 7 in | Same sonar, smaller screen | Best on tight dashes |
What “right size” actually means
The biggest fish-finder mistake recreational boaters make isn’t picking the wrong brand — it’s getting a screen that’s too small to use at speed. A 5-inch unit on a 22-foot center console makes you squint into a glare-washed display every time you check position. The unit you can read is the unit you use.
For most boats 18–25 ft, 9 inches is the right answer. It splits sonar and chart cleanly, the text stays readable in direct sun, and it doesn’t dominate the dash in a way that makes you regret the install.
Sonar tier — what you actually need
Modern recreational sonar tiers go: traditional 2D → CHIRP → Down imaging → Side imaging. For inshore family fishing — bait drifting, trolling, casting flats — CHIRP plus a basic down imaging is plenty. You’ll see fish, you’ll see bottom structure, and you’ll know when to drop a line.
Side imaging is impressive technology and mostly unused on recreational boats. If you don’t fish structure-heavy water (wrecks, reefs, bridges, brush piles), the money is better spent on a bigger screen or saved entirely.
Cartography matters more than people think
The “fish-finder” part of the unit gets all the marketing attention, but the chart side is what you stare at 90% of the time. Garmin’s BlueChart g3 cartography is the cleanest in the recreational tier, with Auto Guidance that drafts routes around hazards based on your boat’s draft. Lowrance C-MAP and Humminbird CoastMaster are both very good — Garmin just edges them on the chart side.
Transducer install — the part that breaks units
A great chartplotter with a badly mounted transducer is a bad chartplotter. The single most important install step is the bracket-and-test approach: mount the transducer on a temporary bracket, run the boat at speed, watch the sonar return, then drill the permanent holes once you know the placement returns clean.
Avoid mounting near engine intakes, behind strakes, or where the transducer breaks the water at planing speed. If you’re not confident — pay a dealer. It’s the one part of the install where DIY can cost you the whole upgrade.
The recommendation
For most readers asking us this question — center console 18–25 ft, recreational inshore use, no tournament-level performance need — the Garmin EchoMap UHD2 93sv is the right answer. Big enough screen, the included transducer is competitive, cartography is the best in the tier, and the price is reasonable.
If your dash is tight, drop to the 73sv (same sonar, smaller screen). If you fish heavy structure and care about side imaging more than chart polish, go Lowrance HDS Live.