Specifications
Two Hurricane 2400s in the fleet is not an accident. Demand for this hull is consistently higher than any single boat can satisfy, especially in peak season when groups are planning birthday trips, bachelorette weekends, and extended family outings simultaneously. The 2400 platform works for South Florida boating in a way that other deck boats in this size class do not quite replicate.
This second 2400 has a slightly different rigging than the Baby Blue version — same hull, similar power, different interior color scheme and seating arrangement. If your group of 8 to 10 is coming down for a week and you have already heard about the Hurricane from someone who rented it before, this is the one to book when the primary is taken. We run it from Fort Lauderdale and Pompano Beach — the same pickup locations as the other 2400, which makes it easy to swap if one location suits the group better.
The hull handles open water better than most deck boats this size. The reason is the strake geometry Hurricane uses — it manages spray and lift at planing speeds rather than just pushing water out of the way. In practical terms, you stay drier and the ride is flatter. On a 90-degree South Florida afternoon, staying dry matters. If your group is slightly smaller and you want the same Hurricane engineering in a more manageable 22-foot package, the Hurricane 2400 Baby Blue runs the same coastal routes with a bit more agility in the tighter backwater spots.
Bimini top, Bluetooth, anchor, safety gear, full walkthrough on pickup. Our multi-day rental rates are where the math makes sense for the Fort Lauderdale to Pompano to Hollywood Intracoastal circuit — enough time to anchor in different spots rather than rushing back to the dock each evening. See the full fleet page for all available dates and size comparisons.
