Specifications
The Hurricane 2400 in Baby Blue is the one that gets photographed most. There is something about the color against South Florida water that just works — we have seen this boat end up on social media more times than we can count without anyone planning it that way.
Under the styling it is a serious 24-foot deck boat with a layout that blurs the line between fishing-capable and full entertainment mode. The bow seating converts, there is real storage under the consoles, and the engine puts out enough power to pull a tube or get somewhere quickly when the afternoon thunderstorms start building on the horizon and you need to make a run for it. It seats 8 to 10 comfortably and goes out primarily from Pompano Beach and Fort Lauderdale — both putting you minutes from the Intracoastal and the offshore reef access points.
The deck is wide enough for people to move around without the whole boat rocking every time someone stands up — a problem that affects narrower hulls in this price class. Bluetooth audio, Bimini top, anchor, and safety kit all included. If your group is six to eight rather than ten, and you want the same Hurricane platform in a slightly more manageable size, the Hurricane SD 217 Burgundy is the 22-foot version of the same proven hull and handles the tighter waterways a bit more easily.
Book early on weekends — it is the most requested color in the fleet and it fills up. Our weekly rental rates give you the full Pompano to Fort Lauderdale to Hollywood corridor at a pace that actually lets you use it rather than spending two days just getting settled. See the complete fleet for all twelve boats and size comparisons.
