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Beamless vs. Cradle Lift: Which One Is Right for Your Boat?

If you have spent any time researching boat lifts, you have probably run into this question. Beamless or cradle? Both are proven systems. Both protect your vessel. But they are built for different situations, and choosing the wrong one for your dock, your boat, or your water conditions is an expensive mistake to correct.

This guide breaks down how each system works, where each one performs best, and ends with a simple decision guide so you can spec the right lift the first time.

The right lift is not about which one looks better. It is about which one fits your boat, your dock, and the water it sits in.

How a Beamless Lift Works

A beamless boat lift uses a cable-driven platform to raise and lower the vessel. There is no overhead beam spanning the dock. The lift mechanism is built into the side columns, keeping the profile clean and open.

This design makes a beamless lift versatile. It works well in a wide range of dock configurations, requires no overhead clearance, and gives the boat owner easy access to the hull from all sides for cleaning, inspection, and maintenance.

Beamless Lift: Best For

  • Runabouts, center consoles, and sportfishers in the mid-weight range
  • Calm water environments: canals, protected marinas, and inland waterways
  • Boat owners who prioritize easy hull access and a clean dock aesthetic
  • Docks with standard piling configurations

How a Cradle Lift Works

A cradle lift uses a four-post frame with a bunk system that cradles the hull of the vessel as it is raised. The bunks are positioned to support the hull at key structural points, distributing the weight evenly and holding the boat securely in place.

The cradle design provides a firmer hold on the vessel, which is why it performs better in rougher conditions. Hurricane’s Storm Series Cradle Lift takes this a step further, engineered specifically for high-wind environments and surge exposure in Florida’s coastal and hurricane-risk zones.

Cradle Lift: Best For

  • Heavier or wider vessels that need firm, distributed hull support
  • Open water, coastal, and storm-exposed locations
  • Boat owners in hurricane-risk zones who want maximum protection
  • Larger sportfishers, cruisers, and vessels requiring higher load capacity

Side-by-Side Comparison

Beamless Lift Cradle Lift
Structure No overhead beam, cable-driven platform Four-post frame with bunk cradle system
Best for Runabouts, center consoles, sportfishers Heavier vessels, rough water, storm zones
Load Capacity Up to ~30,000 lbs depending on model Up to ~80,000+ lbs 
Dock Requirement Flexible, works on most dock types Requires adequate piling spacing and depth
Overhead Clearance Not required Not required
Hull Access Easy access, open sides for cleaning Good , bunk system cradles the hull firmly
Ideal Location Canals, marinas, calm water Open water, coastal, storm-exposed areas

 

Load Capacity: What You Need to Know

Both beamless and cradle lifts are available across a range of load capacities. Before selecting a lift type, confirm the actual loaded weight of your vessel, not the dry hull weight.

Loaded weight includes:

  • Full fuel tank
  • Motor weight (outboard, inboard, or sterndrive)
  • Gear, coolers, and equipment stored on board
  • Any additional accessories or installed electronics

A boat that weighs 8,000 lbs dry can easily reach 10,500 lbs fully loaded. Always build in a minimum 10 to 15 percent safety margin above your loaded weight when selecting lift capacity.

Hurricane Boat Lifts manufactures both beamless and cradle configurations across multiple capacity tiers. If your vessel sits near the top of a capacity tier, move up. The cost difference is minor compared to the cost of a failed lift.

How Dock Configuration Affects Your Decision

Your dock setup will sometimes make the decision for you. A few key factors to evaluate before committing to a lift type:

Water Depth

Measure at the lowest tide point. Shallow water may limit which lift systems can be installed at your dock. Hurricane’s team can advise on the right approach based on your specific depth and tidal range.

Piling Spacing

Standard piling configurations work well with both lift types. Unusual spacing , either too narrow or too wide, may point you toward a custom solution or a specific lift model. Take accurate measurements before ordering.

Water Exposure

A dock in a protected canal has very different demands than one on an open bay or coastal waterway. If your dock sees regular wave action, wind exposure, or is in a designated storm surge zone, a cradle lift, particularly the Storm Series, is the safer choice.

Dock Structure

Fixed docks, floating docks, and seawall installations each have different weight load ratings and attachment points. Confirm your dock’s structural capacity before selecting a lift, especially for heavier vessels.

Quick Decision Guide: Which Lift Is Right for You?

Your Situation Recommended Lift
Your boat is a runabout, center console, or sportfisher up to ~20,000 lbs Beamless Lift
Your dock is in a calm canal or protected marina Beamless Lift
You want easy hull access for cleaning and maintenance Beamless Lift
Your vessel is heavier or wider, and needs firm hull support Cradle Lift
Your dock is in an exposed or coastal location Cradle Lift, Storm Series
You are in a hurricane-risk zone and want maximum protection Cradle Lift, Storm Series
You are not sure which applies to your setup Contact Hurricane for a custom recommendation

The Bottom Line

Both beamless and cradle lifts are excellent systems when matched to the right application. The beamless design offers versatility and clean aesthetics for calmer environments, while the cradle system delivers the holding strength and storm resilience that Florida’s coastal conditions demand.

Hurricane Boat Lifts has been manufacturing both systems since 1998, with nine lift categories built to cover every boat size, dock type, and water condition. If you are still unsure which lift is right for your setup, contact the team directly. They can help you spec the right solution before you commit.

Not sure which lift fits your dock? Contact Hurricane Boat Lifts or find an authorized dealer near you at hurricaneboatlifts.com.

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