screenshot 23 12 2025 103427 www.westmarine.com

Guide to Bilge Pumps

A Beginner’s Guide to Bilge Pumps

If you own a small boat, a bilge pump is one of the most important bits of safety equipment onboard. It’s not glamorous, but when water starts collecting where it shouldn’t, a bilge pump can make the difference between a minor issue and a serious problem.

This guide explains what bilge pumps do, the different types available, and what beginners really need to know.


What Is a Bilge Pump?

A bilge pump removes unwanted water from the bilge — the lowest part of your boat’s hull where water naturally collects.

Water can enter the bilge from:

  • Rain and spray
  • Small leaks around fittings
  • Condensation
  • Washing down the deck

Bilge pumps don’t fix leaks, but they help manage water and buy you time if something goes wrong.


Do Small Boats Really Need One?

Yes — even very small boats benefit from a bilge pump.

On open boats and small cuddy cabins:

  • Rain can fill the bilge quickly
  • A forgotten drain plug can flood the hull
  • Waves over the bow add water fast

Even a basic pump provides peace of mind.


Types of Bilge Pumps

1. Manual Bilge Pumps

These are hand-operated pumps.

Pros

  • Simple and reliable
  • No electricity required
  • Cheap

Cons

  • Slow
  • Requires effort (not ideal in an emergency)

Best as a backup, not your only pump.


2. Electric Bilge Pumps

The most common type on modern boats.

Pros

  • Fast and efficient
  • Runs at the flick of a switch
  • Can work automatically

Cons

  • Needs a battery
  • Wiring required

Ideal as your main bilge pump.


Automatic vs Manual Electric Pumps

  • Manual pump: You turn it on with a switch
  • Automatic pump: Uses a float switch or sensor to activate when water rises

For beginners, an automatic pump is strongly recommended. It works even if you’re distracted — or asleep at anchor.


How Big a Bilge Pump Do You Need?

Bilge pumps are rated in GPH (gallons per hour).

Typical guide for small boats:

  • Dinghy / small open boat: 500–750 GPH
  • 14–18 ft boat: 750–1100 GPH
  • 18–22 ft boat: 1100–2000 GPH

Bigger is usually better — you can’t have “too much” pumping capacity.


Where Is a Bilge Pump Fitted?

A bilge pump should sit:

  • At the lowest point of the hull
  • Where water naturally collects
  • Clear of debris

The outlet hose should rise steadily and exit above the waterline.


Common Beginner Mistakes

  • ❌ Relying on one pump only
  • ❌ Forgetting to test it
  • ❌ Letting debris block the intake
  • ❌ No fuse fitted to the power line

A bilge pump that isn’t maintained may not work when you need it most.


How Often Should You Test It?

  • Before every trip: quick on/off test
  • Monthly: check wiring and float switch
  • Annually: remove and clean the pump

It only takes minutes and could save your boat.


Final Thoughts

A bilge pump is cheap insurance. Even on a small boat, fitting a reliable pump — preferably automatic — is one of the smartest upgrades you can make.

It won’t stop leaks, but it buys time, reduces stress, and keeps you safer on the water

Releated Posts

If in doubt, don’t go out

UK Small Boat Safety Checklist (Inshore & Coastal) Whether you’re heading out for fishing, a short coastal run,…

ByByadmin Dec 22, 2025

How to Launch a Small Boat

How to Launch a Small Boat Solo (Safely & Stress-Free) 1. Prepare Away From the Ramp Never prep…

ByByadmin Dec 21, 2025

Outboard Fails at Sea

What to Do If Your Outboard Fails at Sea An outboard engine failure at sea is one of…

ByByadmin Dec 18, 2025

Understanding VHF Radio Basics (Even for Small Boats)

A VHF radio is one of the most important safety tools you can carry on a small boat.…

ByByadmin Dec 13, 2025

356 total

Scroll to Top