Used Tracker Boats: Models, Prices & What They're Worth
Tracker invented the idea of the affordable, ready-to-fish package boat in 1978 — one price for boat, motor, and trailer, sold through Bass Pro Shops. Nearly fifty years later it's still the value leader in aluminum fishing boats: no brand has put more anglers on the water, and the nationwide Bass Pro/Cabela's dealer network means parts and service are never far away.
Used Trackers are honest tools. Aluminum hulls are light to tow, cheap to power, and forgiving of stumps and gravel launches that would gouge fiberglass. What they aren't is fancy — expect carpet, bench-style layouts, and function-first finish. Priced right, a used Tracker is one of the smartest dollars-per-fishing-hour buys in boating.
What Tracker is known for
- The original all-in-one boat/motor/trailer package — and still the value benchmark
- Aluminum construction: light, tough, shallow-friendly, and cheap to tow behind a small SUV
- Bass Pro Shops / Cabela's distribution, so sales and service coverage is nationwide
- Mercury-matched power across the line, keeping repower and service simple
Popular used Trackermodels & prices
Tracker Pro Team 175 / 190 (bass boats)
$10,000–$25,000 usedThe best-selling aluminum bass boats in America: casting decks, livewells, and trolling-motor-ready bows. A used Pro Team with a 60–115 hp Mercury is the classic first fishing rig.
Tracker Targa V-18 / V-19 (deep-V multi-species)
$25,000–$50,000 usedThe big-water Tracker — deep-V hulls for walleye chop and great-lakes wind, with real storage and 150–250 hp. The line's premium buy, used or new.
Tracker Grizzly (jon & utility, 14–20 ft)
$4,000–$18,000 usedAll-welded workhorses for rivers, duck blinds, and skinny water. Nearly indestructible and cheap to run — judge them on engine condition, not cosmetics.
Bass Tracker Classic XL (17 ft)
$8,000–$15,000 usedThe famous price-point boat. Used examples are the cheapest route to a real bass boat — just mind the basics: rivets, transom, and a healthy outboard.
Ranges are typical asking prices for privately sold and dealer-serviced boats in the U.S.; condition, engine hours, and refit quality move prices substantially.
Tracker boats for sale now
Dealer2022 Tracker Targa V-18 WT
Essex, MD
Fishing boat · Good condition
Riverside Marine
Nationwide Delivery Available
$29,995
View details
Dealer2024 Tracker GRIZZLY 1860 MVX
Osage Beach, MO
Fishing boat · Good condition
Surdyke Yamaha & Marine
Nationwide Delivery Available
$23,499
View details
Dealer2022 Tracker 2072 CC
Houston, TX
Fishing boat · Good condition
LMC Marine Center
Nationwide Delivery Available
$29,129
View details2016 Tracker Z21
Richland, MI
Fishing boat
Gull Lake Marine
Nationwide Delivery Available
$41,600
View details2016 Sun Tracker PARTY BARGE 20 DLX
Richland, MI
Pontoon & tritoon
Gull Lake Marine
Nationwide Delivery Available
$18,500
View detailsBuying a used Tracker: what to check
- Tracker hulls are riveted (Grizzlies are welded) — put the boat on water or fill the bilge and watch for weeping rivets; resealing is doable, but it's your negotiating lever
- Check the transom for flex with the motor trimmed down and a firm shake — wood-cored transoms in older models can rot just like fiberglass boats
- The trailer is part of the deal: Trackers almost always sell as packages, so inspect bunks, bearings, and lights — a bad trailer is an $800–$2,500 surprise
- These boats hold value on utility, not prestige — a 10-year-old Pro Team with a strong Mercury and dry hull is worth more than a newer one that lived on a sandbar
Frequently asked questions
Are Tracker boats good quality?
They're built to a price and honest about it. The aluminum hulls last decades with basic care; where they show cost savings is trim, carpet, and wiring. For pure fishing utility per dollar, they're hard to beat.
How much is a used Bass Tracker worth?
Most used Pro Team-class boats run $8,000–$25,000 depending on age, engine hours, and trailer condition. The engine drives the price — an aluminum hull with a tired outboard is priced as a repower project.
Riveted vs welded aluminum — does it matter?
Welded hulls (like Tracker's Grizzly line) tolerate rough duty better; riveted hulls are lighter and fine for normal use but can seep at rivets with age. On any used riveted boat, a leak check is the first test.
Selling a Tracker boat?
List it free on US Marine Connection and reach buyers nationwide — read our guide to selling your boat or start your listing.