Getting your gear ready should be the easiest part of the day. We stock hand pumps when you want to keep it simple and cheap, 12 V electrics for the car park, and high-volume options for kayaks, towables, aqua-park pieces, or anything else that swallows air.
Everything here works perfectly with our inflatable SUP boards, inflatable kayaks, air platforms, towable tubes, floating docks, and the big aqua-park modules.
Double-action so you’re pumping on the push and the pull – switch to single-action when the pressure climbs. Light, compact, cable-free, and tough enough to live in the boot forever. A standard SUP is ready in 5–8 minutes, an inflatable kayak even quicker.
Use them for:
Any SUP board (15–20 PSI)
Inflatable kayaks (main chambers 1–4 PSI, drop-stitch floors 5–10 PSI)
Towable tubes and loungers (2–4 PSI)
Smaller aqua-park pieces or air mattresses when you’re off-grid
Plug into the car cigarette lighter or any 12 V socket and let the pump do the hard part. They hit 20 PSI easily, fill a SUP in 8–12 minutes, and feature digital gauges and auto-stop so you don’t have to stand there watching.
Perfect for:
SUP boards
Inflatable kayaks (all chambers)
Towables and banana boats
Air platforms and floating mats
Days when you’ve got multiple things to inflate and impatient kids around
The serious pumps for serious air. They shift huge volume at low pressure or switch to high-pressure mode when needed.
Use them for:
Large aqua-park modules (8–15 PSI)
Multiple inflatable kayaks at once
Commercial towables and floating docks
Rental spots or inflatable-heavy back gardens
All pumps come with a full set of adapters (bayonet, push-fit, Boston, HR, Clic) and clear pressure gauges so you inflate to the right number every time – no guessing and no burst seams.
Quick rule so you get the right one first time:
One board or kayak, no rush, no power nearby → hand pump
Regular paddler or family days → 12 V electric
Kayaks, towables, aqua parks, or you hate pumping by hand → high-volume or battery electric
Pick the one that matches how you actually get to the water. You’ll thank yourself the first hot day you’re not puffing like a steam train while everyone else waits.