The UK’s only dedicated marketplace for small boats, outboards, and spare parts.
List your items for Free. Or set up a Store.
See our partner site at Boats n Bits.
.Why List Your Spare Outboard Parts, Outboards or used Boats on Boatsy
Every boater has the same problem: boxes of old outboard bits piling up in the garage — carbs, props, coils, cowls, cables, and odd brackets you kept “just in case.” Most of it still has plenty of life in it, but finding the right buyer has always been the hard part.
Boatsy fixes that.
1. Built for boat people — not general classifieds
On most marketplaces, outboard parts get buried under cars, lawnmowers, and random tools. Buyers have to dig, and sellers get ignored.
Boatsy is 100% boats, outboards, and marine gear — the people browsing are already looking for exactly what you’ve got.
2. Your parts reach the right buyer fast
When someone’s outboard breaks mid-season, they don’t want to wait weeks for a Facebook message reply.
They want the part now — and they’re searching on Boatsy because they know it’s where the marine crowd hangs out.
3. Turn your “spares pile” into real money
Even old parts have value to someone keeping an older engine alive:
A used prop sells.
A carb sells.
A ropey old cowl even sells.
Nothing is junk if it gets someone back on the water.
Boatsy turns your forgotten bits into cash — and frees up space in the shed.
4. Simple listings. No nonsense.
No complicated fees. No endless “still available?” messages.
Just list the part, add a photo, set your price, and it’s live.
5. Support from people who actually understand boats
If you’ve ever tried explaining “it’s the CDI from a 1997 Force 125 but the wires are slightly different” to a general-marketplace buyer… you know the pain.
On Boatsy, the audience gets it: they know outboards, they know what they need, and they know when a part is a bargain.
6. Help keep old engines alive
A lot of perfectly good older motors get scrapped simply because someone couldn’t find a £25 bracket or a working coil.
By listing your spares, you’re helping another boater stay on the water — and keeping good engines out of the skip.