Pontoon Boat Removal for Aging Pontoons
Clear an old pontoon or tritoon hull from your yard, storage lot, or trailer with a plan built around length, weight, and access.

Pontoon and Tritoon Boat Removal We Handle
Pontoon boats age in ways that make them hard to move on your own. Deck framing sags, aluminum tubes corrode, and the trailer under an old hull may no longer roll safely. This category covers pontoon boat removal for deck-style hulls sitting in a yard, on soft ground, or parked in a storage lot. We look at hull length, material, and weight, then plan loading around gates, slopes, and standing water. Whether your project is a small two-tube pontoon or a larger tritoon, the goal is a straightforward review and a clean lift-off. Explore the linked pages below to see how each boat type is handled and what details help us prepare an accurate quote.
Pontoon Boats Items We Can Review
Use this directory to see which items belong in this category. Linked items already have their own detailed removal page; unlinked items are still part of the category list.
Popular Pontoon Boat Types We Remove
These are the pontoon-style projects we review most often. Each linked page covers prep, access, and quote details in more depth.
Pontoon Boats
Classic two-tube pontoon hulls with an aluminum deck frame, from small runabouts to full-size party boats. We plan loading around hull length, deck weight, and trailer condition.
View detailsTritoon Boats
Three-tube tritoon hulls carry extra width and weight, so we review the trailer, ground conditions, and access before scheduling a lift-off and haul.
View detailsWhat Affects a Pontoon Boat Removal Quote
A few details drive most of the pricing on any pontoon or tritoon project. Sharing these up front helps us plan the right equipment and crew.
Hull length and material
Overall length and whether the tubes and deck are aluminum, fiberglass, or a mix of wood framing all affect handling and weight.
Weight and deck load
Furniture, railings, and waterlogged decking add weight. A rough estimate of total load helps us match the right lift and truck.
Trailer availability and condition
A rolling trailer with good tires speeds up loading. A seized, rusted, or missing trailer changes the plan and may add dismantling steps.
Loading access and ground conditions
Gates, slopes, soft ground, and standing water near the hull all shape how a truck and trailer can approach and load safely.
Dismantling and disposal path
If tubes or deck sections must be cut down to clear a tight yard, added labor and the disposal route factor into the quote.
Pickup Options
Pontoon and tritoon boats sit in different spots, so we offer a few ways to load and haul them away.
On-property boat pickup
For a pontoon resting in your yard or beside the house, we assess the path to the hull, check for soft ground and slopes, and load directly from where it sits.
Trailer, yard, or storage-lot pickup
When your hull is parked in a storage lot or along a fence line, we coordinate gate access and maneuvering room so the crew can reach it and load without delay.
Boat and trailer pickup
If the trailer is going too, we haul both hull and trailer together. Sharing tire and frame condition ahead of time helps us plan the load.
How to Prepare Your Pontoon Boat
A little prep keeps the pickup safe and efficient. Please handle these items before we arrive.
Remove fuel, oil, and chemicals
Drain and remove fuel, oil, and any onboard chemicals before pickup. These cannot travel with the hull and must be handled separately.
Pull batteries and loose gear
Take out batteries, personal items, and loose furniture from the deck so the crew can focus on loading the hull and frame.
Clear the access path
Open gates, move vehicles, and note any slopes, soft ground, or standing water between the hull and where a truck can park.
Note trailer and rigging condition
Tell us if the trailer tires are flat, the frame is seized, or any mast, rigging, or added hardware needs to come off before loading.
How Pontoon Boat Materials Are Handled
Once a pontoon or tritoon is loaded, materials may be separated where practical. Aluminum tubes and metal hardware, trailer components, fiberglass panels, wood framing, and any reusable parts can be sorted along the disposal path when conditions allow. We plan a responsible route for each hull, but outcomes depend on the boat's condition and local facilities, so we never promise exact salvage or recycling results. Sharing hull material and general condition ahead of time helps us route the load to the right destination and keeps the process moving smoothly from your yard or storage lot to final disposal.
How Pontoon Boat Removal Works
From first review to final haul, the process stays simple and predictable.
Share your boat details
Tell us the hull length, material, trailer status, and where the boat sits. Photos of the hull and access path help a lot.
Review and quote
We review weight, loading access, and dismantling needs, then plan the equipment and give you a quote based on those factors.
Schedule the pickup
We set a pickup window and confirm gate access, ground conditions, and whether the trailer is leaving with the hull.
Load and haul away
The crew loads the pontoon, dismantles only as needed to clear the space, and hauls the hull and trailer to the disposal path.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do you remove both pontoon and tritoon boats?
Yes. We handle two-tube pontoon hulls and three-tube tritoon hulls. Tritoons carry extra width and weight, so we review the trailer and ground conditions before scheduling a lift-off and haul.
Does the boat need a working trailer?
A rolling trailer with good tires makes loading faster, but it is not required. If the trailer is seized, rusted, or missing, we plan the lift differently and may add dismantling steps.
What do I need to remove before pickup?
Fuel, oil, and any chemicals must be removed before pickup, since they cannot travel with the hull. Please also pull batteries and any loose gear or furniture from the deck.
Can you reach a boat on soft ground or behind a gate?
Often yes. Soft ground, slopes, standing water, and narrow gates all affect the approach, so let us know the conditions ahead of time and we will plan the safest loading route.
What happens to the boat after removal?
Materials like aluminum, metal hardware, trailer parts, fiberglass, and wood may be separated where practical. We plan a responsible disposal path, but we cannot promise exact salvage or recycling outcomes.
Related Pages
Ready to Clear That Pontoon Boat?
Share your hull length, material, and access details, and EZ Hauling Services will plan a straightforward pontoon boat removal from your yard or storage lot. Request a quote to get started.
