
Touring Kayaks for Puget Sound
Sea & Touring Kayaks
If you’re looking at sea kayaks in Seattle, start with the water you’ll actually paddle.
Winds typically build in the afternoons. Puget Sound adds current, boat wake, and cold water year-round. The right touring kayak should feel steady and predictable when conditions change.
We focus on practical sea and touring kayaks that work here.
Delta Kayaks in Seattle
We carry the full lineup of Delta recreational, sea and touring kayaks.
Delta boats are lightweight, durable, and well suited to Puget Sound conditions. They offer efficient hull designs without feeling overly specialized.
From the approachable 12.10 to full touring models in the 15–17 foot range, the goal stays the same: match the kayak to the water and to the paddler.
The Sweet Spot for Seattle Paddling
For many Seattle paddlers, a 12–14 foot touring kayak is the right place to start.
This length gives you:
• Better tracking than recreational kayaks
• Real safety features including sealed bulkheads
• A cockpit that accepts a spray skirt
• Manageable weight for transport and storage
• Enough efficiency to handle distance without feeling oversized
You do not need a 17-foot expedition boat to paddle confidently on Lake Union or in protected areas of Puget Sound.
For many paddlers, a well-designed 12–14 foot sea kayak is the balance of stability, efficiency, and practicality.
This is why boats like the Delta 12.10 and 14 are so common among our students and customers. They are stable enough for day one and efficient enough as your paddling improves.
What Makes a Sea Kayak Different
A true touring kayak is built for open water.
That usually means:
• 15–17 feet in length depending on size and goals
• A rudder or skeg for tracking in wind
• A closed cockpit compatible with a spray skirt
• Sealed bulkheads for flotation
• An efficient hull that moves through water instead of pushing it
You can paddle a full touring kayak on calm water. However, you cannot safely paddle a short recreational kayak in exposed Sound conditions.
If your goal is to paddle beyond protected lakes, a sea or touring kayak is the right category.

When 15–17 Feet Makes Sense
You don’t need a 17-foot boat unless you are going to use it. As paddlers take classes and begin exploring more exposed water, some benefit from stepping into a longer touring kayak.
If you are:
• Crossing open stretches of Puget Sound
• Paddling exposed shoreline regularly
• Carrying camping gear for multi-day trips
• Covering longer distances consistently
Then a full touring kayak is the way to go. These boats handle wind with more authority and reward good paddling technique. For committed touring paddlers, they are a clear step up.
The key is matching the boat to how you actually paddle.
Rudder or Skeg?
Both systems help a touring kayak track in wind.
A rudder reduces the need for repeated sweep strokes and heavy edging. In side wind or downwind conditions, it simply makes life easier.
This becomes more noticeable when the boat is loaded — extra weight makes any kayak less maneuverable, and a rudder helps keep it moving in the direction you want with less effort.
A skeg appeals to paddlers who enjoy actively managing the boat. Those leaning into dynamic water and skill progression often prefer the cleaner feel and more engaged style of paddling.
Not everyone needs either.
If you’re mostly paddling protected water, building skills, and not regularly loading the boat for multi-day trips, a 12–14 foot day touring kayak without a rudder or skeg may be exactly right.
As conditions get bigger, distances get longer, or loads get heavier, those systems become more useful.
The key is simple:
Match the boat to how you'll use it most often.
Recreational Kayaks
Recreational kayaks are around 10-12 feet long and made for paddling in protected waters.
They work best for people who:
-
Prefer an open cockpit
-
Are looking for maximum stability and comfort
-
Paddle exclusively in calm lakes or bays
Because of their hull design and large cockpit openings, recreational boats are ill suited for paddling in areas with wind or waves such as Puget Sound. ​​
For those looking for a wide, stable kayak that is easy to paddle and maneuver, a recreational kayak may be the best choice.

Choosing the Right Sea Kayak
There is no single best kayak.
There is a best kayak for:
-
Your size
-
Your strength
-
Your experience
-
Where you paddle most
For many paddlers, that means a practical 12–14 foot day touring kayak that handles both Lake Union and the Sound without feeling intimidating.
For others with specific goals, a longer boat makes sense.
Cockpit fit, deck height, and volume matter more than length alone. The best way to decide is to sit in the kayak and paddle it.
We offer on-water demos because confidence on the water starts with proper fit.
Deciding Between Recreational and Touring
If you’re asking:
Is 12 feet enough?
Do I need a rudder?
Can I use a recreational kayak on Puget Sound?
You’re asking the right questions.
​
For most people paddling in the Seattle area, a day touring kayak in the 12–14 foot range offers the safest and most practical starting point. It gives you room to grow without jumping straight into expedition length boats.
Start with a boat built for real Northwest water. Then refine from there.
That approach serves you better long term than chasing specs.
Check out our Buyer's Guide or Comparison Page for for more information on Delta Kayaks.
