A trolling motor needs a deep cycle marine battery, not a regular car starting battery. The right type of battery for trolling motor use depends on your motor voltage, boat size, fishing time, weight limits, and budget. For basic, occasional use, flooded lead-acid or AGM can work. For better runtime, lower weight, faster charging, and less maintenance, a LiFePO4 trolling motor battery is usually the best long-term choice.
The key is not just buying “a marine battery.” A trolling motor battery has to deliver steady power for hours, handle repeated discharge, and match the voltage your motor requires. A 12V kayak setup, a 24V fishing boat setup, and a 36V bass boat setup do not need the same battery bank.
Main Types of Batteries for Trolling Motors
The main battery types used for trolling motors are flooded lead-acid, AGM, gel, and lithium LiFePO4. All can be found in marine applications, but they are not equal in weight, usable capacity, maintenance, or long-term cost.
Flooded Lead-Acid Batteries
Flooded lead-acid is the old-school choice. It is usually the cheapest option upfront, and it is easy to find in marine battery sizes such as Group 27 or Group 31.
Pros
Lower upfront price: Flooded lead-acid is often the least expensive way to power a trolling motor.
Wide availability: You can find these batteries at marine stores, auto parts stores, and big-box retailers.
Works for light use: It can be acceptable for short trips and low-frequency fishing.
Cons
Heavy build: A 100Ah-class lead-acid or AGM marine battery often weighs around 60–70 lbs, while many 100Ah LiFePO4 batteries weigh roughly 22–30 lbs.
Lower usable capacity: Lead-acid batteries are commonly treated as 50% usable if you want to preserve lifespan. That means a 100Ah lead-acid battery may realistically provide closer to 50Ah of preferred usable energy.
More maintenance: Flooded batteries need water level checks, terminal cleaning, ventilation, and careful handling.
Shorter cycle life: Deeper discharge tends to shorten lead-acid battery life faster than lithium iron phosphate.
Flooded lead-acid makes sense when budget is the main concern and fishing trips are short. It is not the best fit when weight, runtime, or maintenance matters.
AGM Batteries
An AGM trolling motor battery is still lead-acid, but the electrolyte is absorbed into glass mats instead of sloshing around as liquid. That makes AGM cleaner and easier to live with than flooded lead-acid.
Pros
Lower maintenance: AGM batteries are sealed, so there is no watering routine.
Better spill resistance: The sealed design is safer and cleaner in a boat compartment.
Good vibration resistance: AGM is more rugged than basic flooded lead-acid in rough marine use.
Cons
Still heavy: AGM does not solve the weight problem. A 100Ah AGM can still land near the 60–70 lbs range.
Limited usable capacity: Like other lead-acid batteries, AGM is not ideal for repeated deep discharge.
Higher cost than flooded: You pay more for convenience, but you do not get the same weight savings or cycle life as LiFePO4.
AGM is a decent middle ground. It is cleaner than flooded lead-acid, but it is not a major performance upgrade in the way lithium is.
Lithium LiFePO4 Batteries
A lithium trolling motor battery usually refers to LiFePO4, or lithium iron phosphate. This chemistry is popular in trolling motor setups because it handles deep cycling well, holds voltage more consistently, and weighs far less than lead-acid.
Why LiFePO4 works well for trolling motors
More usable energy: A 100Ah LiFePO4 battery can often deliver 80–100Ah of usable capacity, while lead-acid is commonly limited to about 50Ah if you want to protect lifespan.
Lower weight: Many 12V 100Ah LiFePO4 batteries weigh about 22–30 lbs, compared with roughly 60–70 lbs for many 100Ah AGM or lead-acid marine batteries.
Steadier voltage: LiFePO4 holds voltage flatter through the discharge curve, so the motor is less likely to feel weak halfway through the day.
Longer cycle life: Quality LiFePO4 batteries commonly offer thousands of cycles, while lead-acid batteries usually deliver far fewer cycles under deep-cycle use.
Less maintenance: No watering, no acid cleanup, and fewer routine checks.
Built-in protection: A good LiFePO4 pack includes a BMS to help manage overcharge, over-discharge, overcurrent, short circuit, and temperature protection.
For example, Vatrer LiFePO4 batteries are designed for deep-cycle power with built-in BMS protection, Bluetooth monitoring on supported models, low-temperature protection, and fast charging support when paired with a compatible lithium charger. That combination is useful on the water because it solves the two problems anglers complain about most: uncertain runtime and heavy battery weight.
Lithium vs AGM vs Lead-Acid: Which Is Best for a Trolling Motor?
The best battery type depends on how often you fish and how much performance you expect. A weekend-only jon boat does not need the same setup as a high-thrust bass boat that stays on the water all day.
Trolling Motor Battery Type Comparison
Battery Type
Typical 100Ah-Class Weight
Usable Capacity
Maintenance Level
Charging Time
Cycle Life
Upfront Cost
Best For
Flooded Lead-Acid
60–70 lbs
40–50Ah usable from 100Ah if preserving lifespan
High: check water levels every 1–3 months, clean terminals, keep ventilated
8–12+ hours
200–500 cycles, depending on depth of discharge
$120–$250
Occasional use, lowest upfront budget
AGM
60–75 lbs
45–60Ah usable from 100Ah for better lifespan
Low: sealed design, no watering; inspect terminals periodically
6–10+ hours
300–700 cycles
$180–$350
Users who want sealed lead-acid with less maintenance
LiFePO4 Lithium
22–30 lbs
80–100Ah usable from 100Ah, depending on BMS and usage
Very low: no watering, no acid cleanup; monitor terminals and app data
2–5 hours with compatible lithium charger
2,000–5,000+ cycles; some models reach 4,000+ cycles
$300–$800+
Long runtime, frequent fishing, weight savings, long-term value
Use the table as a decision filter. If the only goal is getting on the water for the lowest upfront cost, lead-acid can do the job. If you fish regularly, carry batteries by hand, run a kayak or small boat, or hate watching voltage sag during the day, LiFePO4 is the stronger choice.
Is lithium better than AGM for a trolling motor? In most performance-focused cases, yes. AGM mainly wins on lower upfront cost and familiar compatibility. Lithium wins on weight, usable capacity, voltage stability, maintenance, and cycle life.
What Voltage Battery Do You Need for Your Trolling Motor?
Battery voltage is not something to guess. Your trolling motor is built for a specific system voltage, usually 12V, 24V, or 36V. Check the motor label or manual before buying anything.
Common Trolling Motor Voltage Setups
Trolling Motor System
Traditional Battery Setup
Lithium Alternative
Common Use
12V trolling motor
One 12V deep cycle battery
One 12V LiFePO4 battery
Kayaks, jon boats, small fishing boats
24V trolling motor
Two 12V batteries in series
One 24V lithium battery or two 12V lithium batteries in series if supported
Medium fishing boats, higher thrust setups
36V trolling motor
Three 12V batteries in series
One 36V lithium battery or three matched 12V lithium batteries in series if supported
Bass boats, heavier boats, long days on the water
A 12V trolling motor battery setup is simple and common on smaller boats. A 24V trolling motor battery setup gives more power and efficiency for heavier boats. A 36V trolling motor battery system is usually found on larger bass boats or high-thrust motors.
When wiring multiple 12V batteries in series, use matched batteries of the same type, size, age, and manufacturer whenever possible. Minn Kota gives similar guidance for multi-battery systems, because mismatched batteries can charge and discharge unevenly.
Single higher-voltage lithium batteries can reduce wiring clutter. A single 24V or 36V LiFePO4 pack also avoids some of the balancing headaches that come with multiple lead-acid batteries, though you still need to confirm motor compatibility, charger compatibility, and BMS discharge rating.
What Size Battery Do You Need for a Trolling Motor?
“Battery size” can mean two things: physical case size and electrical capacity. For trolling motors, capacity matters more. Look at amp-hours, or Ah.
Ah tells you how much current a battery can theoretically deliver over time. A 100Ah battery can deliver 5 amps for about 20 hours, or 20 amps for about 5 hours, before efficiency losses and battery limits are considered.
Practical Capacity Guide by Boat Type
Boat / Use Case
Suggested Starting Point
Better Choice for Longer Runtime
Notes
Kayak with small trolling motor
12V 50Ah LiFePO4
12V 100Ah LiFePO4
Weight matters more here than almost anywhere else
Small jon boat or light fishing boat
12V 100Ah deep cycle
12V 100Ah LiFePO4
Good balance of runtime and simplicity
Medium fishing boat
24V setup
24V LiFePO4 or two matched 12V LiFePO4 batteries
Better for stronger motors and longer use
Bass boat / high-thrust motor
36V setup
36V LiFePO4 or three matched 12V lithium batteries
Better voltage support under heavier loads
Budget occasional use
Group 27+ flooded or AGM
AGM if maintenance is a concern
Expect more weight and less usable capacity
This is also where the best 12V battery for trolling motor use becomes easier to define. For a small boat or kayak, the best 12V option is usually not the biggest battery you can physically fit. It is the battery that gives enough runtime without making the boat stern-heavy or awkward to carry.
How Long Will a Trolling Motor Battery Last on the Water?
Runtime depends on battery capacity, motor draw, speed setting, boat weight, wind, current, and how aggressively you use the motor.
The basic estimate is simple:
Battery Ah ÷ Motor Amp Draw = Estimated Runtime
The catch is usable capacity. A 100Ah lead-acid battery is not the same as a 100Ah LiFePO4 battery in real use. Many users limit lead-acid discharge to around 50% to protect lifespan, which leaves about 50Ah preferred usable capacity. A LiFePO4 battery can usually provide a much larger share of its rated capacity, often 80–100Ah depending on the model and BMS limits.
A simple example makes this easier:
Battery
Rated Capacity
Practical Usable Capacity
Runtime at 20A Average Draw
100Ah Lead-Acid / AGM
100Ah
About 50Ah preferred usable
About 2.5 hours
100Ah LiFePO4
100Ah
About 80–100Ah usable
About 4–5 hours
That does not mean every 100Ah lithium battery will run every trolling motor for five hours. High speed, wind, weeds, current, and a loaded boat can raise amp draw fast. It does mean lithium gives you more usable energy from the same labeled capacity, with less voltage sag as the battery drains.
Key Factors to Consider Before Buying a Trolling Motor Battery
Once you know the basic battery types, the buying decision becomes more practical. The right choice should match your motor first, then your fishing style.
Battery Compatibility
Use this as a pre-purchase checklist.
Voltage match: A 12V motor needs 12V, a 24V motor needs 24V, and a 36V motor needs 36V. Do not under-power a higher-voltage motor.
Deep-cycle design: Choose a marine deep cycle battery, not a starting battery.
Discharge rating: The battery and BMS must support the trolling motor’s continuous current draw.
Series/parallel support: Not every lithium battery supports series wiring. Check the manufacturer’s instructions before building a 24V or 36V bank from multiple 12V batteries.
Charger compatibility: A lithium battery should be charged with a charger that supports a LiFePO4 charging profile.
Can you use your old charger with a lithium trolling motor battery? Sometimes, but not always. If the charger is made only for flooded, AGM, or gel batteries, it may not fully charge LiFePO4 correctly. A compatible lithium charger is the cleaner solution.
Runtime Needs
A short evening trip and an eight-hour fishing day are different electrical problems.
Short trips: A 12V 50Ah LiFePO4 or a traditional deep-cycle battery may be enough for light use.
Half-day fishing: A 12V 100Ah battery is a safer starting point for small boats.
All-day fishing: A 24V or 36V lithium setup gives better headroom, especially with higher thrust motors.
Wind and current: Add capacity if you regularly fish open water, rivers, or windy lakes.
Do not size the battery based only on calm-water use. Trolling motors draw much more current when they are fighting conditions.
Weight and Boat Space
Weight is not just a convenience issue. It affects how the boat trims, how easily the bow lifts, and how annoying the battery is to move after a long day.
A 60–70 lbs AGM battery in a kayak is a very different experience from a 24–30 lbs lithium battery. In a bass boat, replacing three heavy lead-acid batteries with lithium can remove well over 100 lbs from the battery compartment, depending on the models being swapped.
The weight savings are most noticeable in three places:
Kayaks: Easier loading, better balance, and less wasted payload.
Small boats: Less stern squat and more usable space.
Bass boats: Reduced battery-bank weight without giving up runtime.
Charging Speed
Lead-acid batteries charge slowly near the top of the cycle because they absorb current less efficiently as they approach full charge. LiFePO4 batteries can usually accept charge more consistently, assuming the charger and BMS allow it.
A compatible lithium charger can often bring a LiFePO4 battery back to full faster than a comparable lead-acid bank. That does not mean you should use an oversized charger blindly. Stay within the battery manufacturer’s recommended charge current.
Safety and Protection
A good trolling motor battery should be built for more than capacity. It should protect itself when something goes wrong.
BMS protection: For lithium batteries, the BMS should protect against overcharge, over-discharge, overcurrent, short circuit, and temperature extremes.
Low-temperature charging protection: LiFePO4 batteries should not be charged below freezing unless they have a proper heating function. Low-temp cutoff or self-heating matters in cold climates.
Bluetooth monitoring: Real-time battery data helps you see state of charge, voltage, and overall condition before the motor suddenly feels weak.
Water and installation protection: Marine use means vibration, moisture, and tight compartments. Check the enclosure rating and mounting guidance.
Vatrer Battery include built-in BMS protection, low-temperature protection, and Bluetooth monitoring, giving boaters a clearer view of battery status during use instead of guessing from motor performance alone.
Long-Term Cost
Lead-acid looks cheaper at checkout. That is not always the same as cheaper over several seasons.
A lead-acid battery may cost less upfront, but it is heavier, has less preferred usable capacity, needs more maintenance, and typically offers a shorter deep-cycle life. A LiFePO4 battery costs more at first, but its usable capacity and cycle life can make the cost per season lower for frequent use.
The math becomes especially clear if you fish often. Replacing a lead-acid battery bank every few seasons is not just a battery cost. It is also lost runtime, maintenance time, heavier handling, and more charging hassle.
Best Battery Type by User Scenario
There is no single answer for every boat. The best battery for trolling motor use depends on the setup.
Best Battery for Kayak Trolling Motors
A 12V LiFePO4 battery is usually the cleanest fit.
50Ah: Good for lighter motors, shorter trips, and users who prioritize low weight.
100Ah: Better for longer days, stronger kayak motors, or anglers who do not want to watch the battery closely.
Why lithium wins here: Cutting battery weight from about 60 lbs to around 25 lbs changes how a kayak handles and how easy it is to launch.
A lead-acid battery can power a kayak motor, but it usually creates a weight problem before it creates a price advantage.
Best Battery for Bass Boats
Bass boats usually need more voltage and more reserve power. A 24V or 36V LiFePO4 setup is often the better match for high-thrust trolling motors and long days on the water.
The main advantage is not just runtime. It is stable output under load. A lithium bank holds voltage better as it discharges, which helps the motor keep a more consistent feel during the day. Minn Kota also notes that lithium batteries maintain higher voltage for longer periods than lead-acid batteries.
For this kind of setup, Vatrer’s 24V and 36V 50Ah battery options are worth considering if the motor and charger requirements match. They are better suited to users who want to reduce battery-bank weight, avoid routine lead-acid maintenance, and get a cleaner high-voltage setup for longer fishing days.
Best Battery for Occasional Anglers on a Budget
Flooded lead-acid or AGM still has a place.
Flooded lead-acid: Lowest upfront cost, but heavy and maintenance-heavy.
AGM: Better sealed design, less maintenance, still heavy.
Minimum baseline: For lead-acid batteries, use a deep cycle marine battery with enough capacity.
This route makes sense when trips are short and infrequent. It is less attractive if you fish often enough to care about weight, charging time, or replacing batteries sooner.
Best Battery for Minn Kota Trolling Motors
The best battery for Minn Kota trolling motor setups depends on the motor series and voltage requirement. Minn Kota states that its trolling motors use deep cycle marine batteries, and its lithium guidance notes that QUEST series motors are optimized for LiFePO4 cells.
For many Minn Kota users, the practical decision looks like this:
Minn Kota Setup
Battery Direction
12V motor
One 12V deep cycle battery; LiFePO4 preferred for lower weight and better usable capacity
24V motor
Two matched 12V batteries in series or one 24V lithium battery
36V motor
Three matched 12V batteries in series or one 36V lithium battery
Lead-acid setup
Use deep cycle marine batteries, not starting batteries
Lithium upgrade
Confirm charger profile, BMS discharge rating, and series support
Do not buy by brand name alone. Match the battery to the motor voltage, current demand, and charging system.
Best Battery for Serious Anglers
A LiFePO4 battery bank is the better choice when trolling motor performance matters every trip.
Longer usable runtime: A 100Ah lithium battery can provide far more usable energy than a 100Ah lead-acid battery used conservatively.
Lower battery-bank weight: Swapping from lead-acid to lithium can remove dozens of lbs per battery.
Stable power delivery: Voltage stays flatter deeper into the discharge cycle.
Lower maintenance: No watering, less corrosion cleanup, and fewer routine checks.
Better monitoring: Bluetooth-enabled batteries help you track state of charge before it becomes a problem.
The Vatrer LiFePO4 trolling motor battery combines the performance of a deep-cycle lithium battery with BMS protection; some models also support Bluetooth real-time monitoring and low-temperature protection, and it can also achieve fast charging when used with a compatible charger.
Common Mistakes to Avoid When Choosing a Trolling Motor Battery
Battery mistakes usually come from buying too fast. The label says “marine,” the price looks good, and the motor turns on. That does not mean the setup is right.
Using a car battery: A starting battery is not built for repeated deep discharge. Use a deep cycle battery instead.
Buying the wrong voltage: A 24V motor needs a 24V battery system. A single 12V battery will not correctly power it.
Ignoring usable capacity: A 100Ah lead-acid battery and a 100Ah LiFePO4 battery do not deliver the same practical runtime.
Skipping charger compatibility: Lithium batteries need the right charge profile. Old chargers are not automatically compatible.
Undersizing the battery: A small battery may work at low speed in calm water, then disappoint quickly in wind or current.
Overweight: This is especially costly in kayaks and small boats, where 30–40 extra lbs can change handling.
Forgetting temperature protection: Cold-weather charging is a real issue for LiFePO4. Low-temp cutoff or self-heating is worth checking.
Mixing batteries carelessly: Series battery banks should use matched batteries of the same type, size, age, and manufacturer whenever possible.
Final Recommendation
Buy a deep cycle marine battery that matches your trolling motor voltage. That is the non-negotiable part.
If you fish only a few times a season and want the lowest upfront cost, a flooded lead-acid battery can work. If you want a sealed, lower-maintenance traditional option, AGM is better than flooded lead-acid, though it is still heavy and limited in usable capacity.
If you want the strongest overall choice, buy a LiFePO4 lithium battery. It gives you more usable capacity from the same Ah rating, cuts major weight from the boat, charges faster with the right charger, needs almost no routine maintenance, and holds voltage better through the day.