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Hydrofoil Surfboards

Hydrofoil Surfboards

Prone foil boards are purpose-built for one thing: getting you up and connected to wave energy as efficiently as possible. They run lower in volume than you might expect coming from surfing or other foil disciplines — enough to paddle into waves without fighting the board, lean enough to stay out of the way once the foil lifts. Outline, tail shape, and construction all influence how the board feels during the paddle and through the transition onto the foil. Getting the volume right for your weight and ability is the starting point for everything else. Reach out if you want a recommendation built around your specific setup and local conditions.

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    KT Ginxu 2 Pro Carbon

    KT

    $2,030.00 - $2,299.00
    Radical carving and maneuvers with unmatched early take off and seamless touchdowns. In its 2nd generation the Ginxu 2 Pro Carbon balances neutrally on or above the water. Lifting up, it paddles with ease and releases from the surface unlike anything...
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  • On Sale
    2024
    2024 Starboard ACE Foilboard 2024 Starboard ACE Foilboard
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    2024 Starboard ACE Foilboard

    Starboard

    Now: $899.00
    Was: $1,699.00
    AN ACE IN FOILING DOWNWIND, WING AND SURF The Ace Foil features the iconic pin-tail design for efficient takeoff and tracking downwind. The outline is designed to resemble nature’s most streamline possible shape, a teardrop, and the slightly...
    Now: $899.00
    Was: $1,699.00
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  • Sunova X Foil Drive Foilboard Sunova X Foil Drive Foilboard
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    Sunova X Foil Drive Foilboard

    Sunova

    $1,499.00
    THE FOIL DRIVE is a collaborative board with the legends at Foil Drive. Designed and tested with the team at Foil Drive, this board was specially created to function with the gen 2 system. With a larger surface area on the bottom, rolled hardedges and...
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    2024 Appletree Skipper DW Prone 2024 Appletree Skipper DW Prone
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    2024 Appletree Skipper DW Prone

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    $1,199.00 - $1,359.20
    2024 Appletree Skipper DW Prone Sizes: 5'1 / 5'5 / 5'9 Skipper DW prone Width Thickness Volume 5’1” 18” 3.7” 43L 5’5” 18.5” 3.9” 50L 5’9” 19” 4...
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    Omen Flux Foilboard Omen Flux Foilboard
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    Omen Flux Foilboard

    Omen Foils

    $1,266.50 - $1,759.50
    2023 Omen Flux Foil Board Sizes: 36L / 40L / 48L / 60L / 72L / 84L Volume Length Width Thickness 36L 4' 3.5" 18" 3.3" 40L 4' 5.5" 19" 3.4" 48L 4' 9.5" 19.5" 3.7" 60L 5' 2" 21" 4" 72L 5' 7" 22" 4.3" 84L 5'11" 21.5" 4.9" Description: The...
    $1,266.50 - $1,759.50
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Ask any experienced prone foiler what piece of gear made the biggest difference in their early progression and the board comes up more often than you'd expect. It's not the flashiest component in a prone foil setup — the foil gets most of the attention and most of the conversation — but the board is where your paddle phase lives, where your pop-up happens, and where the entire sequence from wave catch to first flight either comes together or falls apart.

Prone foilboards are purpose-built for a discipline that makes specific and sometimes counterintuitive demands on board design, and understanding what those demands actually are is what separates a board decision you'll be satisfied with a year from now from one you're blaming for sessions that never quite clicked. Get this right and everything else gets easier.

What a Prone Foilboard Actually Has to Do

Prone foilboards have a harder job than they get credit for. They need to perform well during the paddle phase — lying flat, generating speed into a wave, timing the catch — and then essentially disappear once the foil lifts and you're flying above the water. Those two jobs pull board design in genuinely opposite directions, and where different shapes land on that spectrum is what defines their rider profile and their place in a progression arc.

The paddle phase demands enough volume to support your prone body position efficiently, generate speed into a wave without excessive effort, and give you enough platform during the pop-up transition to find your feet before the foil takes over. Too little volume here and you're exhausting yourself before the foil ever lifts — fighting the board during the phase that's supposed to be the entry point into the good part of the session. The pop-up itself is more explosive and time-sensitive in prone foiling than in conventional surfing because the window defined by the wave closes faster than most new prone foilers expect. A board that supports that transition rather than complicating it makes a real difference in how quickly consistent pop-ups become a repeatable skill.

The foiling phase demands the opposite — a board that gets out of the way cleanly once the foil lifts, doesn't create drag or resistance as you climb above the surface, and stays manageable above the water without the kind of bulk that makes correction and recovery more physically demanding than they need to be. A board that was generous enough to help you during the paddle phase can feel like a liability once you're flying if the design doesn't account for both phases equally. The best prone foilboards manage that balance without obviously compromising either side of it, and finding one that fits your current technique level on both dimensions is the goal of every board decision in this category.

Volume: Getting the Number Right for Your Weight and Ability

Volume is the starting point for any prone foilboard evaluation and the number that has the most direct and immediate effect on how your sessions feel during the learning phase.

Getting it right for your body weight and paddling ability is more important than any other single spec decision you'll make when choosing a prone foilboard.

Prone foilboard volume requirements are lower than SUP foil boards for the same rider weight — you're paddling in a prone position rather than standing, which changes the buoyancy requirements significantly. A general starting framework that works for most developing riders is a board with volume roughly 30-50% of your body weight in liters — a 180-pound rider in the 25-40 liter range as a starting point, for example. That relationship isn't a rigid formula and varies meaningfully based on paddling ability, ocean experience, and local wave conditions, but it gives you a useful anchor for evaluating options rather than approaching volume selection without any reference point.

Riders with strong surfing or paddling backgrounds can often start toward the lower end of that range because their paddle technique and wave reading translate meaningfully to the prone foiling paddle phase. The pop-up timing and board feel that surfing develops transfers more directly to prone foiling than most riders expect, which means experienced surfers are often ready for less volume than a pure beginner would need at the same stage. Riders coming to prone foiling without a significant surfing background benefit from erring toward more volume — the extra float during the paddle phase and the added platform during the pop-up make the whole experience more accessible during a learning phase that already has plenty of variables to manage without fighting the board on top of everything else.

One mistake worth flagging that shows up regularly in our conversations with developing prone foilers: choosing volume based on where you want to be in your progression rather than where you actually are right now. A board that's technically manageable for an intermediate rider can be genuinely limiting for someone who hasn't yet built the explosive pop-up and wave timing that prone foiling demands. Starting with appropriate volume and progressing to a lower volume shape when your technique earns it is a faster path to skilled prone foiling than jumping to a performance board before the fundamentals are solid.

Length, Outline, and Construction: What the Spec Sheet Actually Means

Volume gets most of the attention in prone foilboard selection conversations, but length, outline, and construction each contribute meaningfully to how a board performs across both phases of the ride and are worth understanding before making a final decision.

Board length in prone foiling typically runs shorter than most new riders expect — purpose-built prone foilboards commonly range from around 4'2" on the shorter performance end to around 6'0" for more volume-oriented shapes designed for developing riders and smaller surf. Longer boards in that range paddle more efficiently and provide more platform during the pop-up transition, which suits riders who are still building their prone foiling technique and benefit from a more forgiving platform during the learning phase.

Shorter boards get out of the way more cleanly once the foil lifts, respond more directly to inputs above the water, and suit riders who've developed the explosive pop-up and wave timing that makes the reduced platform manageable rather than limiting. Getting to a shorter board at the right point in your progression feels like an obvious upgrade. Getting there too early feels like a step backward in session quality.

Outline shape influences paddle efficiency and how the board behaves during the foil transition in ways that interact with volume rather than operating independently. Narrower, more pulled-in outlines reduce drag and suit performance-oriented riding for riders who've developed their technique, but can make the paddle phase less efficient and the pop-up platform less forgiving for riders who are still building their fundamentals. Wider outlines add paddle efficiency and pop-up stability at the cost of some performance responsiveness once foiling — a tradeoff that suits developing riders more than it limits them at that stage of progression.

Construction shapes weight, stiffness, and durability in ways that matter differently depending on where you are in your riding. Full carbon construction produces the lightest, stiffest boards with the most direct feel between your inputs and the board's response above the water. It's the construction choice of experienced riders who've developed the technique to use that directness and who aren't spending sessions regularly impacting the water surface with a board that's still learning what it's doing. Fiberglass and composite constructions add weight but handle the impacts and dings of active learning significantly better — a meaningful practical advantage for riders whose sessions involve more water contact than the promotional photos suggest. The weight difference between carbon and composite construction is real but less meaningful during the paddle phase than above the water, which is worth keeping in mind when the price difference between construction options is pushing you toward a decision.

The Detail Worth Confirming Before You Buy

Foil track compatibility is one of those details that feels minor right up until it isn't, and discovering a mismatch between your board's track system and your foil's base plate after the purchase is one of the more avoidable frustrations in prone foiling gear buying. Prone foilboards use different track and box systems depending on brand and construction — deep tuttle boxes, plate mount systems, and various proprietary configurations all have different mast foot requirements that don't automatically translate across brands.

Confirming compatibility between your board and your foil setup before buying takes two minutes and saves the kind of post-purchase discovery that ruins an otherwise good gear day. If you're buying a board to pair with an existing foil, bring your foil specs into the conversation before committing. If you're building a complete setup from scratch, a package from a single brand eliminates the compatibility question entirely — one of the stronger arguments for the package approach for riders who haven't already committed to a specific foil system and don't want to manage the compatibility research independently.

How We Think About Prone Foilboards

We've had enough conversations with riders who showed up to sessions on the wrong board — too little volume for their current technique, construction that couldn't handle the learning curve, track system incompatible with their foil — to have genuinely strong opinions about how much this decision matters and how preventable the most common mistakes are with the right conversation upfront.

The prone foilboards we carry are ones our team has ridden and evaluated in real conditions — not just checked off a compatibility list. We have opinions about which shapes deliver on their promises for developing riders versus which ones perform well primarily in conditions and at skill levels that most people aren't at yet. And we're not shy about sharing those opinions when you reach out, because getting you on the right board from the start is the most useful thing we can do for your prone foiling progression.

Ready to Find Your Board?

Browse our full selection of prone foilboards and find the right foundation for your wave foiling. Want a recommendation built around your body weight, your surfing background, your foil setup, and your local conditions? Give us a call, hit the live chat, or send us a message — we'll help you find the board that gives prone foiling the best possible chance of clicking for you from the first wave you catch.