Twin Vee Relaunches Bahama Boat Works With Three New Models at Palm Beach Show
Twin Vee cut Bahama's build time from 12 months to four after acquiring the brand in June 2025 and moving production to its Fort Pierce facility.

Three days before the Palm Beach International Boat Show opens its gates along Flagler Drive, Twin Vee PowerCats Co. is arriving with something the Bahama Boat Works name hasn't carried in years: an entirely new product lineup. The Bahama 21, Bahama 23, and Bahama 29 will make their public debut at Booth #1049, 400 N Flagler Drive, West Palm Beach, when the show runs March 25–29, 2026, marking the first major product expansion since Twin Vee acquired Bahama Boat Works in June 2025.
The formal unveiling happens a day into the show. On March 26 at 10:00 AM, Twin Vee will host an invitation-only Media Day where President and CEO Joseph Visconti and Vice President of Product Development Preston Yarborough are scheduled to walk press through the new models and lay out what the company is calling aggressive growth plans for the relaunched brand.
The backstory on how these boats get built is where things get genuinely interesting for anyone who follows production quality. Twin Vee transferred Bahama production to its Fort Pierce, Florida facility, a 100,000-square-foot plant that grew by 30,000 square feet as part of the expansion. Capital investments include a 45-foot five-axis CNC router, automated wiring harness production, and infusion-based lamination designed to tighten resin ratios. Every component runs through the CNC process, which means replacement parts will fit precisely on a boat built years apart from another, a real-world benefit that owners of older production lines rarely get to claim.
The payoff on that infrastructure is measurable. Traditional Bahama build times ran 10 to 12 months. At Fort Pierce, that number sits at approximately four months. Visconti told Powerboat News the broader improvement, measured from design to customer delivery, is around 50% faster.

Twin Vee paired the relaunch with a Mercury Marine partnership announced January 21, 2026. Mercury, a division of Brunswick Corporation, is positioned as a strategic growth catalyst to widen Bahama's dealer reach and introduce the brand to a broader customer base. The company describes Bahama Boat Works as a wholly owned premium monohull brand, a deliberate counterpoint to Twin Vee's catamaran identity, with the offshore fishing pedigree and Florida luxury association that the Bahama name has carried for decades.
Twin Vee (Nasdaq: VEEE) reported $11.8 million in net sales for the nine months ended September 30, 2025, and the Palm Beach show represents the clearest test yet of whether the Bahama relaunch converts brand momentum into order activity. No pricing or technical specifications for the Bahama 21, 23, or 29 have been released ahead of the show; those details, along with sea trial access, remain the outstanding questions heading into next week.
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