The SeaBob Is Back – This Time With Lamborghini Power

Back in May 2023, we first spotlighted the SeaBob as a quirky, intriguing “jet-ski-bodyboard-meets-underwater scooter” concept that had floated into the Asia-Pacific market — but with modest visibility and modest buzz compared to other personal watercraft innovations. That was an era when the SeaBob felt like a niche toy for water lovers who wanted something different: part plaything, part submersible speed sled.

Since then, the SeaBob has quietly hung around the edges of water sport culture without ever truly breaking into mainstream PWC territory — until now.

SeaBob Meets Lamborghini
Last September at the Cannes Yachting Festival, SeaBob maker CAYAGO AG dropped jaws by revealing the SEABOB SE63 for Automobili Lamborghini — a special edition electric watercraft that marries German e-propulsion engineering with genuine Italian supercar DNA.

The collaboration is more than a slapping of logos. The SE63 — where “SE” stands for Special Edition and “63” nods to Lamborghini’s founding year — is a complete reimagining of what SeaBob can be: a high-performance, super-styled electric water toy that looks more like a mini-marine hypercar than a traditional seascooter.

Speed, Style, and Supercar Flair
This isn’t your run-of-the-mill underwater sled:

  • Electric power meets exotic materials — Lightweight carbon fiber, titanium and magnesium components help keep it around 35 kg, while delivering 162 TP of thrust from a 6.3 kW motor.

  • Two modes for two moods — Normal for classic SeaBob cruising and underwater play; Sport for that extra torque rush that feels less like a toy and more like a supercar launching off the pier.

  • Dive deep or fly shallow — Certified for dives down to 25 m, or, with an optional Performance Board, it can plane — literally fly just above the water — reaching surface speeds near 35 km/h.

  • Iconic Lamborghini touches — From the trademark start button to a digital display that looks like it belongs in a supersport cockpit, this thing doesn’t just perform — it feels exotic.

So while it won’t pull wakeboarders (at least not yet), the SE63 absolutely carries the thrill vibe of a PWC, with a performance ethos borrowed straight from the automotive world.

From Festival Feature to Summer 2026 Reality
The SeaBob SE63 world premiere in Cannes wasn’t just a flashy showpiece — it was a declaration that luxury automotive brands see new horizons in marine leisure gear. Production is slated to begin in 2026, with units expected to hit the decks of superyachts and luxury docks by summer 2026 via select SEABOB partners.

No word yet on pricing (and let’s be honest — if you have to ask, you probably already know you can’t afford it), but given its materials, pedigree, and branding, this is clearly aimed at the upper echelon of playground gear — beyond the traditional PWC buyer and right into yachting, resort, and supercar lifestyle territory.

Not Exactly a PWC, But Definitely a Watercraft Future Icon
The SEABOB SE63 shows where the personal watercraft world might be headed: electrified propulsion, top-tier design collaborations, and cross-category innovation that blurs the lines between toys, tools, and tech art. It’s not a jet ski, but it lives in the same adrenaline universe — only now with Lamborghini energy and a performance narrative that feels fast, aspirational, and undeniably fun.

And while the Lamborghini-branded SE63 may be grabbing headlines, it isn’t the only automotive influence shaping SeaBob’s future. Earlier this year, the company quietly introduced an all-new generation of SeaBobs designed in collaboration with one of the most respected automotive design studios in the world — a move that may ultimately prove even more important than the flashiest special edition. We’ll take a closer look at that in an upcoming WCJ article.

Jessica Waters
Jessica Waters
Editor – [email protected] Currently the Managing Editor of the Dalton Daily Citizen in Northwest Georgia, Jessica Waters is a photojournalist and reporter who has covered competition stock car racing, downhill skiing, motocross, horse racing and hydroplane races for more than 30 years, and added jet ski races and freestyle competitions in 2010, covering many competitions for local and national media outlets.

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