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Florida water is warm, often shallow, and packed with structure, which makes sonar both essential and tricky. On the flats you want a unit that reads a foot of water without clutter; over an offshore ledge you want CHIRP power that separates baitfish from bottom at 200 feet. This guide explains transducer types, frequency, and the newer live-sonar options, then recommends finders that match how and where Floridians actually fish.
What to look for
- CHIRP frequency range for target separation
- Down-scan and side-scan for structure
- Transducer mounting (transom vs. thru-hull)
- Shallow-water performance for flats fishing
- Compatibility with your existing chartplotter network
Our picks
CHIRP sonar with down/side-scan combo
A combo transducer covering CHIRP plus down- and side-scan handles nearly every Florida scenario, from mangrove edges to nearshore reefs.
Check price on Amazon → (link placeholder)Entry-level CHIRP fishfinder
A compact CHIRP-only unit is plenty for inshore anglers who mainly need bottom depth and bait marks.
Check price on Amazon → (link placeholder)High-power CHIRP with thru-hull transducer
For deep-dropping and reef fishing, a high-wattage CHIRP unit with a thru-hull transducer reads clearly past 300 feet.
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