The on-again, off-again dream of hopping a boat from downtown Tampa to downtown St. Petersburg just got a lot more concrete. The Pinellas Suncoast Transit Authority (PSTA) has announced it purchased two vessels to power a revamped Tampa Bay Ferry — and this time the goal is daily, year-round service rather than a seasonal experiment.
For anyone who has sat on the Howard Frankland in rush-hour traffic or skipped a St. Pete event because of the drive, the appeal is obvious: a relaxing ride across the bay instead of a white-knuckle trip across the interstate.
- PSTA purchased two ferries: the Bay Breeze (from San Francisco) and the San Juan Clipper (from Seattle).
- The purchase and renovations are funded by a $4.8 million federal grant originally awarded in 2021.
- The route connects downtown Tampa and downtown St. Petersburg, operated by Madeira Beach–based Hubbard's Marina.
- PSTA CEO Brad Miller said the boats have completed sea trials and surveys and are expected in the Bay area by late summer, with a launch targeted for later this year.
Why two boats changes everything
The earlier Cross-Bay Ferry, which ran seasonally starting in 2016 and wrapped up its final season in April 2025, relied on a single leased vessel brought in from out of state. As PSTA has explained, one boat simply can't run seven days a week — when it needs maintenance, the service stops.
A two-vessel fleet solves that problem. One boat can stay in service while the other is serviced or repaired, which is the foundation officials say is needed for reliable, year-round operation, according to St. Pete Rising's reporting on the April plan.
Meet the fleet
| Vessel | From | Capacity |
|---|---|---|
| Bay Breeze | San Francisco | 250 passengers |
| San Juan Clipper | Seattle | 149 passengers |
The Bay Breeze was approved by the PSTA board back in December for up to $2.5 million, while the San Juan Clipper — which had been working as a whale-watching boat in the Pacific Northwest — was the second preferred option at an estimated $2 million for purchase and renovation. Officials previously estimated refurbishment for both boats at three to six months. Renovations may include updated interiors, mechanical work, and onboard amenities such as a bar serving snacks and drinks, according to the April presentation.
Note: Marketing materials and early plans referred to the second boat as the "Clipper." Its full name is the San Juan Clipper, formerly a Seattle-based vessel.
The long voyage home
The boats aren't simply going to motor over. Because both vessels currently sit on the West Coast, they face a long journey to Tampa Bay — and PSTA has said the fleet is expected to arrive sometime by late summer after completing sea trials and surveys.
Where you'd catch it — and what it might cost
On the Tampa side, the ferry is planned to operate from the east end of the Tampa Convention Center near the Harbour Island bridge — the same spot the old Cross-Bay Ferry used. In St. Pete, the boats are slated to dock at the Vinoy Yacht Basin on the downtown waterfront, with a permanent dock eventually planned near the St. Petersburg Museum of History on the St. Pete Pier.
As for fares, PSTA has said it is targeting a $10 one-way fare — lower than the $12 the Cross-Bay Ferry charged in its final season — with discounts planned for seniors and riders with disabilities.
The full operating schedule hasn't been announced yet. Officials have said the early focus will be on weekend demand, gradually building up commuter ridership over time. Fares and timetables remain subject to final approval.
What it means for local life
For Tampa-area residents, a dependable ferry reshapes how a Saturday or a workday could look — dinner on the St. Pete waterfront without parking headaches, a Rays or arts outing across the bay, or a calmer commute for downtown workers. Tampa Convention Center leaders have also pointed to the hundreds of thousands of convention attendees each year who could use the boat to explore both sides of the bay.
For now, the immediate work is finishing renovations, completing the docks, and getting the vessels across the country and into Tampa Bay waters. If the timeline holds, the region could be boarding a true year-round ferry before the year is out.
Want to weigh in on whether you'd ride? Join the conversation in our Community Forum and tell us what schedule would actually get you on board.
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