What we liked
- Auto Stow and Deploy is reliable and saves time at the ramp
- Spot-Lock GPS anchoring is rock solid in moderate wind
- i-Pilot Link networks cleanly with Humminbird and Lowrance units
- Composite shaft survives stump strikes that would bend cheaper units
What we didn't like
- Heavy at over 60 pounds, so a strong bow setup is a must
- Lift Assist is sold separately and is almost a required add
- Foot pedal cable is shorter than some anglers like
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedSpot-Lock and i-Pilot LinkDeploy reliability and buildWeight, power, and the real costsWho should buy the Minn Kota Terrova 80?The verdict Versus the alternatives Specs at a glance FAQsQuick verdict
The Minn Kota Terrova 80 is the bow-mount trolling motor I still recommend to most boaters because the auto stow and deploy, Spot-Lock GPS anchoring, and i-Pilot Link networking simply work. Across two seasons I never had a deploy failure, Spot-Lock held tight in moderate wind, and battery draw stayed predictable. It is heavy and Lift Assist is a near-required extra, but it feels built for long ownership.
Why you should trust this review
I bought this motor and ran it on my own boat for two full seasons, including bass tournaments, crappie trips, family fun runs, and a long winter on a covered slip. Nobody handed me this unit, and I had no incentive to be soft on it. Two seasons is the right window for a trolling motor, because the things that separate a great motor from a merely good one, deploy reliability over hundreds of cycles and how Spot-Lock holds in real wind, only reveal themselves over time on the water.
I fish the way most serious anglers do: a lot of hands-free situations where I need the motor to hold position while I work a spot, tight cover where the shaft takes abuse, and electronics from another brand that the motor has to talk to. That is the real test of a 24-volt bow motor, and it is what I leaned on this Terrova for trip after trip.
How we evaluated
I used the Terrova 80 as my primary motor across every trip for two seasons rather than running a short controlled test. I tracked auto stow and deploy reliability every single launch, since that is the cycle that fails first on lesser motors, and I noted the prop’s survival every time I clipped a submerged stump in tight cover.
For Spot-Lock I judged how tight the hold stayed on windy points, the situation where GPS anchoring earns its money, and I re-checked that accuracy after the 2026 i-Pilot Link firmware refresh to make sure an update had not changed the behavior. I also ran it networked with a connected Humminbird unit to verify route following and AutoChart Live, and I paid attention to battery draw on a quality lithium bank across full fishing days to see whether runtime stayed predictable.
Spot-Lock and i-Pilot Link
Spot-Lock is the headline feature, and it is the reason I keep this motor on the bow. On windy points where I would otherwise be constantly correcting with the foot pedal, it anchored cleanly and held me inside a tight circle without wandering. In moderate wind it is rock solid, which is exactly the condition where lesser GPS anchoring systems start hunting and drifting. After the 2026 firmware refresh I rechecked the holds and they were as tight as before, so the update did not cost me anything.
i-Pilot Link is the other half of what makes this motor feel complete. Networked to a connected Humminbird unit, it gave me route following and Spot-Lock waypoints directly from the chartplotter, and AutoChart Live mapping turned out to be a genuinely fun bonus on smaller lakes that lacked detailed contour data. The integration was clean rather than finicky, which is not something I can say about every networked fishing system I have used.
Deploy reliability and build
Auto Stow and Deploy is the feature I came to trust most, because it worked on every single trip across two seasons. There is real value in pulling up to the ramp and having the motor deploy reliably without a manual wrestle, and over hundreds of cycles I never had a failure. That track record is the strongest argument for the Terrova lineage and the reason it still feels like the standard everyone else is chasing.
The build backs that up. The composite shaft shrugged off real abuse, including stump strikes that would have bent a cheaper unit, and after two seasons it shows wear but no structural problems. The cable-steered foot pedal stayed responsive and kept me in control during tight-cover fishing, where precise steering matters most. This is engineering meant for long ownership, and two seasons in, nothing about it has started to feel tired.
Weight, power, and the real costs
The honest downside is weight. At over 60 pounds this is a heavy motor, and you need a strong, properly rigged bow setup to carry it. Daily deployment by hand is hard on your back, which is why Lift Assist, sold separately, is almost a required add rather than a true option. Budget for it as part of the purchase, because skipping it makes living with the motor harder than it should be.
On power, the 80 pounds of thrust at 24 volts is plenty for the boats this motor belongs on, and it requires a 24-volt system, either two 12-volt batteries in series or a single 24-volt lithium. On a quality lithium bank my draw stayed predictable across full days, with a max continuous draw in the mid-50-amp range at full power, so planning runtime was straightforward. The only minor ergonomic gripe is the foot-pedal cable, which is shorter than some anglers prefer, and that is worth checking against your deck layout before you commit.
Who should buy the Minn Kota Terrova 80?
Buy it if you fish hands-free a lot and want Spot-Lock that actually holds, if you run Humminbird or Lowrance electronics and want clean networking through i-Pilot Link, and if you value deploy reliability and a shaft that survives abuse over saving money upfront. For a serious angler who keeps gear for years, this is the motor that earns its keep.
Skip it if you cannot rig a strong bow mount for a 60-plus-pound motor, if a quieter brushless motor or lockless steering is a priority worth paying more for, or if you only need an affordable transom unit for occasional casual fishing, where this is far more motor than the job requires.
The verdict
After two seasons, the Minn Kota Terrova 80 remains the bow-mount motor I recommend to most boaters. The auto stow and deploy never failed me, Spot-Lock held tight through windy days and a firmware update, and i-Pilot Link integrated cleanly with my electronics. It is heavy, Lift Assist is effectively mandatory, and the foot-pedal cable could be longer. But everything that matters on the water just works, and it feels engineered to keep working for many seasons more. It is the standard the rest of the category is still chasing.
Versus the alternatives
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Garmin Force Kraken 80 | Buy - Quieter brushless motor and lockless steering, but pricier and heavier overall. | Check price | |
| MotorGuide Xi5 80 | Consider - Wireless feel is nice, although Spot-Lock holds are slightly less tight than Terrova. | Check price | |
| Minn Kota Ulterra 80 | Consider - Adds power trim and remote stow, but adds cost and weight without gaining thrust. | Check price | |
| Newport Vessels NV-Series 86 | Skip - Affordable transom unit, but it is not in the same league for hands free fishing. | Check price |
Specs at a glance
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Minn Kota Terrova 80 Trolling Motor FAQs
Yes, the 80 lbs thrust model requires a 24V system, typically two 12V batteries in series or a single 24V lithium.
Yes, with i-Pilot Link installed you get networked Spot-Lock, route following, and AutoChart Live.
Not strictly, but at over 60 pounds the kit makes daily deployment much easier on your back.
Update log
- Jun 20, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


