Aqua Marina Memba 390 Review: Three Years on the Water, Honest Family Verdict
- Carina

- May 24
- 19 min read
Updated: 2 days ago
We have had inflatable kayaks as a family for over three years now. Crete, Lake Garda, the Cornish coast, Dorset, and Vancouver Island later, here is our honest take on what we use and why we love it.

Does the Aqua Marina Memba 390 actually hold up as a great family inflatable kayak? We have paddled ours across salt water, freshwater lakes and open coastline with two children, two chow chows and honestly, varying degrees of competence. Here is what three years of real use actually looks like.
By Carina · Nest Nomad & Beyond
Quick Verdict | |
Best for | Families or couples wanting touring performance from an inflatable, coastal paddling, lakes, European adventures |
Not for | Serious whitewater. Budget-first buyers who rarely get on the water |
Build | Drop-stitch DWF floor, genuinely rigid, hardshell feel underfoot |
Stood up to | Three years: Crete (coast & Lake Kournas), Lake Garda, Cornish coast, Dorset, Vancouver Island |
Inflation time | Around 10 minutes with the included pump; 5 minutes with an electric pump |
Would we buy again? | Yes, without hesitation |
There was a moment on one of our early trips with the Memba 390 that we did not plan for. We were on the water near Mudeford in Dorset, a calm, sunny afternoon, and someone noticed that the kayak felt slightly softer than usual underfoot. Not dramatically. Just noticeably. We paddled back in, pulled it onto the beach, and discovered that the drain valve in the bottom had not been replaced properly after the previous session. We had been very slowly taking on water. No drama, no danger. We were only thirty metres from a shallow beach. but a useful early lesson, and one we have never forgotten since.
We are a family of four. Martin, Carina, and our two daughters Ivy and Eden. The girls were eight and ten when we first bought our kayaks. We also have two chow chows, Storm and Nala, who between them weigh around 49kg and have very different views on water-based leisure. Three years later: Crete, Lake Garda, Switzerland, the Cornish coast, Dorset and Vancouver Island. The Memba 390 has kept us safe through it all.
This is the review we wish had existed when we were first kayak shopping.

Why We Bought a Two-Person and a Three-Person
Two identical three-person kayaks seemed like overkill. Our dogs do not weigh anything like a fully grown adult between them, and frankly, the bigger the kayak the harder it is to control on the water. You really feel the difference, especially in any kind of crosswind or chop. Being total novices, this however is not something we knew at the time, and the decision to go for a three-person and a two-person was more geared to the physical strength and ability of the girls at the time to simply manage to paddle. Somehow without even getting onto the water we both knew at that stage, it was really going to be us doing most of the work. And sure enough, we were right.
So the thinking was: one two-person and one three-person gave us maximum flexibility. Most of the time it would be Ivy and me in the Memba 390, with Martin and Eden in the three-person. That configuration made sense for a couple of reasons. Firstly, overall combined strength of the relevant passengers: Martin and Eden combined packed more paddling power than Ivy and myself at the time (it's a real consideration when it's just you and an eight-year-old in a boat), which mattered for keeping things steady in anything more than flat water. Secondly, Martin is the tallest in the family at 5ft 8in, and in the larger kayak (with the third seat removed and that space freed up) there is a lot more legroom. On a three-hour paddle around Lake Garda that difference matters in a way that is hard to appreciate until you're in it. No leg cramp here.
When Storm joins us, usually one dog at a time rather than both together, though technically the space exists to manage both in the three-person, she goes where the middle seat would be, with Martin at the back and Eden in the front. That way Martin can keep a safe eye on her as she kind of just sits on the floor of the kayak between his comfortably outstretched legs. Nala tends to express her disdain for the whole enterprise from the shore. She's generally not a fan of water and therefore lightly objects to the indignity of having to be lifted in. Fair enough. It's fair to say she's not a regular on the water.
The adjustable paddles were non-negotiable when we bought. They needed to go small enough for Ivy to manage at eight years old, but long enough for Martin and myself to generate real power. Both kayaks deliver on this, the included KP-1 paddles adjust across a meaningful range and the difference between the smallest and largest setting is significant enough to matter across a family with four very different builds.
What Makes the Memba Different, Build Quality

Over the years, we've learned that not all inflatables are the same, and the gap between a budget PVC kayak and a drop-stitch construction is not a minor difference in marketing language. It is a physical difference you feel the moment you step in.
The Memba 390 uses Aqua Marina's drop-stitch DWF (Double Wall Fabric) construction for the floor, which allows the kayak to be inflated to significantly higher pressures than a standard PVC inflatable. The result is a floor that barely flexes underfoot. It does not feel like an inflatable when you are standing or sitting in it, it feels like a kayak. That is the distinction that matters, and frankly, as a parent, it's the level of product security you want when taking your children out on open water.
The AquaShell outer is a heavy-duty polyester hull cover with UV and water-repellent treatment. After three years across salt water, direct Alpine sun and the UV intensity of a south-facing Lake Garda beach, ours looks essentially the same as the day we bought it. The print has not faded, the material has not degraded, and the valves seal as cleanly as they did at the start. Cheap inflatables go milky and start delaminating within a season. This one has not.
The hull profile is touring-shaped rather than recreational (a longer waterline, flatter rocker), which gives the Memba noticeably better tracking and glide than you would expect from an inflatable. It wants to go in a straight line. It holds momentum between strokes. Honestly, when you are starting out with younger children and the reality is you are doing most of the paddling work yourself, you will be thankful for all the design support you can get. For the kind of paddling we do, coastal loops, lake exploration, the odd river stretch, these features matter more than anything else in the spec sheet.
Three Years on the Water: What We've Learned

Mudeford, Dorset: Where We Learned
If you are looking for the ideal beginner kayak location on the UK south coast, Mudeford Quay is hard to beat. Shallow water to launch from, mostly calm, and a natural paddling circuit along the sandbank to a small beach café roughly halfway round. The girls learned here. It is still a family favourite, partly because the café at the end is genuinely good, and partly because there is something quietly satisfying about paddling to your coffee, or an ice cream.
Dorset was also where the Memba proved itself in an unplanned way. On a camping trip with family friends, Ivy (aged twelve at this point) had taken a paddleboard out in the shallows with her friend one afternoon when the tide turned faster than expected. They started drifting and could not manage against the current. Martin and the other family's dad jumped in the Memba, paddled out, and towed both of them back to shore via an improvised rope chain, the rope tied onto the ankle strap loop of the paddleboard and tethered to the back of the kayak. Job done. Needless to say, lessons were learned all around.
Crete and the Cornish Coast: Salt Water
Salt water is harder on kit than flat freshwater, and open coastline introduces variables that a lake does not, chop from different directions, swells, stronger tidal movement (as above). We have had the Memba out in both, and the construction holds up without any concern.
The self-bailing drain valves are genuinely useful in any kind of chop. We leave them open when conditions are not flat, which lets water drain continuously rather than collecting inside. It is a small detail but it makes a real difference to comfort over a longer session.
Which brings us back to the drain valve lesson from the opening. Worth being explicit: before every trip, check that the bottom drain valve is seated properly and fully closed. It takes three seconds. If it was not replaced correctly after the previous session you will find out, gradually but unmistakably, mid paddle. Always intent on learning the hard way it seems, we therefore know this from personal experience.
Lake Garda: Where It Really Came Into Its Own
If you ever get the chance to kayak Lake Garda, take it. We stayed at Camping Bergamini on the south shore, right on the lake, easy access to inflate both kayaks on the campsite, a short walk across the beach and we were launching. Twenty minutes from deciding to go to being on the water. No trailer, no roof rack, no logistics. That is one of the great luxuries of an inflatable setup.
Garda was where the girls really developed as paddlers. Ivy was eleven and Eden was thirteen by this point, and the strength difference from two years earlier was already significant, they were generating real power, not just going through the motions. We would paddle out along the shoreline, pull up at beaches as the mood took us, stop for lunch, stop again for an ice cream, make it back in time for a swim before dinner. The cargo bungee system on both kayaks earned its keep here, a packed lunch, suncream, water bottles, a dry bag of essentials, everything secured without it taking over the cockpit. We use carabiner clips on anything that we want accessible but secured: if the worst happened, you would end up with soggy sandwiches yes, but you would not lose the bag.
The seat adjustability also made a real difference on the longer days. The ability to slide the seat position forward and back, and adjust the backrest angle, is genuinely useful.
On the same trip we were also running the EcoFlow WAVE 3 portable air conditioner in our drive-away awning. If base camp comfort matters as much as the water session, that review is worth reading.
Crete: Lake Kournas

We arrived at Lake Kournas not fully knowing what to expect. What we walked into was one of those places that stops you in your tracks. The water was a gorgeous turquoise blue, genuinely the kind of colour you assume has been filtered on Instagram until you are standing in front of it in 36 degrees. Olive trees dotted around the shoreline provided natural shade, and the whole setting had a laid-back, unhurried vibe that is rare at a spot this beautiful. It was calm, unhurried and exactly what a family holiday should feel like.
There are restaurants and cafés around the lake, along with a handful of local shops selling handmade pottery and crafts, which sounds like it should feel overdeveloped and crowded, but it really did not. The restaurants had loungers available for patrons, so as long as you ordered food or drinks they were yours for the day. We inflated both kayaks, paddled the lake to our hearts’ content, and spent the day spotting the freshwater turtles that live there as we went. In that heat, the water was everything.
We were in Crete for our wedding anniversary, and we loved it so much we went back for a second day. Spent the day swimming and paddling and spotting turtles and eating well and doing absolutely nothing that resembled a schedule. We also came home with a gorgeous handmade blue ceramic kitchen bowl trio from one of the local potters, which now has an active and much-loved place in the daily kitchen setup. Bliss, in every sense.
Safety: What We Actually Use

Overall, we are not cavalier about water safety, particularly with children on board. Here is the actual kit we carry on every trip.
The rope has earned its place more than once. The dry phone bags are not optional, the last thing you want is to need to call the coastguard (for either your own emergency or someone else's) and not have a working phone.
Our safety kit, every trip without exception Helly Hansen life jackets, one for each member of the family. Adults' and children's sizes. We have not cut corners on this and would not. Their range covers everything from compact touring PFDs to full buoyancy aids. Ours slide neatly inside the actual kayak backpacks, so no need for separate storage. Two dry bags (one per kayak), containing: spare water, a rope, a phone dry bag, suncream, a small first aid kit, and an emergency flare. The flare may feel like overkill. We would rather feel slightly silly than need one and not have it. Carabiner clips, on all bags and anything attached to the deck. Accessible but secured. Soggy sandwiches, maybe. Lost bag, not on my watch. Velcro paddle holders, on the side tubes. Useful whenever you need both hands free, and a genuine lifesaver for giving younger paddlers a rest without losing a paddle over the side. Most models come with these, the Memba absolutely does. |
Taking the Dogs on the Water
Storm is an enthusiastic if occasionally wilful paddling companion. She sits in the centre of the three-person and holds a reasonably dignified posture, though her presence does require Martin to work harder. Nala watches from the shore with the considered expression of a dog who has made a firm lifestyle decision and has no regrets about it. Or she just stays home and enjoys an afternoon nap.
The practical note for anyone who wants to take a dog: the extra seat in a three-person inflatable removes to create a flat platform area, which gives a medium or large dog plenty of stable space to sit or lie without destabilising the hull. We would still recommend a canine life jacket on open water, particularly if your dog has any inclination to launch themselves at passing ducks. We have linked one we like here. If you are worried about claws and the fact that you are in an inflatable, rubber bath mats can be a good idea to help protect the area where your dog is seated, and depending on how active they are, potentially up each side of the kayak also. Carabiner clips are great for securing them either to yourself on a waist band leash to free up your hands, or to the kayak itself. We would recommend a short leash here, when they are on board, the least amount of movement from them, the better.
How It Compares: Memba 390 vs the Aqua Marina Tomahawk AIR-C
We ran the Memba 390 alongside a Decathlon ITIWIT three-person inflatable for three years. The ITIWIT has since been discontinued, so rather than compare against something you cannot buy, the more useful comparison is against the Tomahawk AIR-C — the three-person drop-stitch sibling in the Aqua Marina range, and the kayak we would recommend to anyone wanting a three-person to pair with the Memba.
The honest assessment: both are drop-stitch inflatables, both are built to a proper touring standard, and both are significantly better than standard PVC leisure inflatables. The differences are in size, payload and intended use. The Memba is a compact two-person tourer. The Tomahawk AIR-C is a full expedition-capable three-person at 478cm — longer, heavier, higher payload, and aimed at slightly more experienced paddlers. For a family wanting a two-and-three combination, this is the pairing we would recommend.
Feature | Aqua Marina Memba 390 | Aqua Marina Tomahawk AIR-C |
Construction | Drop-stitch DWF floor + polyester hull | Full drop-stitch throughout |
Length | 390cm (12'10") | 478cm (15'8") |
Width | 90cm (35") | Approx. 85cm |
Max payload | 180kg | 260–280kg |
Seats | 2 adjustable high-back, removable | Bench seats, configurable 2–3 |
Tracking | Excellent, touring hull profile | Excellent, V-shaped moulded keels |
Self-bailing valves | Yes, 3 superfast drain valves | Yes, drain valves included |
Still available | Yes, Amazon UK (link below) | Yes, Amazon UK |
Verdict | Touring performance, worth the premium | Step up in size and payload, same build quality |
If You Need a Three-Person: What We'd Recommend
We bought ours as a pair, two-person and three-person, for the specific family reasons I've already addressed. But if you are shopping for a three-person inflatable and want to know what the options look like, these are our favourites:
Aqua Marina Tomahawk AIR-C, The Performance Choice
The Tomahawk AIR-C is the three-person full drop-stitch sibling of the Memba, same construction principle, scaled up to 478cm and three seats. If you want the same touring feel in a larger hull, this is the direct recommendation. It carries a payload of 260–280kg depending on specification, tracks well, and has the same rigid underfoot feel that separates drop-stitch inflatables from standard PVC. It is heavier at around 24kg, and at 478cm it is a proper expedition-capable open kayak rather than a compact tourer, worth knowing before you commit.
Approximate price: check current Amazon UK listing. Affiliate link below.
Aqua Marina Laxo 380, The Accessible Family Option
The Laxo 380 sits below the Tomahawk in the range and is a more approachable entry point. Comfortable for three people up to a 210kg payload, the same polyester hull construction as the Memba, and high-back adjustable seats throughout. The tracking is leisure-grade rather than touring-grade, which for calm lakes, rivers and sheltered coastline is perfectly adequate. At 17.5kg it is a realistic one-person carry for shorter distances, which matters more than it sounds when you are loading off a campsite.
Approximate price: check current Amazon UK listing. Affiliate link below.
Aqua Marina Tomahawk AIR-K 440, For Two Adults and a Larger Dog
Worth a separate mention: the Tomahawk AIR-K 440 is the two-person full drop-stitch Tomahawk rather than the three-person. At 440cm with a 240kg payload and the same construction as the AIR-C, it suits two larger adults or two adults who regularly take a medium-to-large dog and want more beam width and payload capacity than the Memba 390 offers. If you paddle as a pair with a bigger dog, this probably serves you better.
Approximate price: check current Amazon UK listing. Affiliate link below.
What We'd Change
The honest answer here is: not much. Three years and several thousand kilometres of travelling later, neither kayak has given us a significant cause for complaint. But in the spirit of learning through personal failure, and feel free to check out our EcoFlow WAVE 3 drainage fail for proof that we do this consistently, here is what is worth knowing before your first trip rather than during it.
• Check the bottom drain valve is properly replaced and seated after every session. If it was not closed properly from the previous trip you will discover this on the water, gradually, with increasing clarity, and urgency.
• The two-person Memba carries at 17kg, perfectly manageable as a two-person carry when inflated. On your own, for any distance, you will want to deflate it first or get someone to help.
• Plan your pump time into the morning. Around ten minutes with the included pump to inflate both kayaks properly is the realistic figure. Factor it in rather than discovering it when the kids are already standing at the water's edge with their paddles demanding to know how long you're going to be.
• Check the Velcro paddle holders before long trips, light grip does the job for most situations, but on choppier water you want to know your paddle is genuinely held.

One upgrade worth making early: ditch the included hand pump and get an electric pump. We use the Outdoor Master Shark 2S and it cuts inflation time from around ten minutes to five — for both kayaks. On a campsite morning when the kids are already dressed and ready to go, that difference matters more than it sounds. The Shark 2S handles the pressure requirements of drop-stitch inflatables without issue and is compact enough to live in the kayak bag alongside everything else. It is one of those purchases that pays for itself in reduced frustration within the first trip.
Who Is the Aqua Marina Memba 390 For?
It is for families or couples who want to get on the water without the cost, storage, and roof-rack logistics of hardshell kayaks. It is for those who want to cover real distance on the water without something that paddles like a pool toy. It is for anyone who wants kit that packs into a car boot and is on the water within ten minutes of arriving.
It is not for whitewater, it is not for serious multi-day expeditions, and it is not for buyers who want the cheapest option on the market. But if you paddle coastal stretches, lakes and rivers with family or friends, and you want something that actually performs rather than just floats, it is one of the best choices in its class.
Final Verdict
Just over three years. Four countries. Two daughters who paddled their first proper kayaks in these and now keep up on open water without any help from us. One drain valve lesson. One rescue mission at Mudeford. One family who would buy the same kayaks again tomorrow.
BUILD | Drop-stitch DWF floor makes this a genuinely different product to standard PVC inflatables. Rigid, responsive, durable. After three years of real use it still looks and performs like it did at the start. |
TRACKING | The touring hull profile delivers straight-line performance that is exceptional for an inflatable. It wants to go straight and holds momentum between strokes. You notice it most when paddling alongside lesser inflatables. |
ADJUSTABILITY | Seats move fully fore and aft, backrest angle adjusts independently, paddles cover the full range from child to tall adult. More useful across a mixed-age family than any single spec suggests. |
DURABILITY | Three years, salt water, Mediterranean sun, Atlantic coast. No delamination, no fading, no valve failures. Cheap inflatables do not survive this. This one has barely shown it. |
SAFETY KIT | Not included with the kayak. But the self-bailing drain valves, the deck fittings for clips and bungee, and the robust construction give you a solid platform to build a proper safety setup around. |
ONE NOTE | Check the bottom drain valve before every single trip. Thirty seconds. Non-negotiable. We learned this the gradual way and you do not need to. |
★ Aqua Marina Memba 390 is available on Amazon UK. Affiliate link in the product list below.
Affiliate links may be used in this post. We only recommend products we have personally tested. Full affiliate disclosure here.
Aqua Marina Memba 390 — Frequently Asked Questions
Real questions. Answered from three years of genuine first-hand use across multiple countries and conditions.
Does the Aqua Marina Memba 390 actually work as a touring kayak, or is it just a leisure inflatable?
It is a proper inflatable tourer. The drop-stitch DWF floor inflates to a significantly higher pressure than a standard PVC kayak, which gives it a rigidity underfoot that is much closer to a hardshell than you would expect. The touring hull profile (longer waterline, flatter rocker) gives it genuine straight-line tracking and efficient glide. We have used it on open coastline in Crete and the UK, on Lake Kournas in Crete, on Lake Garda, and as far afield as Vancouver Island. It held its own in all of them.
Is the Aqua Marina Memba 390 good for beginners?
Yes, even children, and this is where a lot of good-quality inflatable kayaks perform particularly well. The stability is excellent, the hull wants to go straight which makes it forgiving for learners, and the seat adjustability means you can configure it properly for different heights and paddling abilities. Our daughters learned in ours. Our youngest was eight at the time. The combination of a stable, well-tracking inflatable with fully adjustable paddles is genuinely ideal for mixed-ability family paddling.
How long does it take to inflate the Aqua Marina Memba 390?
Around ten minutes with the included manual pump; closer to five minutes with a good electric pump. We inflate ours with the Outdoor Master Shark 2S, which handles the Memba comfortably and is a significant improvement on the manual pump included with the kayak. Either way, plan the inflation time into your morning rather than discovering it when the children are already ready to go. Best way to avoid the nagging.
What is the weight limit for the Aqua Marina Memba 390?
The Memba 390 has a maximum payload of 180kg. For two adults this is generous. For two adults with a child or medium-sized dog it is comfortable, Storm at around 25kg puts us well inside the limit with two adults aboard. For two larger adults who want to add a third person or large dog, the Tomahawk AIR-K 440 (240kg payload) or AIR-C (260–280kg) is the more practical choice.
Can you take a dog in an inflatable kayak?
Yes, and we do. The practical things to know: the seats in both the Memba and the three-person are fully removable, which frees up a flat platform area for a dog to sit or lie. A well-trained dog who is comfortable on water and happy to stay seated, rather than lunging at interesting things going past, is manageable without any drama. We use a canine life jacket for Storm on any open water and would recommend it regardless of how confident your dog is in the water.
Is an inflatable kayak safe on open coastal water?
With the right preparation and conditions, yes. The key factors: a construction quality appropriate for the conditions (the drop-stitch Memba handles coastal use that would destroy a cheap PVC inflatable), proper life jackets for all passengers, a rope, a dry bag with essentials, awareness of tidal movement before you launch, and not pushing into conditions that are beyond your ability. We have used the Memba on the Cornish coast, the Dorset coast, the Cretan coastline, and on Lake Kournas in Crete. None of those trips required more than sensible preparation and a conditions check before launching. Where we have exercised more caution is on any crossing with tidal flow, the rope in our dry bag exists for exactly that scenario.
How does the Aqua Marina Memba 390 compare to cheaper inflatables?
The honest answer is: considerably better, and in ways you feel immediately rather than gradually. The drop-stitch floor alone changes the on-water experience completely, the rigidity, tracking and glide of the Memba are not comparable to a standard PVC inflatable in the same way that a quality mattress is not comparable to an air bed. The durability difference is also significant. After three years and multiple trips across varied conditions, our Memba shows almost no signs of wear. Cheap inflatables rarely last one or two seasons before the material begins to degrade.
What should I pack in a dry bag for kayaking with children?
Our dry bag packing for every trip: spare water, a rope (longer than you think you need), a waterproof phone case, with your phone in it, suncream, a small first aid kit, and an emergency flare. The flare has never been used. The rope has. One per kayak, every trip. Beyond the dry bag: life jackets that fit properly, paddling that is appropriate to the ability of the youngest or least experienced person in the group, and a clear plan for what happens if conditions change. Always.
Product Specifications at a Glance
All specifications sourced from Amazon UK listing and Aqua Marina product pages. Confirm current listing before publishing.
Aqua Marina Memba 390, Full Specifications | |
Model | |
Configuration | 2 person (also available as solo Memba 330) |
Length | 390cm / 12'10" |
Width | 90cm / 35" |
Weight | 17kg / 37.5lbs |
Max payload | 180kg / 396lbs |
Air chambers | 2 main + drop-stitch floor chamber |
Drain valves | 3 superfast self-bailing valves |
Max floor pressure | 4.35 PSI / 0.3 Bar (drop-stitch DWF floor) |
Fin system | 2 removable centre fins with locking pin |
Seat system | Premium high-back seats with EVA cushion + storage pockets, fully adjustable and repositionable |
Paddle holder | Velcro holder on lateral tubes |
Carry handles | Front, rear and centre rubber handles |
Cargo | Adjustable bungee fore and aft + D-buckle seat adjustment |
Hull technology | AquaShell, heavy-duty polyester, anti-UV, water-repellent |
Floor technology | Drop-stitch DWF (Double Wall Fabric), 7cm thick rigid floor |
Water shield | DECK SHIELD, prevents cockpit splash ingress |
Packed format | Backpack with zip and shoulder straps |
Inflate time | Approx. 10 minutes (included hand pump) / approx. 5 minutes (electric pump) |
In the box | Kayak, backpack, 2x seats, 2x fins, KP-1 paddle (2-section), Aero 16 hand pump |
Amazon UK ASIN | B08N59WSWD (confirm current listing before publishing) |
Prices correct at time of writing, check Amazon UK for current pricing. Availability and specification may vary.
Shop the Kit, Affiliate Links
Aqua Marina Memba 390, 2 Person Inflatable Kayak Our two-person, find current pricing and availability on Amazon UK. |
Aqua Marina Tomahawk AIR-C, 3 Person Inflatable Kayak Best three-person for families wanting touring performance. Amazon UK. |
Helly Hansen Life Jackets, Adults & Children What we use for the whole family. Adults' and children's sizes. Amazon UK. |
Dry Bags (10L and 20L) One per kayak, waterproof protection for phones, first aid, essentials. Amazon UK. |
Outdoor Master Shark It cuts inflation time from around ten minutes to five, reduces stress. |
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