17 July 2026 · Sam de Jong
Evinrude E-TEC 25 vs 30 HP: What's the Difference?
The 25 and 30 HP E-TEC run the same block. The 25 is software-limited, and a reflash restores the full 30 HP it was built for.
If you own an Evinrude E-TEC 25 HP and have ever wondered why the 30 HP feels like a different engine on paper but looks identical in the flesh, here is the short answer: it is the same engine. The 25 and the 30 share one two cylinder small block. What separates the two ratings is not displacement, not the powerhead, not the induction, but the software running on the EMM (Engine Management Module). Change the software and you change the rating.
Same block, different label
The 15, 25 and 30 HP E-TEC are all built on that single two cylinder platform. The castings, the pistons and the fuel system are common across the family. Evinrude publishes three horsepower figures for it, but there is only one piece of hardware doing the work underneath.
So why sell a detuned version at all? The 25 HP exists to sit under specific licensing thresholds and tax brackets that many countries and inland waterways apply at the 25 HP line. Rating the engine at 25 keeps it legal and affordable for owners who need to stay under that ceiling. The power is not gone, it is held back in the EMM calibration. When those constraints no longer apply to you, there is no reason to keep paying for the limit.
What the 25 to 30 reflash actually does
A reflash loads the full 30 HP calibration onto your existing EMM. That restores the 5 HP the block was designed to make in the first place. Nothing is bolted on and nothing is bored out. It is plug and play. This is real rated power, the same figure Evinrude stamps on a factory 30, not a risky overclock that leans on margins the engine was never meant to give.
One detail that trips people up: the 25 to 30 step needs no water valve and no other hardware change. You can read the full breakdown on the 25 to 30 HP upgrade page.
Bear in mind that adding horsepower can mean your current propeller is no longer the right match. To get the full benefit of the extra power you may need to fit a different propeller, and a dealer can help you size it.
The bigger win: 15 to 30 on the same block
If the 25 to 30 gain sounds useful, the 15 HP owners on this platform have even more on the table. Because the 15 HP runs the identical block, it can be reflashed all the way to 30 HP. That is a gain of 15 HP, effectively doubling the rated output, with no hardware changes and, again, no water valve. Same plug and play process, applied to a block that was quietly capable of twice its badge the whole time. The details live on the 15 to 30 HP upgrade page.
How the reflash gets done
There are two ways to have it done, and both are fixed price (ex VAT).
| Option | Price | What you need |
|---|---|---|
| Remote reflash | 199 euro | Windows laptop, diagnostic cable, bootstrap cable, internet, charged battery |
| Remote plus our bootstrap and diagnostic cable kit | 275 euro | We supply the cables |
| Mail-in reflash | 199 euro | Send us the EMM |
| Mail-in plus a diagnostic cable | 250 euro | We include a cable |
With remote tuning, the EMM never leaves the boat. You sit at the dock with a Windows laptop, the two cables, internet and a charged battery, and we reflash live in under an hour. If you would rather post the unit, mail-in is typically back in the post within about three days of arriving here.
Remember that with mail-in you pay carriage both ways, sending the EMM to us and getting it back, whereas the remote option ships nothing because the EMM stays on the boat.
Hardware Care is based in Nieuwkuijk, Netherlands, and we ship worldwide by DHL Express. We have tuned over 100 EMMs on this and related platforms, so the process on your block is well trodden.
Ready to unlock your 30
Your 25 HP already has a 30 HP block under the cowling. Check the part number on your EMM label, and if it reads 5006040, 5006041 or 5006042 you are almost certainly eligible. Start on the 25 to 30 HP upgrade page to confirm your unit and choose remote or mail-in. Restoring the full rated power the engine was built for is a short job, and it costs less than a weekend of fuel.