We just bought your perfect boat earlier this year

(ok, our perfect boat anyway)--
Unfortunately we've only been able to use it twice, due to low water and my business schedule. But I found out a lot in those two trips...
Obviously the boat is the Regal in my signature. It's a 2003 2860 Commodore. 28'er with a 9'11" beam. That extra foot-and-a-half does make a difference. It was well taken care of, and the price was under $35k. She has a pair of 4.3's to push her around. The Regal has the stepped hull, and some folks were telling me she might be hard to get up on plane because of that. The most pleasant surprise was to find this reasonably large boat gets fully on plane in about 5 seconds. After that she's no high-speed demon, around 40 was what I got out of her, but I didn't get much trimming practice. Also note we're at 4400' altitude. She cruised nicely about 31 mph at 34-3500 rpm. Rode like a new Escalade on the salt flats.
The cockpit layout is nice, has a nice L-seat on the port side and a double helm seat, behind which is a table and back-to-back seats. There's a sink, hot/cold shower and a refer all next to the transom door. Down below is quite large, headroom is like 6'6". The big beam helps, and the fixed V-berth is NICE, no breaking down the dining room to sleep! The midcabin is plenty roomy, but the entrance is to it is a bit of a pain, but this isn't uncommon on cruisers. There's also another refer downstairs which is nice, and it's under the V-berth, leaving more usable cabinet space. Lots of cabinets and places to store stuff, HOWEVER, there's not much storage space up top! (Our Chap 262ssi Bowrider had acres of storage under the seats)
She's a bit heavy, just about 10,000# wet with the trailer. And even though I've herded 53' of SkipperLiner around for 10 years, this boat feels big when sitting in the captain's chair
At 28' it's a big step up from a Hurricane, but you'd get used to something this big quickly. Towing this thing for long distances, if you have a truck with enough guts and good brakes on the trailer (I'm changing out the surge brakes for electrics) shouldn't be too bad.
A 24-26 footer may be do-able for your needs. Our last crusier was an '88 SunRunner Ultra 252, not a small boat but was only 23' on center. Had a 5.7 Volvo that was a bit underpowered, some tighter props helped with that. We had a lot of good times on that boat. But the Regal's extra size and power is very noticeable, and welcome!
So that's my
on the subject! Pics of the Regal and Sun Runner for ref..