OK, thank you for the clarification. No, need to take pics of the trim gauge. Just for clarification, I'm summing up "proper" trim use (forget about the tabs for now as your boat should do fine without them). You may know all this, but just in case...
-- Always start with full down trim.
-- Apply throttle smoothly and to at least halfway (depending on load). It's not a problem to apply full throttle.
-- The bow will rise up a bit in front of you and then start to come back down and level off. You are now "on plane".
-- At this point you can raise the trim to keep the bow from burying too far in the water. With practice you can start to trim up as the bow is starting to come back down, if you want.
-- You can also pull back on the throttle as the bow comes back down.
OK, that said, let's get back into this. Now, there can actually be some boat-side issues here and/or some engine-side issues. Let's try to eliminate one of those sides to help narrow things down.
-- Beg, borrow or steal a portable 6-gallon fuel tank. Disconnect the hose that's on the engine side of the fuel/water separator that's mounted on the boat. Connect the portable tank to this hose with a simple barb connection. Go run the boat.
-- If the issue is still present, the problem is either the hose going to the engine (unlikely) or something at the engine, itself. If you want, you could connect the portable tank's hose directly to the F/W separator that's mounted on the side of the engine.
-- If the issue goes away, the problem is the F/W sep, the line to the tank, the tank pickup or the vent system.
If you can narrow this down for us, it will help. Reading the plugs will help, too.
??? Given it's a newer boat, you probably have an EPA carbon canister in the vent system. If so, this "could" be the problem as it may have gotten saturated. This would effectively create a problem like putting your finger over a straw, stopping full fuel flow. The same would happen with a clog anywhere in the vent system. Two quick tests... when the engine is struggling, you may find that the fuel bulb is flattening. That is a dead giveaway that there's a clog in the vent system (or internal line failure... although that's unlikely given it's almost new). Another way to find out if the vent system is to blame is to run with the fuel cap off - which creates a new "vent", in essence.
I know I wrote a lot here, but I'm trying to come up with ideas that could explain your problem and are relatively easy to check and at no/minimal cost to you before spending money on engine-related things.