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Best for Beginners
Keitech Fat Swing Impact
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Summary
If you’re not sure where to start with swimbait options, try the Keitech Fat Swing Impact.
Best Bargain
STORM WildEye Shad
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Summary
The Storm Wildeye Shad gives anglers a lot of bang for their buck.
Easiest to Fish
STORM Arashi Glide Bait
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Summary
The Storm Arashi Glide Bait is a great starter lure for anglers who are new to this style of swimbait.
The swimbait “revolution” is well over a decade old, but outside of the West and in certain pockets of the South, everyday anglers are still trying to figure out how to integrate these proven largemouth bass lures into their game plans. A big part of the resistance seems to be the terminology. Each of us has a different idea of what the term “swimbait” actually means.
So, what is a swimbait? Well, it can be a lot of things. For instance:
A swimbait can be soft plastic or made of hard materials.
A swimbait can be as short as 2 inches or longer than a foot.
A swimbait can be floating, suspending, or sinking.
A swimbait can be made to swim or to glide.
And a swimbait can be made to replicate all sorts of easy meals—from shad to trout to rodents, and everything in between.
In other words: You can ignore bass anglers who claim that “swimbait” only refers to those 12-inch trout imitators that cost $300. Swimbaits
, as you’ll see in the choices below, are available in a variety of sizes (and prices), and you should stock your tackle box full of them. Because come springtime, when bass are fat and hungry, a swimbait is the best lure you can cast to catch giant largemouths.
Here are the five best swimbaits to use this spring, plus some tips on how to fish them.
Best for Beginners: **Keitech Fat Swing Impact
**
Best Budget: Storm Wildeye Shad
Best for Anglers Who Want Speed: Mike Bucca Bull Shad
Best Glide Bait Swimbait: Storm Arashi Glide Bait
Best for Explosive Strikes: SPRO BBZ Rat
Best Swimbaits: Reviews & Recommendations
Best for Beginners: **Keitech Fat Swing Impact
**
Specs
Length: 2.8″, 3.3″, 4.8″
Colors: Alewife, AYU, Arkansas Shiner, Black, Black Blue, Black Cherry, Black Shad, and more
Price: $9.95 -$10.49
Pros
Extremely versatile
Produces strikes from a wide array of species
Many colors and sizes
Cons
May get torn up quickly by fish
The Fat Swing Impact has spawned a legion of imitators not only because it works, but because it works in so many different ways. This boot-tailed, ribbed soft plastic can be rigged on a weedless hook and dragged through or over vegetation, but it also excels on a ballhead jig or in multiples on the back of a castable umbrella rig. What makes the lure so effective is that it swims enticingly at any speed, and even when left to fall on a slack line it still undulates on the fall. Start with the 4.8-inch version, going up to 5.8 (or even 6.8) if you’re around big fish and big forage, or down to 2.8 if the fish are finicky.
Best Budget: Storm Wildeye Shad
Specs
Length: 2″, 3″, 4″
Colors: Olive shad, Pearl, Natural shad, Shad, Bluegill, Shiner chartreuse silver, Yellow perch
Price: $4.79 for a pack of 3
Pros
Variety of colors makes it effective for different species and conditions
Three different weight options
Extremely effective for saltwater and freshwater fishing
Bang for your buck
Cons
Limited action on tail
For years, the guides of Mexico’s top trophy lakes have sworn by the Wildeye, which comes in clamshell packaging in small groups for a buck or two apiece. At that price you’re getting a bait that falls straight, swims true, and has a quality hook, but also one that you’re not afraid to throw in the gnarliest cover. Because they’re so wind-resistant and run straight, they’re also deadly on schooling fish in the middle water column.
Best for Anglers Who Want Speed: Mike Bucca Bull Shad
Specs
Length: 3.75″
Colors: Rainbow trout, Bluegill, Bumble bee, Gizzard shad, Golden shiner, Pearl bone, Threadfin shad
Price: $14.99
Pros
Multiple sections for increased action
Durable
Realistic
Easy to fish
Cons
Expensive
Even some of the most expensive hard swimbaits will blow out on a warp-speed retrieve, but Bucca’s jointed Bull Shad (available in sizes as small as 3 inches and up to 9 inches) is made to swim true at any speed. Nothing looks more like an injured threadfin or gizzard shad than this lure, and while you can get custom-painted models, the rougher looking bone or shad paint jobs straight from the factory are proven giant killers. The Bull Shad comes in floating, slow sinking, and fast sinking models.
Best Glide Bait Swimbait (That’s Easy to Fish): Storm Arashi Glide Bait
Specs
Length: 7.5″
Colors: Oikawa mesu, Rainbow trout, Black silver shad, Green gill, Bluegill, Threadfin shad
Price: $40
Pros
Natural action
Sinks well for good depth control
Easy to control and fish
Comes with replacement tail
Cons
Expensive
In the hands of a highly skilled bass angler, traditional single-jointed glide baits can be made to dance. But if you’re new to this style of swimbait, it can be difficult to if you’re fishing them correctly. Enter Bassmaster Elite Series pro Brandon Palaniuk, who worked with Storm to develop a 7.5-inch glider that offers a wide glide with just simple turns of the handle. From there, you can experiment with retrieves until you have more dance moves, with an assurance that anyone can make it work right out of the package.
Best for Explosive Strikes: SPRO BBZ Rat
Specs
Length: 3.25″
Colors: Brown
Price: $27
Pros
Fun topwater bait
Lip pushes a lot of water
Tail gives great action
Durable
Cons
Expensive
If you think that the bass on your home waters only feed on bluegills, shad, perch, and trout, well, you’re probably right. Still, even if the fish have never seen a rodent swimming
across the water, the rat may be too much to resist. Retrieved slowly, the SPRO BBZ Rat swims in an “S” and makes a nails-across-the-chalkboard clacking sound. The 50 size, which has 5.25 inches of body and nearly another 5 inches of tail, might be too big for your local bass, but you’d be surprised at how often even 2-pounders will smoke this easy meal. The 25, 30, and 40 sizes are more appropriately sized lures—but err on the bigger size with this lure. The topwater strikes are unforgettable.
FAQs
Q: What is the ideal size of a swimbait?
Swimbait size depends on what you are fishing for and where you are fishing. Usually, the bigger the bait, the bigger the fish you’re chasing. But a good all around size is 3-4 inches long. This will cover most fishing styles and techniques.
Q: How long do swimbaits last?
Once again, this depends on how often you use the lure and how many fish you’ve caught with it. Usually, after 4-5 fish, there’s a good chance you’ll have to swap the swimbait out for a fresh one.
Q: Should I add weight to swimbait?
Adding weight to your swimbait will alter how you fish the lure. Many anglers add swimbaits to their chatterbait or spinner lures where they ride high in the water column. You don’t want to add too much wait to your swimbait because this can affect the overall action of the lure.
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