Fishing Reel Buying Guide

Live bait versus artificial lures is fishing’s oldest debate. Both have their place, and understanding when to use each makes you more versatile.

Live Bait Advantages

Real food looks, smells, and moves like real food because it is. Finicky fish that reject artificials often eat live bait. When fish are inactive or heavily pressured, natural presentation wins.

Lure Advantages

Lures let you cover water fast. Cast, retrieve, repeat without re-baiting. You can fish all day on one pack of plastics. Lures also trigger reaction strikes from fish that aren’t actively feeding.

Learning Curve

Live bait is more forgiving for beginners. Present it reasonably well and fish eat it. Lures require understanding retrieves, colors, and conditions. The skill ceiling for artificial fishing is higher.

Cost Comparison

Initial lure investment is higher but they last. Live bait costs money every trip and dies if you don’t use it. Over time, lure fishing becomes cheaper. Short term, bait fishing costs less to start.

Convenience Factor

Lures live in your tackle box, ready anytime. Live bait requires purchasing, transporting, and keeping alive. Spontaneous trips favor artificial. Planned outings accommodate either approach.

Species Considerations

Some species respond better to one or the other. Catfish love natural bait. Bass respond well to artificials. Trout eat both depending on conditions. Know your target’s preferences.

Tournament Rules

Many bass tournaments require artificial only. This exists partly to level competition but also speeds up fishing. If you compete, artificial skills become essential.

Dale Hawkins

Dale Hawkins

Author & Expert

Jason Michael is the editor of Fish Blog. Articles on the site are researched, fact-checked, and reviewed by the editorial team before publication. Read our editorial standards or send a correction at the editorial policy page.

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