Best Ways To Store Fishing Tackle

Options for storing fishing tackle abound these days, with quite literally hundreds of options for keeping your favorite fishing gear organized, protected, and accessible. But it helps to understand what options exist and then set up a storage solution that works for how you fish. This often revolves around a modular approach to storing tackle.

Options for storing fishing tackle abound these days, with quite literally hundreds of options for keeping your favorite fishing gear organized, protected, and accessible. But it helps to understand what options exist and then set up a storage solution that works for how you fish. This often revolves around a modular approach to storing tackle. 

If you're a bass angler, you need ways to store lots of different kinds of lures for lots of different techniques. If you're a crappie angler, you need ways to carry tons of color and size options of your favorite styles of jigheads and plastics. If you're a trout guy, you might have stuff for conventional fishing and stuff for fly fishing, and even some stuff that crosses over between the two, and ways to store all of it.

Table of Contents

  • How to Store Your Fishing Tackle
  • Choosing The Right Tackle Box For Fishing
  • The Modular Tackle Storage Approach
  • Best Tackle Boxes For Storing Fishing Tackle

How To Store Your Fishing Tackle

There are a few aspects to storing fishing tackle to consider when choosing a tackle box. Organization obviously tops the list. But equally important can be protection from water, and more importantly, rust. As well as protection from damage if you were to drop the box of your prized gear. 

And one final consideration is simply size. If you want to carry your tackle with you on your person, then the boxes should probably be smaller. While if you have a boat or a ton of any one type of lure, you might need some larger bulk storage options.

The main thing is choosing the system you want to use to store tackle. That could be a series of similar boxes, a tackle bag with boxes inside of it, or just simply a "hodgepodge" of bags, boxes in all different sizes to handle all the variations of your fishing tackle.

This is also where a modular approach to storing tackle should be seriously considered to be most efficient with your fishing tackle organization. We'll discuss that further in a moment.

Choosing The Right Tackle Box For Fishing

Choosing the right box is partially preference and partially related to the lures or gear you plan to store or organize. Obviously, a huge box is not ideal for very small lures and vice versa. And sometimes a bunch of big, bulky hard boxes are not convenient to store in something like a sling pack or backpack while on foot. 

Knowing where you are going to store your tackle, like a garage, boat, or tackle bag, will give you a place to start and then go from there based on the volume and size of the gear you need to store. 

Hard boxes can offer better waterproof protection if they have sealed rubber ring liners in them. Soft bags can allow you to leave lures and tackle in their original bags and throw them easily, all in one convenient pack.

Open boxes with fewer modular compartments mean things like treble hook lures will be hung up a lot more on each other, but you can usually fit a lot more baits in a single box. Whereas specialized boxes will often hold a lot fewer lures, but they will be evenly separated and easy to access quickly on the water. 

The Modular Tackle Storage Approach

Once you understand what you want to organize and where you plan to store it. You can be very flexible by adopting a modular approach to storing fishing tackle. Often, anglers who own a ton of fishing tackle will have bulk storage options would could just be large bins that hold a lot of boxes and bags. Then from there you can move what you need for that day or season into smaller boxes to take in the boat, or throw in a bag if on foot, that offer a selection of your full collection for the current fishing situations.

For example, I have shelves of big bulk boxes of crankbaits. From those, I will grab out a selection of those in some different colors and depths and throw them in a smaller box to keep in my boat or throw in my backpack on my travels to fish that are relevant to that season and the depth I will be fishing.

I also have a smaller box that I call day boxes or go boxes. I have a smattering of various baits from my middle boxes that I will throw in a smaller tackle box, which is what I intend to use that day or for the next couple of weeks, that I know are the baits I normally catch the fish on or have been catching them on recently. Often these boxes will fit in a pocket, and I can literally change colors and baits quickly and easily, and keep fishing more and digging around in my tackle less.

Best Tackle Boxes For Storing Fishing Tackle

A bunch of great brands offer lots of unique and efficient ways to store a wide variety of fishing tackle. Brands like FishUSA, Plano, Meiho, SPRO, Lakewood, FishMore, Rapala, and many more offer storage options that cover every range of lures imaginable. Again, storing tackle definitely depends on personal preference as well as the fishing gear each angler has to organize. But we wanted to highlight a handful of the options currently available to anglers by category.

Specialty Lure Boxes

If you really want to keep your baits separated and organized, there are several good specialty tackle storage options to choose from. Some have slotted compartments sized to house specific baits while others have literally foam cutouts in the exact shape of certain popular lures. But these can be great options if you have a handful of really good quality lures you know work and want to keep stored very organized and separated so that you can get them out quickly on the water, tied on and fishing without fighting to untangle from everything else. 

Some of the boxes we recommend in this category would include the following:

FishUSA Flagship Stickbait Box

Plano EDGE Spinnerbait Box

Fishmore T3 Pro Megabass Vision ONETEN Jr Box

Plano Spoon Box

Foam Slit Boxes

Another very effective and clean way to store things like jigs and terminal tackle, like hooks, can be with foam slit boxes. Several different options exist in this type of tackle storage, and if you are an OCD angler like us, you will love these boxes for storing your favorite jigs, Chatterbaits, jigheads, and hooks. 

Several options we have used and like include the following:

Rapala RapStack 3600 Open Foam Tackle Tray

Gamakatsu Slit Foam G-Box

FishUSA Flagship Slit Foam Jig Box

Eurotackle Euro-Locker Jig Box

Bulk Tackle Boxes and Bags

For storing larger items, like say lots of bags of plastics, both bulk bags and boxes can serve this purpose well. Some boxes that are large can hold lots of smaller boxes as well. In my own house, I have a tackle shelf that stores bulk bins full of tackle and tackle boxes that I pull from to fill bags for trips and take to the boat for trips based on seasons. It's part of my modular system to have larger bins and boxes with smaller bags and boxes that I transfer or pull from these bigger boxes.

Some of the boxes or bags we would recommend include the following:

FishUSA Flagship Large Deep Waterproof Tackle Box

Rapala RapStack 3700 Deep Open Tackle Tray

Plano ProLatch XL StowAway Tackle Box

SPRO Soft Sided 3700 Bag

These few boxes are just a sampling of the hundreds of options for storing and organizing fishing tackle.

Regardless of how you fish, organizing tackle doesn't have to be difficult or done one certain way. Figure out where you plan to store your tackle, how much you have to organize and store and how you can create a modular system to store at home, in the boat and in a go-bag for your fishing trips on foot or in other's boats, and you'll spend a lot more time fishing and lot less time looking for and untangling your gear on the water. 

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