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Musky Lures

Muskies didn't earn the nickname "fish of 10,000 casts" for nothing, and the right lure is what shortens the odds. Angling Sports carries a full range of musky lures, from bucktails and crankbaits to glide baits, jerkbaits, topwaters, and oversized soft plastics, so you can match your presentation to the season, the forage, and the mood of the fish.

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Building a Musky Lure Arsenal

No single lure catches muskies in every situation. The fish that crushes a bucktail in July might want a slow glide bait in October, and the one that ignores a topwater at noon might blow up on it at dusk. That's why experienced anglers carry a spread of styles and keep rotating until they find what's working on a given day. We chase muskies across Ontario and the Great Lakes, and the lesson repeats every season: versatility beats any one "magic" bait.

Here's how the main categories break down, and where each one fits.

Bucktails and Spinnerbaits

Bucktails are among the most popular musky lures ever made. The spinning blade throws off flash and vibration that muskies can track from a distance, and a simple straight retrieve keeps them working, which makes them excellent search baits for covering water and locating active fish. They shine through the warmer months when muskies are aggressive. Shop musky bucktails and spinnerbaits.

Hard Baits

Hard baits cover crankbaits, glide baits, jerkbaits, and topwaters. Crankbaits wobble and cover water for reaction strikes, glide baits tempt following fish with a slow side-to-side action, jerkbaits put an erratic dive-and-rise action in your hands, and topwaters draw explosive surface strikes in low light and warm water. Together they handle most of the casting and trolling situations you'll face. Shop musky hard baits.

Soft Plastics and Rubber Baits

Oversized rubber baits, swimbaits, tubes, and curly tails present a big, lifelike meal and let you control the depth and cadence. They're a go-to for trophy hunters and come into their own in late summer and fall, and for pressured fish that have seen everything else. Shop musky soft plastics.

Matching Lures to Conditions

Water clarity and light drive most lure decisions. In clear water, natural patterns like perch, sucker, walleye, and cisco get more attention. In stained water or low light, high-contrast colours like firetiger, chartreuse, orange, and black help fish find the bait. As a rule of thumb, fish faster, flashier presentations when muskies are active, then slow down and downsize during cold fronts and tough bites.

Complete Your Musky Setup

Whatever you tie on, back it with the right gear. Pair your lures with a heavy-power musky rod, a strong musky reel, heavy braid, and a quality musky leader to handle big baits and powerful fish.

Musky Lures FAQs

Product information


What are the best musky lures for beginners?

Bucktails, jerkbaits, and topwater baits are excellent starting points for new musky anglers because they're relatively easy to fish and build confidence on the water. Bucktails cover water and locate active fish, jerkbaits let you work structure and trigger reaction strikes, and topwaters can produce exciting surface explosions in the warmer months. All three catch fish consistently and help you learn key musky techniques.

What are the most popular musky lure styles?

Some of the most productive musky lures include bucktails, glide baits, jerkbaits, crankbaits, topwater baits, swimbaits, and large soft plastics. Each offers a different action and presentation, which lets you adapt to changing water conditions, forage, and fish behaviour. Successful anglers rotate between styles until they find what fish are responding to.

What lures should you have in a musky tackle box?

A well-rounded musky tackle box should include a mix of bucktails, glide baits, jerkbaits, crankbaits, topwater baits, and soft plastics. Bucktails are ideal for covering water, glide baits excel when fish are following, topwaters trigger explosive strikes, and soft plastics are excellent for targeting larger fish. Carrying multiple styles lets you adjust to season, weather, water clarity, and how active the muskies are.

What colours work best for musky lures?

Natural patterns like perch, walleye, sucker, and cisco work well in clear water, while brighter, higher-contrast colours like firetiger, chartreuse, orange, and black are stronger in stained water or low light. Most anglers carry both so they can adapt as conditions change through the day.

Do you need a leader for musky lures?

Yes. Muskies have sharp teeth that cut straight through braid and mono, so always run a quality leader. A heavy fluorocarbon or wire leader prevents bite-offs and protects your lure, no matter which style you're throwing.