Rapala 60-30-200IC Spinnerbait Review
Our verdict
The Rapala 60-30-200IC is an 8-gram brass spinnerbait priced at $6.29, and its 4.7-star average across 147 reviews matches the top scores in this comparison. With 200+ units bought last month, it moves at the same pace as the Yakima 206-WH, making it a dependable pick for crappie, trout, and panfish anglers.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Anglers targeting crappie, trout, or panfish who want a small, brass, 8-gram spinnerbait with a spear point hook. It fits light tackle setups where a compact lure profile matters more than bulk.
Skip if
Skip it if you are after bass specifically, since this lure is built and marketed around crappie, trout, and panfish rather than bass, where the bass-targeted Strike MK-93G may be a better fit.
- Material Brass
- Weight 8 Grams
- Target Species Crappie Trout Panfish
- Technique Spear Point
- Size One Size
- Pieces 1
- Priced 37% below the category median ($9.99 across 71 tracked models)
Our scorecard
-
Owner rating4.7/5
4.7 average across 147 owner ratings
-
Popularity1.8/5
147 owner reviews, fewer than most models here
The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other fishing gear and tackle we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.
Overview
Crappie and trout fishing calls for smaller, lighter lures than a bass angler would reach for, and the Rapala 60-30-200IC is built around that gap. At 8 grams with a brass body and a spear point hook, it is sized and shaped for panfish, trout, and crappie rather than heavier bass water.
Priced at $6.29, it sits well below the two Yakima models at $8.99 and above the Strike MK-93G's $3.99. Its 4.7-star average across 147 reviews ties the top rating in this comparison, shared with both Yakima 206 models, though its review count is far smaller than the 206-WH's 1,023. The 200+ units bought last month matches the 206-WH's pace exactly and beats the MK-93G's demand on a per-review basis.
For anglers fishing the species this lure targets, brass construction and a spear point hook are straightforward, no-surprise specs, and the sales and rating data back up the price. It is a reasonable buy for crappie, trout, or panfish trips, less so for anyone specifically chasing bass, since the listing does not name bass among its target species at all.
Pros
- 4.7-star rating across 147 reviews, tying the top score in this comparison
- 200+ bought last month, matching the Yakima 206-WH's pace
- Brass construction at a compact 8 grams for panfish, trout, and crappie
- Priced at $6.29, cheaper than both Yakima 206 models at $8.99
- Spear point hook built for the species it targets
Cons
- 147 reviews is far fewer than the 206-WH's 1,023 or MK-93G's 1,536
- Built for crappie, trout, and panfish, not bass
- Listed as one size only, with no weight or color variants shown
- No color option specified in the listing
Specifications
| Material | Brass |
|---|---|
| Weight | 8 Grams |
| Target Species | Crappie Trout Panfish |
| Technique | Spear Point |
| Size | One Size |
| Pieces | 1 |
| Feature | Fishing Lure |
Performance notes
An 8-gram brass body puts this spinnerbait on the lighter end of the category, well under the 206-WH's 1.12 ounces, which lines up with its stated target species of crappie, trout, and panfish rather than the heavier bass water the MK-93G is built for. Brass adds flash and a bit of weight without the bulk of a full metal blade setup, which suits smaller, lighter presentations. The spear point hook differs from the J hook on the MK-93G and the needle point on the 206-WH, another sign this lure is tuned for a different fishing style than the bass-oriented options here. At $6.29 for a single-piece, one-size lure, the price sits between the MK-93G's $3.99 and the two Yakima models at $8.99, and the spec sheet backs up the species targeting the listing claims rather than leaving buyers guessing.
What buyers say
A 4.7-star average across 147 reviews puts the Rapala 60-30-200IC in a tie with both Yakima 206 models for the highest rating in this comparison, and its review count of 147 is enough to make that average meaningful rather than a fluke from a handful of early buyers. The 200+ units bought last month is the same pace as the 206-WH, one of the stronger sellers in the group, and it clears the 206-FRT's 0 bought despite that lure sharing the same 4.7-star rating. That active, current sales pattern suggests real, ongoing demand rather than a listing that has fallen out of favor.
Similar fishing gear and tackle to consider
- Reaction$11.9850+ bought last monthView on Amazon
- Rooster
Rooster Tail Fishing Lures, Inline Spinner Baits Kit for
$9.99700+ bought last monthView on Amazon
Featured in
Frequently asked questions
Is the Rapala 60-30-200IC good for bass fishing?
Its listing targets crappie, trout, and panfish rather than bass. Anglers specifically fishing for bass may get better results from a bass-targeted lure like the Strike MK-93G, which lists bass as its target species and uses a J hook design suited to that fishing style.
How much does the Rapala 60-30-200IC spinnerbait weigh?
It weighs 8 grams and is built from brass with a spear point hook. That makes it noticeably lighter than the Yakima 206-WH's 1.12-ounce metal build, which fits its role as a lure for smaller species like crappie, trout, and panfish rather than heavier bass water.
How does the Rapala 60-30-200IC sell compared to similar spinnerbaits?
At 200+ units bought last month, it matches the Yakima 206-WH's pace and beats the 206-FRT, which shows 0 bought despite a similar 4.7-star rating. Its 147 reviews are fewer than the Strike MK-93G's 1,536, but the rating and recent sales pace both point to steady demand.