WANOON W-2-01-01 Tackle Bag Review
Our verdict
The WANOON W-2-01-01 is a 42-liter, 2.8-pound nylon bag priced at $36.99, and its 4.6 star rating across 475 reviews with 300+ bought last month puts it squarely in the middle of this comparison set on both price and demand.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Anglers who want a larger 42-liter capacity bag and are willing to pay more than the sub-$26 options for that extra room, especially those who plan to fill it with their own tackle boxes rather than needing trays included.
Skip if
Skip this if you need included trays or the lowest possible price. At $36.99 without trays, and the size listed as 42L-Without Tackle Boxes, buyers need to budget separately for internal organization.
- Material Nylon
- Weight 2.8 Pounds
- Size 42L-Without Tackle Boxes
- Color Black
- Pieces 1 Count
Our scorecard
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Owner rating4.6/5
4.6 average across 475 owner ratings
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Popularity2.8/5
475 owner reviews, more 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
A 42-liter bag sits at the larger end of tackle-bag capacity, the kind of size that fits a full day's gear for a boat trip or a multi-rig bank session rather than a quick single-lure outing. The WANOON W-2-01-01 delivers that volume in nylon construction at 2.8 pounds, priced at $36.99.
That price sits above the Allen at $23.80, the Allnice at $25.99, and the Kylebooker at $31.57, making WANOON the most expensive single-bag option in this comparison group aside from the specialty Xelfly backpack and KastKing tray system. The listing explicitly notes 42L-Without Tackle Boxes, which means the 42-liter figure describes empty bag capacity and buyers need to supply their own tackle trays or boxes to fill that space, unlike the KastKing Karryall which bundles 4 trays.
On ratings, 4.6 stars across 475 reviews lands in the same range as the Allen at 4.6 across 830 and the Kylebooker at 4.5 across 1,600, a consistent band across this whole category rather than a standout. The 300+ bought last month matches the Allen and Allnice figures exactly, putting WANOON in a three-way tie for second place on recent demand behind the KastKing Karryall's 500+.
Pros
- 42-liter capacity is a larger stated volume than any other bag with a listed size in this comparison
- 2.8-pound weight is specified, giving a clear reference for how much the empty bag itself adds to total pack weight
- 4.6 star rating across 475 reviews, matching the top rating tier in this category
- 300+ bought last month ties the Allen and Allnice bags for second-highest recent demand
- Nylon construction, a durable synthetic commonly chosen for tear resistance in outdoor gear
Cons
- At $36.99, more expensive than the Allen, Allnice, and Kylebooker single-bag alternatives
- Size is listed as without tackle boxes, meaning trays are not included and must be bought separately
- 475 reviews is a mid-size sample, smaller than the 830 to 6,400 range of some competitors
- Black is the only color option listed, versus the olive green, khaki, and army green choices elsewhere
Specifications
| Material | Nylon |
|---|---|
| Weight | 2.8 Pounds |
| Size | 42L-Without Tackle Boxes |
| Color | Black |
| Pieces | 1 Count |
Performance notes
The 42-liter capacity figure is the headline spec, and it is worth noting the listing qualifies this as without tackle boxes, meaning the 42 liters is raw empty volume rather than usable space once trays are loaded in. That distinction matters when comparing against the KastKing Karryall, which states its size in terms of 4 included trays rather than raw liters, so a direct capacity comparison between the two is not apples to apples from the spec sheet alone. At 2.8 pounds, the bag itself is a moderate weight for its size class, light enough to carry loaded without adding excessive base weight, though the spec sheet does not list a maximum load capacity separate from the empty bag weight. Nylon as the shell material is a common choice for tear and abrasion resistance in outdoor carry gear, generally holding up well to repeated loading and unloading of hard tackle trays.
What buyers say
A 4.6 star rating across 475 reviews places this listing in the same top rating tier as the Allen bag, though with roughly half the review count, 475 versus 830. The 300+ bought last month matches two other bags in this comparison exactly, which suggests steady, comparable demand rather than a standout or a laggard. Taken together, the pattern here reads as a solidly performing mid-pack listing, neither the highest-rated nor the highest-demand option, but consistent with the category norms this comparison group establishes.
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Frequently asked questions
Does the WANOON tackle bag include tackle trays?
No. The size is listed as 42L-Without Tackle Boxes, meaning the 42-liter capacity figure describes the empty bag and buyers need to purchase tackle trays or boxes separately to fill that space.
How much does the WANOON bag weigh?
The bag itself weighs 2.8 pounds, a spec worth noting for anglers tracking total carry weight once tackle trays and gear are loaded inside the 42-liter capacity.
How does WANOON compare in price to similar tackle bags?
At $36.99, it costs more than the Allen at $23.80 and Allnice at $25.99, and slightly more than the Kylebooker at $31.57, making it the priciest single-bag option among the direct comparisons here.