Fishing Pliers with Innovative Ergonomical Handle, Corrosion Saltwater Resistant,Fishing Multitool Review

4.6 (108) Amazon rating$13.99100+ bought last month

Our verdict

At $13.99, this ergonomic fishing multitool combines stainless steel and tungsten carbide construction with a 4.6 star rating across 108 reviews. Weighing just 3.8 ounces, it is the lightest plier in this comparison and matches the top rating tier at a mid-range price.

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Best for

Anglers who want an ultralight plier at 3.8 ounces with tungsten carbide reinforcement for cutting braided line, plus stainless steel corrosion resistance for saltwater use. The $13.99 price and 4.6 star rating make it a solid mid-range pick.

Skip if

Skip it if you want the deepest review history or highest recent sales volume. Its 108 reviews and 100+ bought last month trail the Berkley BTSTLP6's 848 reviews and 500+ units bought, and the Rapala RCP6's 544 reviews.

  • Material Stainless Steel, Tungsten Carbide
  • Weight 3.8 Ounces
  • Color Pink-6.6"
  • Pieces 1.0 Count
  • Priced 17% above the category median ($11.99 across 104 tracked models)

Our scorecard

4.4/5 overall
  • Owner rating4.6/5

    4.6 average across 108 owner ratings

  • Popularity1.8/5

    108 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

Casting all day with a heavy plier clipped to a vest gets tiring, which is where this 3.8 ounce fishing multitool comes in. Built from stainless steel and tungsten carbide and finished in a pink 6.6 inch design, it is priced at $13.99, landing between the $11.97 Rapala RCP6 and the $20.11 Texas SR-5. It ships as a single 1.0 count unit and undercuts the Texas SR-5 by more than six dollars.

The tungsten carbide component points to a tool built with braided line cutting in mind, since tungsten carbide holds an edge better than plain steel jaws over repeated cuts. Stainless steel handles the corrosion resistance side, useful for anglers fishing saltwater. At 4.6 stars across 108 reviews, it matches the rating held by the Texas SR-5 and Rapala RCP6, both also at 4.6 stars, and beats the Berkley BTSTLP6's 4.4 stars.

Where this multitool trails the field is volume. Its 108 reviews are the smallest sample among the pliers in this comparison, and its 100+ units bought last month is well behind the Berkley's 500+ and the Rapala's 200+. For anglers who weigh weight and edge-holding material over review history, the 3.8 ounce build and matching top-tier rating make a reasonable case at $13.99.

Pros

  • Lightest plier in this comparison at 3.8 ounces
  • 4.6 star rating across 108 reviews, matching the Texas SR-5 and Rapala RCP6
  • Tungsten carbide component alongside stainless steel construction
  • Priced at $13.99, undercutting the $20.11 Texas SR-5
  • 100+ units bought last month shows ongoing demand

Cons

  • 108 reviews is the smallest sample of any plier in this comparison
  • 100+ bought last month trails the Berkley's 500+ and Rapala's 200+
  • No brand name listed in the product data
  • Costs more than the $11.97 Rapala RCP6 and $10.99 Berkley BTSTLP6

Specifications

MaterialStainless Steel, Tungsten Carbide
Weight3.8 Ounces
ColorPink-6.6"
Pieces1.0 Count

Performance notes

Tungsten carbide is a harder material than standard steel, which typically means better edge retention when cutting braided or heavier monofilament line over repeated use, a relevant detail for a plier marketed as a multitool. Pairing that with stainless steel construction addresses saltwater corrosion, since stainless resists rust better than plain carbon steel in wet, salty conditions. At 3.8 ounces, this is the lightest plier in this comparison, noticeably lighter than the 0.3 pound Rapala RCP6, which should make it less noticeable clipped to a vest or stored in a pocket over a long day on the water. The pink 6.6 inch design and ergonomic handle point to a grip built for comfort during repeated use, though the listed specs do not detail jaw length or whether it includes a built-in line cutter separate from the carbide edge.

What buyers say

A 4.6 star rating across 108 reviews places this multitool in the same tier as the Texas SR-5 and Rapala RCP6, both also at 4.6 stars, and ahead of the Berkley BTSTLP6's 4.4 stars, suggesting the ergonomic and carbide-reinforced design satisfies buyers at a rate comparable to established competitors. The review count of 108 is the smallest in this set, well under the Rapala's 544 and the Berkley's 848, so the sample size backing that rating is thinner than the others. With 100+ units bought last month, demand is present but modest, trailing the Berkley's 500+ and the Rapala's 200+. Together, the pattern points to a smaller-volume listing earning solid marks without yet building a large review history.

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Frequently asked questions

What materials are used in this fishing multitool?

It combines stainless steel and tungsten carbide, weighs just 3.8 ounces, and comes in a pink 6.6 inch design as a single 1.0 count piece. The stainless steel targets corrosion resistance for saltwater use, while the tungsten carbide component supports cutting braided line.

How does the price compare to other fishing pliers?

At $13.99, it costs more than the $11.97 Rapala RCP6 and the $10.99 Berkley BTSTLP6, but less than the $20.11 Texas SR-5. It sits in the lower half of the price range while still matching the top 4.6 star rating in this set.

Is this a good option if review count matters most?

Not ideally. Its 108 reviews are the smallest sample among the pliers in this comparison, trailing the Rapala RCP6's 544 and the Berkley BTSTLP6's 848. The 4.6 star rating is solid, but buyers wanting the deepest track record should look at those two options first.

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