TIDEWE Hunting Waders with Boot Hanger & 600G Insulation, Waterproof Review
Our verdict
The TIDEWE 600G insulated hunting waders cost $89.99 and hold a 4.5-star average across 3,000 reviews, the highest rating of the four waders in this comparison. With 600 grams of insulation and neoprene construction, they are built for cold-weather hunting and fishing rather than warm-season wading.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Cold-weather anglers and hunters who need real insulation, since 600 grams of neoprene insulation targets low-temperature wading, and buyers who want the strongest rating in this set, a 4.5-star average built on 3,000 reviews.
Skip if
Skip it if warm-weather wading is the main use, since 600 grams of insulation adds bulk and heat that is unnecessary outside cold seasons, or if a lower price matters more, TIDEWE's own WD001-BN-11 costs $40 less.
- Material Neoprene
- Size 10
- Color Realtree Max 7
Our scorecard
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Owner rating4.5/5
4.5 average across 3,000 owner ratings
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Popularity4.5/5
3,000 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 day of late-season duck hunting or cold-water wading calls for waders that actually hold heat, not just keep water out. The TIDEWE 600G Hunting Waders are built around that need, pairing neoprene construction with 600 grams of insulation and a Realtree Max 7 camo finish aimed squarely at hunters rather than casual waders.
At $89.99, they land within a dollar of FROGG's 2713143 model, which also uses neoprene and costs $89.15. The TIDEWE listing specifies a size 10 fit and the Realtree Max 7 pattern, and it carries a 4.5-star rating, the top score among the four waders in this set. That score comes from 3,000 reviews, a bigger base than FROGG's 786 and FROGG's other model at 2,100, though still smaller than TIDEWE's own budget WD001-BN-11 at 13,200.
Bought-last-month sits at 0+, matching FROGG's 2713143 and trailing the 50+ and 600+ figures posted by the other two waders here. That does not undercut the rating, 4.5 stars is the highest of the group, but it does mean recent purchase volume is harder to gauge than for the higher-turnover alternatives.
Pros
- Highest rating in this comparison set at 4.5 stars, ahead of FROGG's 4.3 and 4.2 and TIDEWE's own 4.4-star WD001-BN-11.
- 3,000 reviews, nearly four times FROGG 2713143's 786 and more than FROGG 2711126-2X's 2,100.
- 600 grams of insulation built into a neoprene shell for cold-weather use.
- Realtree Max 7 camo finish suited to hunting rather than a plain color.
- Neoprene construction matches the material used in both FROGG waders in this set.
Cons
- Priced at $89.99, roughly double TIDEWE's own WD001-BN-11 at $49.99.
- Bought last month shows 0+, the same low figure as FROGG's 2713143 and well behind the 600+ of TIDEWE's budget model.
- Only one size (10) and one color (Realtree Max 7) are listed.
- The added insulation weight is not specified, so overall wader weight is unclear from the specs.
Specifications
| Material | Neoprene |
|---|---|
| Size | 10 |
| Color | Realtree Max 7 |
Performance notes
600 grams of insulation is a meaningful amount for a wader, aimed at late-season conditions where standing in cold water for hours is the norm rather than the exception. Paired with a neoprene shell, that insulation level puts these waders closer to hunting gear than to a lightweight summer wader like the nylon-PVC options in this set. The tradeoff is that insulated neoprene waders run warmer and heavier than uninsulated versions, which is worth weighing if the use case is warm-weather bass fishing rather than cold-morning duck hunting. The Realtree Max 7 camouflage pattern reinforces that hunting focus, since it is designed to blend into marsh and field settings rather than serve as a general-purpose color. At $89.99, the price sits close to FROGG's neoprene 2713143 at $89.15, so buyers choosing between the two are mainly weighing insulation level and camo pattern against FROGG's plainer forest green finish.
What buyers say
A 4.5-star average across 3,000 reviews is the strongest combination of rating and volume in this comparison, edging out FROGG's 4.3 stars on 786 reviews, FROGG's 4.2 stars on 2,100, and even TIDEWE's own WD001-BN-11 at 4.4 stars. That said, the bought-last-month figure sits at 0+, the same quiet reading as FROGG's 2713143, and it lags well behind the WD001-BN-11's 600+ recent buyers. Read together, the pattern suggests a product that has built a large, well-reviewed base over time rather than one currently seeing a purchase surge. For a specialized insulated hunting wader, that steady accumulation of reviews at a high rating is arguably more telling than a short-term spike in sales.
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Frequently asked questions
How much insulation do the TIDEWE 600G waders have?
They carry 600 grams of insulation built into a neoprene shell, a level suited to cold-weather hunting and fishing where standing in cold water for extended periods is common. That is heavier insulation than an uninsulated neoprene or nylon-PVC wader would offer.
What size and color does this TIDEWE wader come in?
The listing specifies size 10 in the Realtree Max 7 camouflage pattern, a finish built for blending into hunting environments rather than general-purpose color options like the forest green or brown seen on other waders in this comparison. No other size or color option is listed for this model.
Is this TIDEWE wader worth the $89.99 price compared to cheaper options?
It costs $40 more than TIDEWE's own WD001-BN-11 at $49.99, but it adds 600 grams of insulation for cold-weather use and holds the highest rating in this comparison at 4.5 stars across 3,000 reviews, versus 4.4 stars on the budget model.