Drasry Ice Fishing Gloves Check price on Amazon

Drasry Ice Fishing Gloves Review

4.3 (881) Amazon rating$14.24

Our verdict

The Drasry Ice Fishing Gloves sell for $14.24 and hold a 4.3 star average across 881 reviews, making them the cheapest neoprene option in this lineup by a wide margin. Anglers who want cold water protection without paying the $23.21 Glacier price or the $28.35 Lindy price get a solid middle ground here.

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Best for

Ice anglers and cold weather casters who need a budget neoprene glove in a large size, especially those comparing the Stone Pattern color against darker options like the Glacier 015BK or Berkley BTLCFG.

Skip if

Skip these if you need a puncture proof design, since the Lindy AC950 is built specifically for that at $28.35. Anyone chasing the highest review volume in this category should also look at the Berkley BTLCFG instead.

  • Material Neoprene
  • Size Large
  • Color Stone Pattern

Our scorecard

4.3/5 overall
  • Owner rating4.3/5

    4.3 average across 881 owner ratings

  • Popularity3.3/5

    881 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

Standing on a frozen lake at dawn, the first thing that fails is usually your hands, not your line. The Drasry Ice Fishing Gloves are built from neoprene, the same material found in the Glacier 015BK, and are sized for Large hands in a Stone Pattern colorway. At $14.24 they sit well below every other glove in this set, undercutting the Glacier by nine dollars and the Lindy AC950 by more than fourteen.

With 881 reviews and a 4.3 star average, the Drasry gloves have accumulated more feedback than the Glacier 015BK's 114 reviews, though they trail the Lindy AC950's 898 reviews and the Berkley BTLCFG's 2,607 reviews. Amazon lists 0+ bought in the past month for this listing, the same figure shown for the Glacier, while the Lindy shows 100+ and the Berkley shows 1,000+, suggesting steadier recent demand for those two.

Neoprene is a reasonable baseline for cold water glove material, and the Drasry price makes it an easy entry point for anglers who do not want to commit to the puncture proof Lindy AC950 or the ultra cheap Berkley BTLCFG at $7.99. The tradeoff is a review count and recent purchase volume that lag behind both of those competitors, which matters if buying pattern strength is part of your decision.

Pros

  • Priced at $14.24, the least expensive neoprene glove in this comparison.
  • Neoprene construction matches the material used in the pricier Glacier 015BK.
  • 881 reviews at a 4.3 star average shows a track record well past the Glacier's 114 reviews.
  • Available in a Large size for a secure fit.
  • Stone Pattern color offers a patterned alternative to solid black or pink options.

Cons

  • Bought last month is listed at 0+, the same low figure as the Glacier 015BK and well behind the Lindy AC950's 100+ and Berkley's 1,000+.
  • No puncture proof rating like the Lindy AC950 lists.
  • 4.3 star average trails the 4.6 stars posted by both the Lindy AC950 and Berkley BTLCFG.
  • Only sold in one size and one color, unlike some rivals with more options.
  • Review count of 881 is still well short of the Berkley BTLCFG's 2,607.

Specifications

MaterialNeoprene
SizeLarge
ColorStone Pattern

Performance notes

Neoprene is the material doing the work here, the same fabric the Glacier 015BK uses, and it is chosen for cold water gloves because it insulates even when wet, unlike the plastic listed for the Berkley BTLCFG. The Stone Pattern color and Large sizing suggest this is built for anglers who want a snugger, more camouflaged glove rather than the one size fits most approach of the pink Berkley pair. At $14.24, the price point is closer to an impulse buy than the $23.21 to $28.35 range of the Glacier and Lindy gloves, which typically signals a lighter duty build. The spec sheet does not list a weight for the Drasry gloves, unlike the Glacier's 6.4 ounces or the Lindy's 0.12 kilograms, so buyers comparing bulk and dexterity across models will need to rely on the size and material listing alone.

What buyers say

A 4.3 star average across 881 reviews puts the Drasry gloves in the middle of this group, ahead of the Glacier 015BK's 4.2 stars but behind the 4.6 stars each posted by the Lindy AC950 and Berkley BTLCFG. The 0+ bought last month figure matches the Glacier and sits well under the Lindy's 100+ and the Berkley's 1,000+, which points to lighter current momentum even though the review base is substantial. A high review count paired with slower recent purchase activity often means a product built a following early and now sees steadier, less bursty demand rather than fading popularity.

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Frequently asked questions

What size does the Drasry Ice Fishing Gloves come in?

The listing specifies a Large size in a Stone Pattern color. There is no mention of additional size options in the spec sheet, so anglers who need a different fit should compare against gloves like the Lindy AC950, which lists a Large/X-Large option.

How does the price compare to other ice fishing gloves?

At $14.24, the Drasry gloves cost less than the Glacier 015BK at $23.21 and the Lindy AC950 at $28.35. Only the Berkley BTLCFG, at $7.99, undercuts it, though that listing carries a different material spec and a 1,000+ bought last month figure.

Is the 4.3 star rating reliable given the review count?

With 881 reviews behind it, the 4.3 star average has a solid sample size, more than the Glacier 015BK's 114 reviews though fewer than the Lindy AC950's 898 or the Berkley BTLCFG's 2,607. That volume makes the rating reasonably stable.

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