Saltwater Fishing Pliers - Stainless Steel Needle Nose Pliers, Hook Review

4.3 (80) Amazon rating$6.99300+ bought last month

Our verdict

The Saltwater needle nose fishing pliers cost $6.99, come with a lanyard, and hold a 4.3 star rating across 80 reviews. More than 300 units sold last month suggests the built-in lanyard and low price are resonating with buyers who want a simple, attachable pliers for regular saltwater trips.

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Best for

Best for anglers who want a low-cost, lanyard-equipped pliers for saltwater trips, at $6.99 with a 4.3 star rating across 80 reviews and strong recent purchase volume of 300+ a month.

Skip if

Skip it if you want the largest available review history, since 80 reviews trails the Rapala's 544 and Berkley's 848, or if you'd rather have a longer-established brand name than this listing's generic branding.

  • Material Plastic, Stainless Steel
  • Weight 4.8 ounces
  • Color Black And Red
  • Pieces 1
  • Feature Stainless Steel Fishing Pliers with Lanyard
  • Priced 42% below the category median ($11.99 across 104 tracked models)

Our scorecard

4.2/5 overall
  • Owner rating4.3/5

    4.3 average across 80 owner ratings

  • Popularity1.4/5

    80 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

A pliers that stays clipped to a vest or a bag strap is one less thing to lose overboard, which is likely why this Saltwater fishing pliers ships with a lanyard as a listed feature. Built from a mix of plastic and stainless steel, it weighs 4.8 ounces, comes in black and red, and costs $6.99. It carries a 4.3 star rating across 80 reviews, and more than 300 units were bought last month.

Priced below every other pliers in this comparison except the Multitool Fp-2023-ss at $4.99, it undercuts the Bneajix A1019 at $7.19, the Berkley BTSTLP6 at $10.99, the Rapala RCP6 at $11.97, and the Texas SR-5 at $20.11. Its 4.3 star rating sits a bit behind the Bneajix's 4.5 and the Berkley's 4.4, but its 80 reviews give it a more established base than the Multitool's 9 or the BiteX's 45.

For anglers who want a lanyard built in from the start rather than added separately, and who prioritize a low price with a mid-sized review history, this Saltwater pliers is a sensible pick among the cheaper options in this lineup.

Pros

  • Built-in lanyard feature keeps the pliers clipped to gear instead of lost overboard
  • Priced at $6.99, among the cheapest in this comparison
  • 80 reviews gives a more established base than several lower-priced competitors
  • 300+ units bought last month shows strong current demand
  • Stainless steel component resists corrosion in saltwater use

Cons

  • 4.3 star rating trails the Bneajix A1019's 4.5 and Berkley's 4.4
  • Plastic content in the material mix versus all-stainless-steel competitors like the Texas SR-5
  • 80 reviews is still well behind the Rapala's 544 and Berkley's 848
  • No listed brand name beyond the generic 'Saltwater' title

Specifications

MaterialPlastic, Stainless Steel
Weight4.8 ounces
ColorBlack And Red
Pieces1
FeatureStainless Steel Fishing Pliers with Lanyard

Performance notes

This pliers mixes plastic and stainless steel, likely plastic handles over stainless steel jaws, a common split that balances grip comfort with a corrosion-resistant working end for saltwater exposure. At 4.8 ounces, it's a light tool, easy to keep clipped on for the length of a trip rather than weighing down a belt or vest. The black and red color combination gives it some visibility against dark bag interiors, useful when digging for it quickly to free a hook. The standout spec here is the built-in lanyard, listed directly as a feature, which matters specifically for boat and saltwater use where gear regularly goes over the rail if it isn't tethered. That single feature differentiates it from plainer listings like the BiteX or the Multitool, neither of which lists a lanyard.

What buyers say

A 4.3 star rating across 80 reviews sits in the middle of the pack, below the Bneajix A1019's 4.5 and the Rapala RCP6's and Texas SR-5's 4.6, but above nothing dramatically. What stands out is the purchase volume: 300+ units bought last month outpaces the BiteX's and Multitool's 100+ and the Texas SR-5's reported 0+, trailing only the Bneajix's 1,000+ and the Berkley's 500+. That combination of a respectable rating, a moderate review base, and strong recent sales suggests a listing that has moved past its early days and is building consistent repeat demand.

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Frequently asked questions

Does this Saltwater fishing pliers come with a lanyard?

Yes, a lanyard is listed as a direct feature of this pliers, which helps keep it attached to a vest, belt, or bag strap during a trip. That matters most on a boat or near open water, where an unclipped tool can easily go over the side.

How does the price of this Saltwater pliers compare to competitors?

At $6.99, it's cheaper than the Bneajix A1019 at $7.19, the BiteX at $9.99, the Berkley at $10.99, the Rapala at $11.97, and the Texas SR-5 at $20.11, with only the Multitool Fp-2023-ss at $4.99 costing less among the pliers covered here.

Is this Saltwater pliers made entirely of stainless steel?

No, the listing specifies a plastic and stainless steel material mix, likely plastic in the handle and stainless steel in the working jaws, which is a common way to balance grip and corrosion resistance without the cost or weight of an all-metal build.

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