Anglers who chase fish in the surf know they need a rig that does more than just hold live bait.
It needs to have enough weight to allow long casts when necessary, hold the bottom against tide and current, and offer the option of a tough leader tied to their hook.
The Fish Finder Rig offers all of this, explaining its enduring popularity from Maine to Texas, California to Alaska.
If you want to know the advantages of the Fish Finder Rig, learn to assemble it in a snap, and discover a modification that can save your bait from crabs, keep reading!
Table of Contents (clickable)
What is the Fish Finder Rig?
A staple of surf and pier fishing, the Fish Finder rig uses a strong barrel swivel to connect your main line – holding a sliding pyramid sinker – to your leader.
Designed to allow easy, long casts and to hold the bottom exceptionally well, it’s simply an amazing rig for presenting live or cut bait.
Why Use a Fish Finder Rig?
When you’re fishing from the beach, you often need a rig that provides enough weight for long casts, but you always need a rig that can stay put in the face of surging tides and heavy currents.
Pyramid sinkers are ideal for holding the bottom, and since they range in size from about one ounce to massive five-ounce options, you can always find the weight you need for your conditions and needs.
Used in tandem with strong leader and a good hook, it’s an ideal rig for catching everything from croaker to flounder, blues to reds.
How to Assemble a Fish Finder Rig
Fish Finder Rigs come together in just seconds, and if you tie one up once, you’ll remember it forever:
Cut 18 to 25 inches of leader using 20-pound mono or prepared stainless steel leader for species with aggressive teeth. Most prepared leaders already come with a barrel swivel.