The venerable Texas rig is rightfully famous, and from punching thick grass mats to pitching into heavy cover, working a deep hole or hump to gliding under a dock, it’s just plain magic.
But the wacky rig has a lot going for it, too, and there’s something special about its fluttering dance that draws hungry bass like a magnet. And from a weightless rig to a jig head, drop shot to Neko, anglers who underestimate the effectiveness of the wacky rig tend to lose tournaments.
If you’re new to bass fishing or just have questions about how these two rigs compare head-to-head, we’ve got you covered.
Want to know more about the Texas and wacky rigs?
Keep reading!
Table of Contents (clickable)
The Texas Rig
We love the Texas rig, and if you want to know every detail about it, check out these in-depth articles:
The Texas Rig: A Complete Guide to Rigging and Techniques
How to Rig and Fish a Senko: Top 5 Techniques
Ned Rig vs Texas Rig: Which Is Right For You?
The Texas rig is a bass-fishing staple, and its components are deceptively simple. This is definitely a case where the sum is greater than the parts.
Start off with a 3/0 to 4/0 Gamakatsu extra-wide gap (EWG) hook, selecting the exact size to match your trailer.
Add a good bullet sinker, a bead, or silicon float stop, and you’re ready for a soft plastic.
Everything from big worms like the 7 ½-inch Culprit Original to a 6-inch Zoom Brush Hog will work, and the range of curly tails and creature baits that pair with the Texas rig is as long as a country road.
Typically, Texas rigs include a relatively heavy bullet sinker. ¼- to 1 ½-ounce options are popular, making this a grass puncher that’s difficult to rival. Those heavy sinkers also send your trailer to the bottom in a hurry, making the Texas rig ideal for deep water.
That buoyant, typically long and fat soft plastic with a weighted head falls at an angle through the water, gliding gently as it does. That motion can be used to “sail” a Texas-rigged worm up under cover like a dock and into other inaccessible spots.
Moreover, as plenty of anglers have discovered, you can lighten up on the weight, downsize the hook, and run a smaller soft plastic, turning the Texas rig into a front-heavy finesse presentation. Tossed from spinning tackle, this version competes favorably with the Ned, though hooksets can be a bit softer than you’d want.
With a heavier bullet sinker, the Texas rig is best fished from baitcasting tackle, as you’d expect. A good, stiff, sensitive worm rod and a fast reel are essential.
Like most anglers, I prefer braid like Power Pro or Sufix 832, typically 20-pound test or heavier. I’ll also run a leader of mono or fluorocarbon where the water clarity has me worried about line-shy fish.
For “finesse” Texas rigging, I choose a 1/16-ounce bullet weight and trade that 3/0 EWG for a 1/0 offset. My trailers will be in the 4- to 5-inch length, typically something like a 4-inch YUM Dinger.
Obviously, I’ll switch to spinning tackle, choosing a 6 ½- to 7-foot rod in medium light to medium power, like the St. Croix Premier.
A Shimano Ultegra or Pflueger President is more than enough reel for this application.
20-pound braid will typically be my line of choice, with a 6- to 10-pound fluorocarbon or mono leader. On my finesse rod and reel combo, you’ll find Sufix 832 tied to a Seaguar InvizX leader.
Movement, glide, and weedless slide
However you choose to weight and trailer your Texas rig, it’s going to do several things really well.
First, the Texas rig covers a lot of ground. Each twitch or bump will pull that sinker toward you, and any disconnect from the bottom will have your soft plastic racing toward you. Even when fished slowly, as it should be, the Texas rig is anything but a slowpoke.