A Tackle Shop Guide to Soft Plastic and Hardbody Lure Casting Rods
Lure fishing is a highly active, sensory technique. When you are bouncing a plastic across the sand flats or twitching a minnow over a weed bed, you are predominantly relying on the rod blank to tell you what is happening beneath the surface of the water. Lure rods are specifically engineered to give the angler maximum feedback, better casting accuracy, and the mechanical stiffness required to drive a hook into a fish's jaw effectively.
A Note From Our Local Experts
"I often come across anglers in my local area, such as Lake Illawarra, trying to flick soft plastics using heavy, old-school fibreglass rods. They come into the shop and tell me they can’t catch anything on soft plastics and usually blame the lure. When I question them on their setup, the problem is almost always the rod.
If you use a fibreglass rod, it acts like a giant shock absorber. It completely absorbs all the sharp wrist action you try to give the lure, and masks the subtle 'tap' of a bream picking it up off the bottom. If you are going to invest in modern artificial baits, you need a crisp, graphite rod to actually work them properly. It acts as an antenna, transmitting the vibration of the swim directly into your hand so you know the exact second you get a strike."
— Ben Czulowski, Owner, Fishing Tackle Shop (Ocean Storm) | 20+ years industry experience
What Actually Makes a Good Lure Rod?
If you put a dedicated lure rod next to a standard bait rod, the physical differences are obvious. Here is what you are actually paying for and why those features matter on the water.
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High-Modulus Graphite Blanks: Unlike fibreglass, high-modulus graphite is incredibly stiff and lightweight. This rigidity is what transmits tiny vibrations—like a lure bumping a rock or a flathead grabbing the tail of your plastic—up the line and into the handle.
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Fast Taper (Fast Action): A 'fast action' rod only bends in the top 20 to 30 percent of the blank, leaving the lower section stiff. That flexible tip allows you to flick a lightweight lure a good distance, while the stiff backbone provides the immediate leverage required to drive a jig head hook securely into a fish's hard jaw.
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Split Grip Handles: Most modern lure rods feature a split EVA or cork grip, exposing the bare carbon blank between the reel seat and the butt. This reduces the overall physical weight of the rod and allows your hand to sit closer to the raw carbon for even better bite detection.
Pro-Tips: Getting the Most From Your Lure Rod
- Ditch the Monofilament Mainline: Fishing lures on standard mono line defeats the purpose of a sensitive graphite rod. Mono stretches under load like a rubber band. That stretch absorbs your rod twitches and will mask bites. Spool up with a braided line to achieve near-zero stretch, and simply run a rod-length of fluorocarbon or monofilament as your invisible leader.
- Use the Correct Knot Type: When tying on hard body lures, tying a tight knot directly to the tow point restricts the lure's ability to wobble. Always use a small loop knot (like a Lefty's Loop) or a specialised lure clip to give the lure a pivot point. The opposite applies when fishing with soft plastics; most soft baits on jig heads fish best with a firmly closed knot, such as a uni knot, as it allows the lure's tail to impart maximum action.
Lure Rod Application Guide
Match the rod's power and length to the environment you are fishing.
| Target Environment |
Recommended Length |
Power Rating |
Common Target Species |
| Sand Flats & Open Lakes |
7ft to 7ft 2in |
1–3kg or 2–4kg |
Bream, Whiting, Flathead |
| Kayaks & Tight Creeks |
6ft 6in to 6ft 10in |
1–3kg or 2–4kg |
Australian Bass, Trout, Redfin |
| Deep Drop-offs & Reefs |
7ft |
3–6kg or 4–8kg |
Snapper, School Mulloway |
| Heavy Timber Snags |
6ft to 6ft 6in |
4–8kg+ |
Mangrove Jack, Barramundi |
Swipe →
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use the exact same rod for both soft plastics and hard body lures?
Yes, absolutely. While tournament purists might buy a slightly softer rod for hardbodies (to stop the hooks pulling out) and a stiffer, faster rod for plastics (to punch the single hook home), a standard 'moderate-fast' graphite rod sits right in the middle and handles both lure styles incredibly well for the average angler.
Should I buy a 7-foot rod or something shorter?
It depends on your physical environment. A 7-foot to 7-foot 2-inch rod is the modern Australian standard for open water, sand flats, and shore bashing because it clears the shoreline weeds and casts a great distance. But if you are fishing out of a tight kayak, heavily timbered creeks, or skipping plastics under boat hulls and pontoons, dropping down to a 6-foot 6-inch blank gives you much better close-quarters casting accuracy.
What kilogram rating should I choose for standard Aussie estuaries?
Strip away the confusion: a 2–4kg or 1–3kg rod is your absolute bread and butter for chasing bream, whiting, and flathead in local lakes and rivers. Stepping up to a 3–6kg or 4–8kg rod is strictly for when you are expecting snapper, mulloway, or fishing heavy tidal washes where you need raw stopping power to keep a fish out of the reef.
My rod says "Cast Weight 2-10g". What happens if I throw a heavier lure?
The cast weight rating indicates the sweet spot where the rod blank loads and fires efficiently. If you tie on a 20-gram metal lure, the rod will feel sluggish and overloaded during the cast. More importantly, whipping a lure that is significantly over the weight rating puts extreme stress on the fine graphite tip, making it highly susceptible to snapping mid-cast.