Best Soft Plastics for Bass: The Complete Guide

Hard baits get the glory. Soft plastic baits catch the fish. Ask any serious bass angler what fills the most of their tackle box, and the answer is almost always soft plastic lures. They're cheap, they're versatile, and they work in every season on every body of water in the country.
This guide breaks down all the major soft plastic categories for bass, when to throw each one, and what to look for when you're building your box.
Why Soft Plastics Are Essential for Bass Fishing
The best soft plastics for bass share a few qualities that no hard bait fully replicates:
- They feel natural when a bass bites, giving you a half-second longer before the fish spits it
- They can be rigged virtually weightless for finesse presentations or heavily weighted for deep-water work
- They're inexpensive enough that you can lose a dozen in a day and not feel it
- A bass can inhale a soft plastic in a single bite — hard baits have to be struck precisely at the hook
Best Soft Plastics for Bass by Category
Craw Baits — The Most Natural Bottom Bait
Craw baits for bass mimic a crawfish — the single most important forage item for bass in most North American fisheries. A well-designed craw bait has claws that flap and flutter with any movement, a profile that looks alive at rest, and enough bulk to justify a strike. Use them on jigs, Texas rigs, and Carolina rigs any time bass are holding on the bottom. Best colors: green pumpkin, brown/orange, and watermelon red.
Creature Baits — Maximum Bulk and Action
Most creature baits for bass are bulky, appendage-heavy soft plastics designed to displace water and look alive on the fall. They're the go-to trailer for heavy-cover flipping and pitching — the wide body and multiple limbs look like something worth chasing into cover. Texas rig them on 5/0 EWG hooks for most presentations. Best colors: black and blue in dark water, green pumpkin and watermelon in clear.
Stick Baits — The All-Season Finesse Option
A stick bait for bass (stickworm) is a straight, cylindrical soft plastic with subtle action and big appeal. The Senko-style stickworm falls horizontally with a slight shimmy that drives bass crazy. Rig it wacky-style on an open hook for the most action, or nose-hook it Texas style for cover fishing. Stickbaits produce year-round but especially shine when bass are in post-spawn recovery and want something easy to eat.
Soft Swimbaits — The Baitfish Imitation
Soft plastic swimbaits for bass range from 3" paddle tails on a jig head to full-size 6"+ boot tail swimbaits rigged on a swimbait hook. The thumping, rolling action of a paddle tail swimbait is one of the most consistent bass triggers available. Best retrieved just fast enough to feel the tail kicking. Fish them on a swim jig, a weighted swimbait hook, or a standard ball head jig.
Soft Jerkbaits — The Open-Water Finesse Killer
Soft jerkbaits for bass are slender, shad-shaped soft plastics rigged on a wide-gap hook and worked with sharp, darting twitches. The action mimics a dying or fleeing baitfish — exactly what a bass wants to see in open water over points, flats, and around baitfish schools. Weightless is the classic setup; a weighted EWG hook for deeper presentations.
Tube Baits — Smallmouth's Weakness
Tube baits for bass are hollow-body soft plastics with a cylindrical shape and a fringe of tentacles at the tail that flutter on the fall. They were popularized for smallmouth bass on rocky structure, and they remain one of the most effective smallmouth baits available. They also work well on largemouth around rocky banks and dock posts. Rig them on an internal tube jig head or a Texas-rigged EWG hook.
Grubs — The Underused Classic
Grubs for bass fishing are curly-tail or twin-tail soft plastics that have been catching fish since the 1970s. They work on a ball head jig, a straight-shank hook, or a drop shot. The curly tail creates action on every movement and even at rest in current. Best in 3–4" sizes on a ball head jig around dock posts, rocky structure, and deep ledges.
Trailer Baits — What You Put Behind a Jig
Trailer baits for bass are soft plastics designed specifically to be added to jigs, chatterbaits, and spinnerbaits. The right jig trailer adds bulk, changes fall rate, and gives a jig action it wouldn't have on its own. Craw trailers and chunk-style trailers dominate for jig fishing; swimbait tails shine on swim jigs and chatterbaits.
What Color Soft Plastics Should You Use?
The same color logic that applies to jigs applies to soft plastics for bass:
- Clear water: Natural greens — green pumpkin, watermelon — match crawfish and baitfish closely
- Stained water: Add contrast — watermelon/red flake, pumpkin/chart — for better visibility
- Murky or dark water: Black, junebug, or dark blue — create a strong silhouette
How to Rig Soft Plastics for Bass
The most versatile soft plastic rigs:
- Texas rig: The universal rig for any soft plastic in or around cover. Bullet weight, EWG hook, bait rigged weedless.
- Wacky rig: Hook through the middle of a stickbait. The bait falls with a natural shaking action that's deadly on pressured fish.
- Carolina rig: Egg sinker on the main line, 18–24" fluorocarbon leader, soft plastic on an EWG hook. Great for covering hard bottom in 8–20 feet.
- Drop shot: Soft plastic rigged 8–18 inches above a drop shot weight. The bait suspends off the bottom and quivers naturally with any line movement.
- Jig trailer: Soft plastic threaded onto the hook of a jig as a trailer to add bulk, action, and natural appearance.
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