Lure Color Selector
Choose the best lure color based on water clarity, weather, and light conditions. Adjust based on what the fish are responding to in your area.
Lure Color Selector
Recommended Colors
Green Pumpkin
Natural colors work best in stained water.
All Recommended Colors:
Adjust Parameters
Results are starting points based on common patterns. Fish behavior varies by location and day — always experiment if the first choice doesn't work.
Quick Reference: Color by Water Clarity
Save or screenshot this chart for on-the-water use.
| Water Clarity | Best Colors | Avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Clear Water | Green pumpkin, watermelon, brown, white | Bright chartreuse, hot pink |
| Stained Water | Junebug, green pumpkin w/ flake, crawdad | Very subtle colors |
| Murky Water | Chartreuse, white, black, orange | Subtle natural colors |
Note: These are general guidelines. Many factors affect color choice, and local knowledge is valuable.
How It Works
Selection Factors
- 1
Water Clarity
In clear water, fish can see details, so natural colors work best. In murky water, bright colors help fish find the lure.
- 2
Light Conditions
Bright days call for subtle colors. Cloudy days or low light allow brighter colors.
- 3
Season
Fish activity and forage change with seasons, affecting color preferences.
- 4
Species
Different fish see colors differently and prefer different forage.
Pro Tips
Start with Green Pumpkin
When in doubt, green pumpkin works in most conditions for bass. Pair it with the right rig from our soft plastic rig selector.
Match the Hatch
If bass are eating crawfish, use crawfish colors. If chasing shad, use shad colors. Our spinnerbait blade selector can help match blade color to conditions.
Keep a Variety
Carry multiple colors and be willing to change if fish aren't responding. See our lure color chart for a complete reference.
Cold Water = Darker
Water temperature can affect color preference — colder water often favors darker colors. Use our crankbait depth calculator to find the right depth for cold water presentations.
Frequently Asked Questions
In murky water (under 2 ft visibility), use bright colors like chartreuse, white, black-blue, or orange — these create maximum visibility when fish can't see well. Dark colors like black and blue create strong silhouettes in low visibility. Avoid subtle natural colors like green pumpkin in muddy water since fish can't see the details. Pair bright lures with heavier line from our line strength calculator since fish rely more on vibration than sight. Our spinnerbait blade selector can help you choose vibration-heavy blades for murky conditions.
In clear water (5+ ft visibility), use natural colors like green pumpkin, watermelon, brown, or natural shad — bass can see details and inspect lures closely. Smallmouth bass in clear water respond especially well to crawdad patterns and natural browns. Match the hatch by observing what forage is present. Use 6-10 lb fluorocarbon in clear water for better invisibility. Check our leader calculator for setting up fluorocarbon leaders in clear water, and our soft plastic rig selector for the best rig pairing with natural colors.
In spring (pre-spawn), bass respond to crawfish colors as they move shallow — use our soft plastic rig selector for spring rigging options. During the spawn, white and green pumpkin trigger territorial strikes. In summer, match the hatch — shad patterns if bass are chasing baitfish. In fall, baitfish-oriented colors like shad, perch, and white are effective. In cold water, darker colors create better silhouettes. Our crankbait depth calculator helps you find the right depth for seasonal crankbait color choices.
Walleye are low-light predators. At dawn, dusk, and night, use gold, chartreuse, orange, or glow colors. On overcast days, gold, purple, and pink work well. On bright days, switch to silver, white, or natural patterns. In deep water, colors fade — use brighter colors even in clear conditions since reds and oranges disappear below 15-20 ft. Our spinnerbait blade selector can help you choose the right blade color for walleye spinnerbaits, and our jig head weight calculator helps pair the right weight with your color choice.
Matching the hatch is a good starting point, especially in clear water where fish can inspect your lure. If bass are eating crawfish, use crawdad colors. If chasing shad, use shad patterns. However, in stained or murky water, presentation and vibration matter more than exact color match. Carry a few versatile colors — green pumpkin, Junebug, and chartreuse cover most conditions. See our lure color chart for a complete color reference, and use our lure color selector to narrow down choices by specific conditions.
Recommended Next Steps
Based on your current tool, these related tools might help.