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How to Tie Essential Fishing Knots

Master the five fishing knots every angler needs for hooks, lures, and line-to-line connections.

BY
Editorial Team
FILED
07 / 07 / 2026
LOCATION
112.55°N 136.37°E
READ
2 min
How to Tie Essential Fishing Knots
HERO FRAME
★ OVERALL 85 / 100
07
The Quick Take

Master the five fishing knots every angler needs for hooks, lures, and line-to-line connections.

Good For
  • ✓ Clear, practical field advice
  • Fishing Tips
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Consider If
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The scorecard.

OVERALL · 84HIGHER IS BETTER
Clarity
88

Easy to read; the practical takeaway lands in the first few paragraphs.

Depth
81

Enough detail for the water. Not so much that the article drowns in it.

Honesty
79

Caveats where they belong. No oversold promises or press-release language.

Usefulness
86

Actionable on your next trip — not just interesting trivia.

Value
85

Pays back the read time whether you’re shopping or just curious.

A knot is the weakest point in any fishing setup. A poorly tied knot fails at the worst possible moment. These five knots cover every situation an angler encounters.

Improved Clinch Knot

The most common knot for tying line to a hook or lure. Thread the line through the eye. Wrap the tag end around the standing line five to seven times. Thread the tag end through the small loop near the eye, then through the large loop that forms. Wet the knot and pull tight. Trim the tag end.

This knot works well with monofilament and fluorocarbon up to about 20-pound test. Above that, the wraps become difficult to cinch properly.

Palomar Knot

Stronger than the improved clinch and easier to tie. Double the line and pass the loop through the hook eye. Tie an overhand knot with the doubled line. Pass the hook through the loop. Pull the standing line and tag end to tighten. Wet before cinching.

The Palomar is the preferred knot for braided line because the doubled line grips itself better than single-line wraps. It works with all line types and strengths.

Uni Knot

A versatile knot that works for hooks, swivels, and line-to-line connections. Thread the line through the eye. Form a loop beside the standing line. Wrap the tag end through the loop and around both lines five to six times. Pull the tag end to tighten the wraps, then slide the knot down to the eye.

The double uni knot (two uni knots back to back) connects two different lines. This is the standard method for attaching a fluorocarbon leader to braided main line.

Loop Knot

A loop knot gives lures free movement instead of cinching tight against the eye. Tie an overhand knot in the line six inches from the end. Thread the tag end through the lure eye and back through the overhand knot. Wrap the tag end around the standing line three times. Pass the tag end back through the overhand knot. Pull to tighten.

Use loop knots with jerkbaits, swimbaits, and topwater lures that need unrestricted action in the water.

Blood Knot

Connects two lines of similar diameter. Overlap the two tag ends by six inches. Wrap one tag end around the other line five times. Tuck the tag end between the two lines at the center. Wrap the other tag end the opposite direction five times. Tuck it through the center opening from the opposite side. Pull both standing lines to tighten.

The blood knot is traditional for fly fishing leaders but works for any line-to-line connection where the diameters are within two sizes of each other.

Practice

Practice each knot at home until you can tie it in under 30 seconds with your eyes closed. On the water, you will tie knots in wind, rain, cold, and low light. Muscle memory built at the kitchen table pays off when conditions are difficult.