Magnetar Magnet Fishing Rope 20 Meters — The One I Keep Coming Back To
Sixty-five feet. That's what 20 meters actually is, and honestly — that's most of the spots you're ever going to fish from. The bridge near me is maybe 30 feet off the water. The canal spot I hit on weekends? Even less.
This one's made by Magnetar, which is a brand that actually does magnet fishing gear for a living. Not a rope company that slapped a new tag on something. That matters more than it sounds like it should.
I've used plenty of generic rope that claimed to be up to the job. This isn't that.
I want to talk about the rope situation for a second, because I think a lot of people — especially when they're starting out — just grab whatever's nearby. Paracord. Climbing rope off Amazon. The thing that came with their first kit that they've been using for two years even though it's half unraveled at one end. I was that person. For longer than I'd like to admit.
Then I picked up this Magnetar rope and the first thing I noticed was how it actually felt in my hand. Not stiff, not slimy, not that weird waxy texture you get on certain synthetic ropes that makes you feel like you've been handling candles all afternoon. Just... good rope. The kind where you immediately think okay, someone thought about this.
Sixty-five feet is the right number.
I know some people want 30 meters, 50 meters, more more more — and sure, there are spots where you need it. But I've been doing this long enough to know that the vast majority of bridges and docks and canals you're actually going to visit sit somewhere between 15 and 40 feet off the water. Twenty meters covers nearly all of that with room to spare. I dropped this thing off an old iron bridge over a creek in November — water running fast, cold enough that I had to keep switching which hand was holding the rope — and I had plenty of length left over. Probably had eight feet coiled at my feet the whole time.
What I actually appreciate is that Magnetar built this rope for magnet fishing specifically. That sounds obvious but it's not. Generic rope has to be all things — it's got to work for camping, boating, tying stuff to your truck, whatever. This one doesn't have to compromise. The handling is clean, it knots well — I run a double figure-eight on mine — and it hasn't shown any fraying or weird soft spots after consistent use. I've got a friend who bought some unbranded stuff for a few bucks less and within a few trips it was starting to look rough. Like, visibly rough. Not the vibe when you're dangling a magnet over forty feet of dark water.
The price is honest.
Twenty-nine ninety-nine for a rope that's going to actually last is a reasonable exchange. This isn't a gear hobby where you want to be replacing your rope every season because you cheaped out. The magnet's the investment — the rope just needs to not fail. This one doesn't fail. At least mine hasn't, and I've put it through enough grimy riverbeds and awkward bridge railings to have a decent sample size by now.
One thing I'll say — if you're someone who fishes spots where you genuinely need more than 65 feet, this isn't your rope. There are longer options out there and you should probably grab one of those. But if you're a normal person fishing normal spots? You're probably fine. More than fine.
My hands were absolutely destroyed that November trip, by the way. Completely unrelated to the rope. That's just what late autumn magnet fishing does to you and I keep going back anyway.
More gear picks: Best Magnet Fishing Accessories • Best Magnet Fishing Kits • Best Magnet Fishing Magnets
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Reviewer: Will Flaiz
Based in Portland, Oregon, Will Flaiz has turned his magnet fishing hobby into a significant part of his life, sharing his passion through his widely recognized platform, MagnetFishingIsFun.com. His journey began along the serene waters of the Willamette and Columbia Rivers, where he not only sought the thrill of discovering hidden treasures but also embraced the responsibility of cleaning up the environment and protecting natural habitats.


