Magnet Fishing in Arkansas: Rivers, Finds & What to Know
Arkansas is genuinely underrated for magnet fishing. The Arkansas River corridor has loads of old lock-and-dam infrastructure, and the delta waterways down south are slow and deep enough to accumulate serious junk over decades. Not a lot of legal headaches here either.
Magnet fishing in Arkansas — quick info
Recommended Pull Force
Recommended Rope Length
Beginner Difficulty
Typical Water Conditions
Arkansas has a great mix of slow bayou-style waterways in the delta region and faster, rockier streams in the Ozarks. The Arkansas River runs through the middle of the state and has a lot of old bridge and lock infrastructure worth targeting. Water clarity varies a lot — clearer in the highland streams, murky as anything in the lowlands.
Is it legal? Arkansas doesn't have a statewide magnet fishing ban, and public waterways are generally accessible. The Arkansas Game & Fish Commission manages most major lakes and rivers, and while magnet fishing isn't specifically regulated, the usual rules about removing cultural or archaeological artifacts apply — so if you pull something that looks historically significant, don't just toss it in your truck.
Best magnet fishing gear for Arkansas
Best magnet fishing spots in Arkansas
1. Arkansas River — Broadway Bridge
Little Rock
Decades of river traffic, barge activity, and urban runoff have turned the riverbed under the Broadway Bridge into a junkyard of interesting metal. People have pulled out old tools, chains, and some genuinely weird stuff that probably fell off barges going back to the mid-1900s. There's decent bank access on the north side and street parking nearby.
2. Arkansas River — Murray Lock and Dam Area
Little Rock
This stretch of the Arkansas River near the Murray Lock and Dam is probably the most productive urban magnet fishing spot in the state. Decades of river traffic, barge activity, and bridge construction have left an absolute pile of metal on the bottom here. Access is solid — there's parking nearby and the banks are walkable in most spots.
3. Arkansas River at Murray Lock and Dam
Little Rock
One of the most productive magnet fishing spots in the state. Decades of barge traffic, fishing boats, and river commerce have dropped an incredible amount of metal around the lock structure and the banks nearby. People have pulled out tools, anchors, old chains, and plenty of mystery junk from the murky water here. Parking is easy and access is straightforward from Murray Park.
4. Buffalo National River — Steel Creek Area
Boxley
The Buffalo is one of the clearest rivers in the state, and the Steel Creek area has shallow stretches where you can actually watch your magnet drag across the bottom — which is kind of addictive. That said, this is National Park Service land, and removing objects is generally not allowed, so confirm the current rules with the NPS before you even think about dropping a magnet here. Worth knowing about even if you end up just looking.
5. Buffalo National River — Steel Creek Access
Boxley
The Buffalo is gorgeous and the water clarity in this section means you can actually watch your magnet descend, which is a weird thrill after years of blind fishing in murky water. That said, this is National Park Service land — you need to check with the NPS before pulling anything out, because removing objects is generally not allowed here. Worth visiting to understand what you're working with before you commit.
6. White River — Cotter Bridge
Cotter
Cotter's old truss bridge over the White River has been a crossing point for over a century, and the riverbed underneath shows it — old bridge hardware, tools, and the occasional piece of military-era metal from when the area saw a lot of Army Corps activity. The White runs clear up here, so you get that satisfying visual of watching your finds come up. Parking is easy right off the highway.
7. White River at Cotter Bridge
Cotter
The old truss bridge at Cotter crosses the White River at a spot that's been heavily trafficked for well over a century. The water here is clear enough that you get that satisfying visual of the magnet working, and the riverbed near the bridge pilings tends to hold old fishing gear, bolts, and occasionally something more interesting. Bank access on the Cotter side is easy and the parking situation is decent.
8. Lake Ouachita — Tompkins Bend
Mount Ida
Lake Ouachita is one of the cleaner reservoirs in the state, and the Tompkins Bend area has old submerged road crossings and boat ramp runoff that have been collecting dropped gear and old hardware for decades. It's a Corps of Engineers lake, so access is generally straightforward and there's established parking at the recreation area. Shallow cove edges near the old road beds are the spots to work.
9. Lake Ouachita — Denby Point Access
Mount Ida
Lake Ouachita is one of the clearest lakes in the country and that visibility makes it genuinely different from your average lake magnet session. The boat ramps and fishing piers around Denby Point have seen a lot of dropped gear over the years — tackle boxes, anchors, all kinds of stuff. Parking is easy, and the access points are well-maintained.
10. Kings River near Kings River Ford
Berryville
The Kings River is one of those clear Ozark streams where you almost feel like you're cheating because you can actually see the bottom in a lot of spots. The ford crossing here has been used for generations and old crossing sites always mean dropped tools, horseshoes, and equipment from travelers who didn't make it across dry. Shallow depth makes it approachable even for beginners.
11. Kings River — Highway 62 Bridge
Berryville
The Kings River is one of those Ozark streams that runs gin-clear most of the year, and the Highway 62 crossing near Berryville has been a regular river crossing point long enough that there's real history in the riverbed. Farmers, travelers, and just plain careless people have been dropping stuff off this and earlier bridges here for well over a hundred years. The river is shallow enough at normal levels that you can wade and work it from multiple angles.
12. Arkansas River at Webbers Falls Lock and Dam
Gore
This lock and dam site on the Arkansas River sees serious commercial barge traffic and has for decades. The area around the lock walls and downstream apron is where metal tends to collect, and people have reportedly found tools, cables, and old river hardware in this stretch. Access from the public areas near the dam is workable and the depth runs significant — bring enough rope.
13. Arkansas River — Webbers Falls Lock and Dam
Webbers Falls
Lock and dam sites are some of the most productive spots on any major river, and Webbers Falls is no exception — barge traffic has been running through here since the McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System opened in the 1970s, and things fall off boats constantly. The downstream tailwater area is the zone to work, and there's public bank access on the Oklahoma-adjacent end of the structure. People have found commercial barge hardware, old tools, and navigation equipment in this stretch.
14. Arkansas River — Junction Bridge Area
Little Rock
The Junction Bridge is a converted railroad bridge that's now a pedestrian walkway, which means you've got a fantastic overhead platform to work from in a spot that's been an active river crossing since the 1800s. The riverbed here is layered with decades of dropped and discarded metal. You're legally fishing from a public bridge, which keeps the access questions simple.
15. Lake Ouachita — Crystal Springs Recreation Area
Mount Ida
Lake Ouachita is one of the clearest lakes in the country, which makes it genuinely different from most magnet fishing spots where you're just dropping blind into murk. The old boat ramps and dock areas at Crystal Springs are solid targets, and the lake has been a recreation destination long enough that lost fishing gear, anchors, and dropped equipment have had time to accumulate. The Corps of Engineers manages the lake, so public access points are well established.
16. Lake Dardanelle — Russellville Boat Ramps
Russellville
Lake Dardanelle is a big, busy reservoir on the Arkansas River, and the boat ramps around Russellville are drop-zones for every kind of boating hardware imaginable — anchors, chains, trailer parts, fishing gear. The ramp areas tend to have a gradual slope so you can work different depths without needing a boat. It's a heavily used lake, which in magnet fishing terms means more stuff on the bottom.
17. Lake Dardanelle — Dardanelle Lock and Dam Tailwaters
Dardanelle
The tailwaters below Dardanelle Lock and Dam on the Arkansas River are a magnet fisher's dream in terms of accumulated metal — this area has seen heavy commercial and recreational use for a long time. The current below the dam concentrates debris in predictable eddies if you learn where to look. Public bank access is available on the downstream side.
18. Red River at Garland City Bridge
Garland City
The Red River runs murky and slow down in the southwestern corner of Arkansas, which means you're fishing mostly by feel — but that's fine because the old bridge crossing at Garland City has seen enough traffic over the years to make the blind drops worthwhile. Old bridge hardware, fishing weights, and river debris tend to pile up around bridge pilings in slow-moving rivers like this one. The rural location means you're usually fishing with nobody else around.
19. Ouachita River — Camden Highway 274 Bridge
Camden
Camden sits on the Ouachita in south Arkansas where the river gets wider and murkier than the Ozark streams up north — you're fishing blind, which honestly makes the finds more surprising. The Highway 274 bridge is an older crossing with good bank access, and the Camden area has industrial and military history going back to WWII, which makes the riverbed more interesting than you might expect. People have pulled out old hardware, tools, and some genuinely unidentifiable pieces of metal here.
20. Ouachita River — Malvern Riverside Park
Malvern
The Ouachita River through Malvern has a public park with direct river access and it's the kind of mid-size Southern river where old tools, car parts, and scrap metal have been getting tossed or dropped for generations. The bottom is muddy in places so you won't see what's coming up, but that's half the fun. Parking right at the park makes this an easy half-day trip.
21. Illinois Bayou at Scottsville Bridge
Russellville
Illinois Bayou feeds into the Arkansas River just downstream, and the old bridge crossings along this creek have been collection points for metal debris from the farming and timber operations that have worked this area for generations. The water is relatively shallow and the access from the roadside is easy, which makes it a solid spot if you're newer to this and don't want to deal with complicated access situations. Old tools and farm hardware are the usual finds.
22. Red River — Fulton Bridge Site
Fulton
The Red River forms part of the Arkansas-Texas border in the southwest corner of the state, and the Fulton area has old ferry and bridge crossings that go back to the 1800s. It's a murky, slow-moving river down here, but that sediment actually preserves metal surprisingly well. Access is relatively open along the Arkansas bank and there's not much competition — most people don't think to come this far south.
23. Red River — Garland City Access
Garland City
The Red River down in the southwest corner of the state is a different beast from the clear Ozark streams — it runs slow and murky and has that classic lowland river character. Garland City sits on a bend with old bridge remnants in the area and the kind of river bottom that holds metal well. It's off the beaten path, which means less competition and more undisturbed ground to work.
24. Lake Dardanelle — Old Highway 22 Boat Ramp
Dardanelle
Lake Dardanelle is a Corps of Engineers reservoir on the Arkansas River and gets heavy recreational fishing traffic all year. The old boat ramp areas and dock pilings are where people have been accidentally dropping gear for decades — fishing lures, anchors, outboard motor parts, the occasional knife. Public access is solid and the launch ramps give you a built-in spot to work from without scrambling down a bank.
25. Greers Ferry Lake — Heber Springs Dam Area
Heber Springs
Greers Ferry is a Corps of Engineers lake with clear water and a lot of recreational boat traffic, and the area near the dam tailwater and the older Heber Springs bridges has been collecting dropped gear since the lake was impounded in 1962. The shoreline below the dam on the Little Red River side is especially productive and has produced old construction hardware from the dam build itself. There's established public access and the area sees enough visitors that the parking situation is easy.
26. Greers Ferry Lake — Heber Springs Public Access
Heber Springs
Greers Ferry is a massive Army Corps of Engineers reservoir with tons of public shoreline and a long history of recreational boating, which translates to a solid amount of dropped gear on the bottom near the ramps and docks. The water is clear enough in the upper sections that you sometimes get visual confirmation of what you're pulling. The Heber Springs area has multiple access points so you're not fighting for space.
27. Ouachita River at Camden Bridge
Camden
Camden sits on the Ouachita River in the southern part of the state and the bridge crossing here spans a river that's been a working waterway for a long time — there was significant military and industrial activity in this area during World War II, which adds an interesting layer to what might be sitting on the bottom. The river runs deeper and slower here than the Ozark streams up north, and the bridge pilings are the obvious target. Bank access on the town side is manageable.
Magnet fishing in Arkansas — FAQ
Is magnet fishing legal in Arkansas?+
What pull strength do I actually need for the Arkansas River?+
How long should my rope be for Arkansas waterways?+
Are the Ozark streams worth magnet fishing, or is it all too fast?+
What do I do if I pull up something that might be a weapon?+
Is Arkansas a good state for beginners?+
Can I magnet fish in Arkansas state parks?+
Here are some magnet fishing finds in Arkansas
- Guns and Ammunition: Magnet fishermen have reportedly found guns and ammunition in Arkansas waterways, such as the Arkansas River.
- Car parts: Some magnet fishers have found car parts, such as wheels, engines, and even entire cars, in lakes and rivers in Arkansas.
- Historical items: Some people have reported finding historical items, such as old coins and artifacts, while magnet fishing in Arkansas.
- Fishing gear: As you might expect, some magnet fishermen have pulled up fishing gear such as lures, hooks, and weights.
- Miscellaneous objects: In addition to the above, magnet fishing can yield a variety of miscellaneous objects, including tools, bicycles, and even safes.
- Jewelry: Some magnet fishermen have reported finding jewelry, such as rings, necklaces, and bracelets, in Arkansas waterways.
- Construction materials: Magnet fishermen have found construction materials, such as rebar and nails, in bodies of water in Arkansas.
- Household items: It is not uncommon for magnet fishermen to pull up household items, such as keys, silverware, and coins, from lakes and rivers in Arkansas.
- Industrial equipment: Some magnet fishermen have found industrial equipment, such as metal pipes and machinery parts, while fishing in Arkansas.
- Personal items: Magnet fishing can also yield personal items, such as cell phones, cameras, and wallets, that may have been accidentally dropped into the water.
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