Tackle Boxes
51 products
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Explore fishing tackle boxes for organising lures, hooks, weights, tools and small accessories in Ireland. Compare external size, compartment layout, adjustable dividers, closure, hinge strength, material, water resistance, drainage and stackability around the fishing method, transport bag and quantity of tackle. Separate wet, sharp and chemically reactive items, and choose a box that remains secure when carried or inverted.




Tackle boxes for organised fishing equipment
A tackle box protects small equipment while making it faster to find the correct lure, hook, weight or connector. Fixed compartments suit repeated layouts, while adjustable dividers allow custom sections. External dimensions, lid depth and closure design determine whether the box fits the intended bag and keeps contents separated.
Clear lids improve identification, but material thickness and hinge quality matter more than appearance. Water-resistant construction can reduce spray entry without necessarily being submersible. Check the stated protection level, especially for boat and shore use, and do not assume a sealed box will float.
Browse the parent fishing accessories range, compare fishing optics, use specialist hook and rig storage, or keep polarised sunglasses in a separate protective case.
Choose size, dividers and protection
Start with the largest item that must fit, then check whether smaller components remain contained when the lid closes. Dividers should reach the lid or use a design that prevents hooks and swivels migrating between sections. Deep boxes suit bulky lures, while shallow trays improve access to fine terminal tackle.
Separate soft plastics from materials they may react with, and isolate wet or salted tackle until it can be rinsed and dried. Use hook guards or individual compartments for exposed points. Heavy weights should sit low and close to strong hinges rather than stressing a thin lid.
The GC Sintez accessory case review provides a practical storage example. Match rigid boxes and soft cases by measured internal dimensions rather than nominal size names.
Clean and audit tackle boxes
Empty sand, bait and salt after each session, wash suitable boxes and dry them open. Inspect latches, hinges, seals and divider slots. Replace cracked boxes that could release hooks or allow water into valuable tackle.
Label specialist trays, record valuable contents and avoid carrying unnecessary weight. Keep chemicals, oils and adhesives upright in their original containers, and never store food with fishing tackle. Review the layout before each trip, return every item to its labelled position and remove damaged hooks, split soft plastics and leaking containers before they contaminate the rest of the box.










































