Featured Wooly Bugger Flies
For everyday trout fishing, start with the olive or black bead head in size 10, or pick up the 36-fly assortment to cover all conditions at once. For bigger rivers and deeper holes, the cone head size 8 gets the fly down faster where bead heads can't reach. If you want to tie your own, the black bead head tying kit includes every material you need.
- 36 Wooly Bugger Fly Assortment: Thirty-six flies across the most productive colors, including olive, black, brown, and chartreuse, all in one order. The fastest way to stock a streamer box with a full color range without placing individual orders.
- Olive Bead Head Wooly Bugger, Size 10, Qty 6: Six bead head flies per pack on size 10 hooks. The top-producing color across most trout water and the first one to reach for when conditions are unknown.
- Black Bead Head Wooly Bugger, Size 10, Qty 6: Six per pack on size 10 hooks, consistent across all seasons and water types. If olive is not producing, this is the next fly to tie on.
- Cone Head Olive Wooly Bugger, Size 8, Qty 4: Built for deeper holes and stronger current where bead head patterns don't get down fast enough. The solid metal cone at the nose sinks faster and keeps the fly near the bottom in big water. Four per pack, size 8.
- Bead Head Black Wooly Bugger Fly Tying Kit, Size 10: Pre-packaged with every material needed to tie your own black bead head wooly buggers, including marabou, chenille, hackle, a brass bead, hooks, and thread. Each kit produces multiple finished flies.
How to Choose Wooly Bugger Flies for Trout
Choose bead head wooly bugger flies for average-depth trout water, cone head wooly buggers for deeper and faster water, and color based on water clarity.
The Bead Head in Size 10 is the go-to choice for most anglers. It performs well in riffles, runs, and normal pools, making it ideal for everyday trout fishing in typical conditions.
For deeper presentations, the Cone Head in Sizes 6 and 8 is the better option. Its weighted head cuts through fast current and reaches deep holes, making it particularly effective in winter, early spring, and large rivers.
If you're a first-time buyer unsure which colors to commit to, an Assortment Pack lets you test across mixed conditions before purchasing singles — a practical way to find what works in your local waters.
Finally, if you prefer tying your own flies, a Fly Tying Kit gives DIY anglers the materials to create their own patterns at a lower cost per fly than buying pre-tied options.
Bead Head vs. Cone Head
Bead head wooly buggers in size 10 are the right starting point for most trout anglers. The small brass or gold bead adds enough weight to keep the fly in the strike zone on a standard floating fly line, covering riffles, runs, and average-depth pools where trout feed most of the day.
Cone head wooly buggers in sizes 6 and 8 carry more metal at the nose and sink faster. They belong in deeper holes, stronger current, and bigger rivers where trout hold near the bottom, especially during winter and early spring. Both bead head and cone head patterns produce a jigging action on the retrieve, but the cone's greater weight gets the fly down faster and holds it there in heavy current where a bead head would skip along the surface.
Best Color by Water Clarity
Match wooly bugger color to water clarity, not just personal preference.
Olive outperforms all other colors in clear to lightly stained water and is the first color to reach for on most trout rivers. Black is the pick for low-light conditions, overcast days, and off-color water from runoff. Chartreuse and orange cut through murky, high-water conditions when trout need a fly that stands out to strike. Brown and tan read as natural patterns in streams where sculpin and crayfish make up most of the forage.
Best Size for Trout
Size 10 covers the widest range of trout situations, from small creeks to mid-size rivers, and handles fish from pan-sized trout up through larger fish in heavier water. Size 8 adds profile and weight for bigger rivers and more aggressive presentations. Size 6 is built for the largest water, winter deep-hole fishing, and crossover use on bass and pike.
Fly Tying Kits vs. Ready-to-Fish Packs
Wild Water carries 7 wooly bugger tying kits covering black, olive, orange, white, tri-color, and rubber leg variations. Each kit includes marabou, chenille body material, hackle, a bead, hooks, and thread, with enough material to produce multiple finished flies. The cost per fly runs lower than buying ready-to-fish packs. The trade-off is time: each fly takes 15 to 20 minutes to tie for a beginner working from scratch. Ready-to-fish packs are the faster option; tying kits are the better value over time.
Why Buy From Wild Water Fly Fishing
Wild Water has stocked trout anglers since 2006. Every wooly bugger fly in this collection ships ready to attach to a leader and fish. No prep work, no assembly.
Orders over $50 ship free from Wild Water's U.S. warehouse. Every purchase comes with a 30-day return policy. If the flies do not perform as expected, the return process is simple and straightforward.
If you’re unsure which color or head style to start with, the Wild Water team fishes the same flies they sell and answers those questions every day. Reach them at info@wildwaterflyfishing.com or by phone at 585-967-3474.