Honest Reviews. Expert Advice. Better Fishing
Tank-tough and ready for salt
When you need a reel that shrugs off saltwater and hard-fighting fish without a premium price tag, the Daiwa BG is the classic answer. It’s the reel that made ‘metal body on a budget’ normal, and it still delivers toughness that punches well above its cost.
The solid aluminum housing and Daiwa’s Digigear drive are the heart of it — this is a reel built to take a beating. The gears are strong and mesh cleanly, and the whole thing feels reassuringly solid in a way that plastic-bodied reels never quite do.
Its waterproof drag is the standout feature for salt anglers: it stays smooth and sealed against the grit and spray that kill lesser reels. The Air Rotor keeps the retrieve reasonably smooth, though it’s fair to say a top-tier freshwater reel will feel glassier in the hand.
The trade-off for all that toughness is weight — the BG is heavier than a finesse freshwater reel, so it’s not what you’d grab for a full day of ultralight casting. But for inshore, surf, and light offshore work, that heft comes with durability you’ll appreciate when a big fish is testing your gear.
Bottom line: for inshore and light saltwater fishing on a budget, the Daiwa BG is a genuine workhorse. Nothing else at this price offers the same combination of metal-body toughness and a sealed, powerful drag.
| Reel Type | Spinning |
| Gear Ratio | 5.3:1 – 5.7:1 |
| Weight | 9.5 – 29 oz |
| Max Drag | 15 – 33 lbs |
| Bearings | 6+1 |
| Best For | Saltwater & Big Fish |
Yes — the metal body and waterproof drag make it one of the best value saltwater spinning reels you can buy. It's built to handle salt and big fish.
Rinse it with fresh water (don't blast it) after every trip, dry it, and periodically service the drag and add reel grease to keep it smooth for years.
The 3000–4000 sizes cover most inshore work; go 5000+ for surf and bigger saltwater fish. Smaller sizes suit lighter inshore and freshwater.
Premium reels are lighter and smoother, but the BG offers most of the durability and drag power for far less. It's the value pick, not the luxury one.
Definitely. It's overbuilt for most freshwater fishing, which means it'll last a long time — just note it's heavier than a dedicated freshwater reel.