Comparison

The Best Fly Tying Vise Depends on What You Already Own

There is no single “best” fly tying vise across every budget and skill level — there is a best fit. Tailwater sells the same hardened-steel rotary vise three ways: alone for $49.99, in a Complete Fly Tying Kit with hand tools and thread for $79.99, and in a Pro Fly Tying Tool Set with a fuller tool lineup for $84.99. Which one is best for you depends on what tools you already own.

We sell three versions of one vise because tiers arrive at very different starting points. Someone who has tied for years and just wants a better vise under their existing tools needs something completely different from someone who has never clamped a hook. This page compares all three honestly, including where each one falls short.

Tailwater rotary fly tying vise, the shared base across all three product options

All three options, side by side

The Fly Tying Vise ($49.99) is the tool alone. The Complete Fly Tying Kit ($79.99) adds a bobbin holder, whip finisher, hackle pliers, brushes, tweezers and 5 spools of thread. The Pro Fly Tying Tool Set ($84.99) adds a fuller tool lineup instead of thread.
OptionPriceWhat's includedBest for
Fly Tying Vise$49.99Rotary vise only, no tools or threadBudget-conscious, already own hand tools
Complete Fly Tying Kit$79.99Vise + bobbin holder, whip finisher, hackle pliers, brushes, tweezers + 5 spools 100D/220yd threadBeginners starting from zero
Pro Fly Tying Tool Set$84.99Vise + fuller tool lineup (no thread)Serious tiers who want a full bench setup, own thread already

If you're a beginner: Complete Fly Tying Kit

A beginner who owns nothing should buy the Complete Fly Tying Kit ($79.99). It is the only option of the three that includes thread, and it covers the core tool list — bobbin holder, whip finisher, hackle pliers, brushes, tweezers — needed to finish a fly rather than just hold one.

The math is simple: buying a vise alone and then separately sourcing a bobbin holder, whip finisher, hackle pliers and thread from wherever costs more in time and usually more in money than buying the kit, and you risk mismatched sizing between tools bought from different places. See the full breakdown on our Complete Fly Tying Kit page.

If you're on a tight budget: Fly Tying Vise solo

If money is the deciding factor and you already own a bobbin holder, scissors and some thread, the Fly Tying Vise alone at $49.99 gets you the identical rotary vise used in both bundles for $30 less than the kit.

There is no compromise in the vise itself between the solo option and the bundles — same hardened-steel jaw, same 1.2mm opening, same #4–#24 hook range, same 205mm / 8.07in length. You are only paying less because you are buying less. Full technical detail is on our rotary fly tying vise page.

If you're serious and want everything: Pro Fly Tying Tool Set

Tiers who already have thread and want the fullest tool lineup should choose the Pro Fly Tying Tool Set ($84.99) — a fuller tool lineup built around the same vise, for $5 more than the kit but without thread included.

This is the option we recommend least often for a first purchase, mainly because most beginners need thread more than they need a wider tool selection in week one. But for someone who already ties, or who is upgrading from a cheaper vise and keeping their existing thread stock, the fuller tool lineup is the better $5 gap to pay. More detail on individual tools is on our fly tying tools page.

Tailwater Complete Fly Tying Kit contents: vise, hand tools and five thread spools

Where premium vises fit — honestly

Brands like Renzetti, Peak and Griffin make well-regarded rotary vises starting around $150 and climbing well past that, aimed at tiers who want features beyond what a $50–$85 vise offers. Tailwater is not competing at that tier — it is built for tiers who want a solid rotary vise without a premium price.

We would rather say this plainly than pretend a $50–$85 vise is a substitute for a $150+ precision vise in every respect. If you have already decided you want to spend in that range, a premium vise is a legitimate, different purchase. Tailwater is for the much larger group of tiers who want a genuinely rotating, hardened-steel vise without paying premium-tier prices.

By the numbers

4.8 / 5

Average rating across 47 verified buyers

— Tailwater verified purchase data, 2026

#4–#24

Hook size range the vise jaw accepts

— Tailwater measurements, 2026

205mm / 8.07in

Total vise length, base to jaw tip

— Tailwater measurements, 2026

Holt Ferris · Fly Tyer and Guide, 15 Seasons on the Water

Fly fishing guide and tyer for 15 seasons. I have clamped a lot of vises to a lot of benches, in drift boats and in kitchens at midnight before an early hatch.

I point beginners at the kit, budget buyers at the solo vise, and keep the Pro set for people who already tie. See how we test.

Pick yours

Fly Tying Vise

★★★★★

$49.99

Budget-conscious, already own tools

Get Mine — $49.99 →
Most popular

Complete Fly Tying Kit

★★★★★

$79.99

Beginners starting from zero

Get Mine — $79.99 →

Pro Fly Tying Tool Set

★★★★★

$84.99

Serious tiers, fullest tool bench

Get Mine — $84.99 →

Free shipping on all three options · 30-day money-back guarantee

Best fly tying vise FAQ

What is the best fly tying vise for a beginner?

For most first-time tiers, the Complete Fly Tying Kit is the best starting point because it includes the vise plus the bobbin holder, whip finisher, hackle pliers, brushes, tweezers and thread needed to actually finish a fly, not just clamp a hook.

What is the cheapest good option?

The Fly Tying Vise on its own at $49.99 is the cheapest way in, and it is the same hardened-steel rotary vise used in both bundles — nothing about it is a stripped-down version. It only makes sense if you already own the hand tools and thread.

Is the Pro Fly Tying Tool Set worth $5 more than the kit?

It depends on what you already own. The Pro Fly Tying Tool Set trades the 5 spools of thread in the Complete Kit for a fuller tool lineup. If you already have thread but want more tools, the Pro set is the better $84.99. If you need thread and a tighter core tool list, the $79.99 kit fits better.

How does Tailwater compare to premium rotary vises?

Premium rotary vises from established tackle makers sit at a different price point, generally $150 and up, and are aimed at tiers who want features like true in-line rotation calibration or interchangeable jaw systems. Tailwater is built for the $50–$85 range: a solid hardened-steel rotary vise without the premium price.

Can I switch between the three options later?

Yes. All three use the same underlying vise, so nothing you buy now becomes obsolete. If you start with the solo vise and later want more tools, the Pro Fly Tying Tool Set or individual pieces from our fly tying tools guide cover the gap.

Keep exploring

Read the full breakdown of the Complete Fly Tying Kit, the individual fly tying tools in the Pro set, or the technical detail behind the rotary fly tying vise itself. You can also read 47 verified buyer reviews, check our testing methodology, browse the Tailwater guides, learn more about Tailwater, or return to the Fly Tying Vise homepage. Questions before you order? Contact us — we reply within one business day.