Fly-Tying Hackle Size by Hook

Get the recommended hackle feather length for any standard dry fly hook size.
Includes both barb length range and gape multiplier rule of thumb.

Fly-Tying Hackle Size by Hook

The classic dry-fly hackle rule: the hackle barb length should equal 1.5 to 2 times the hook gape (the vertical opening between point and shank). Too short and the fly sits too low in the surface film. Too long and the fly flops on the water like a bird wing, losing the precise upright posture that fish key on.

The standard hook-to-barb-length table, used by every commercial hackle grower (Whiting, Metz, Hoffman):

  • Hook size 28: 1.5-2.5 mm barb length
  • Hook size 26: 2-3 mm
  • Hook size 24: 2.5-3.5 mm
  • Hook size 22: 3-4 mm
  • Hook size 20: 3.5-4.5 mm
  • Hook size 18: 4-5 mm
  • Hook size 16: 4.5-6 mm
  • Hook size 14: 5.5-7 mm
  • Hook size 12: 6.5-8 mm
  • Hook size 10: 7.5-9 mm
  • Hook size 8: 8-10 mm
  • Hook size 6: 9-12 mm
  • Hook size 4: 10-14 mm

Buying hackle: if you tie sizes 14-20 (covers ~80% of dry fly fishing in most regions), a single high-quality grade-1 hackle cape covers you for several hundred flies and lasts decades. Whiting Bronze or Silver Saddle are the practical choice for most tiers — slightly less perfect than the top grades but far more affordable.

Cape vs saddle: capes have feathers that scale by size from neck to tail (you select for your hook size). Saddles have many feathers all about the same size on a given saddle, so you buy one saddle per hook size range. Capes are more versatile; saddles are more efficient if you tie volume in one size.

Hackle gauge tools (small slotted plastic gauges with hook-size markings) let you check a feather barb length against a marked size in seconds. For tiers without a gauge: hold the feather against the hook bend and eyeball whether the barb tip extends about twice the gape past the point.

Wet flies and soft-hackle nymphs use longer, softer hackle — generally one or two sizes larger than the equivalent dry fly hackle. Streamers use even longer marabou or saddle hackle for movement.

The wrong-size hackle is the most common reason home-tied dry flies sit poorly on the water. If your flies are tipping or sinking, check this first before adjusting tail length, body taper, or flotant choice.


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