Part 1 What Are Soft Plastic Fishing Lures Made Of? (PVC, Plastisol & Plasticizers Explained)
- Rodney Abel
- Feb 20
- 6 min read
Updated: Feb 27

What are soft plastic fishing lures made of?
Soft plastic fishing lures are made from PVC (polyvinyl chloride) resin suspended in liquid plasticizer, a material system known as plastisol. When heated to approximately 320–350°F, the PVC resin particles absorb plasticizer, fuse into a homogeneous melt, and then solidify into a flexible finished lure after cooling. Additives such as salt, stabilizers, pigments, and elastomers are used to fine-tune density, durability, and action.
If you want a deeper technical breakdown of how plastisol behaves during heating and fusion, see the science of plastisol and how soft lures are engineered for action.
Most anglers assume soft plastic fishing lures are simply “rubber,” but that assumption ignores the engineered material system behind them. These baits are precision-formulated PVC plastisol systems where resin selection, plasticizer balance, additive loading, and controlled fusion determine final flexibility, density, durability, and action. Small changes at the formulation level produce measurable differences in how a lure moves, feels, and performs in the water.
Soft plastic fishing lures are often confused with rubber or silicone, but their material systems and processing methods are fundamentally different.
Soft Plastic Lure Materials Comparison
Property | PVC Plastisol (Soft Lures) | Rubber | Silicone |
Base Material | PVC resin + liquid plasticizer | Natural or synthetic rubber polymers | Silicone elastomer |
Processing | Heated to ~320–350°F to fuse | Vulcanized (chemical crosslinking) | Cured via heat or catalyst |
Flexibility Control | Adjusted by plasticizer ratio | Controlled by formulation and crosslinking | Generally soft and elastic |
Density Control | Easily adjusted with salt or additives | Limited control | Limited control |
Buoyancy Tuning | Yes (via fillers/additives) | Difficult | Moderate |
Recyclable/Re-meltable | Yes (thermoplastic) | No (thermoset once cured) | No (thermoset once cured) |
Typical Use in Fishing Lures | Primary material for soft plastics | Rarely used | Used in specialty baits |
Most modern soft plastic fishing lures are PVC plastisol systems because they allow precise control over flexibility, density, action, and durability.
This article breaks down the three core factors that determine how a soft plastic behaves:
PVC — the structural backbone
Plasticizers — the flexibility control
Formulation differences — why not all plastics act the same
1. PVC: The Backbone of Soft Plastics
At the core of nearly every traditional soft plastic lure is PVC — Polyvinyl Chloride.
PVC starts as a fine white powder. In this form, it is rigid and brittle. On its own, PVC behaves more like plumbing pipe than a fishing worm.
What PVC Actually Is
PVC (polyvinyl chloride) is a thermoplastic polymer made of repeating vinyl chloride units. As a thermoplastic, it softens when heated and solidifies again when cooled without undergoing a permanent chemical change. This reversible behavior is what makes plastisol processing possible. In its unmodified form, PVC is rigid and brittle; flexibility only occurs when plasticizers are introduced to separate and lubricate the polymer chains
At the molecular level, PVC consists of long-chain polymers that naturally pack tightly together. When heated alone and allowed to cool, PVC forms a hard, inflexible solid. Only when plasticizer molecules are blended into the system do those chains gain mobility, allowing the finished lure to bend, stretch, and recover in the water.
These chains:
Are stiff by nature
Do not flex easily
Lock together tightly when cooled
If you heat PVC powder alone and let it cool, you do not get a soft bait. You get a hard chunk of plastic.
So why does it become soft in fishing lures?
Because PVC is only half the system.
2. Plasticizers: The Flexibility Engine
Plasticizers are liquid additives blended into PVC before heating.
When plastisol is heated to approximately 320–350°F, the PVC resin particles fuse into a homogeneous solid that remains flexible after cooling.
Their job is simple:
They force the PVC chains apart.

What Plasticizers Do
When plasticizer is added:
It wedges itself between PVC molecular chains
It reduces internal friction
It allows the chains to slide past each other
The more plasticizer added, the more flexible the finished material becomes.
This is the single biggest reason some soft plastics feel supple while others feel stiff.
The Basic Rule
More plasticizer =
Softer feel
More stretch
More “life” in the water
Less plasticizer =
Firmer body
More durability
Tighter action
This ratio is not random. It is engineered.
Soft vs Firm Soft Plastic Formulations
Property | High Plasticizer (Soft) | Low Plasticizer (Firm) |
Shore A Hardness | 5A–15A | 20A–35A |
Flexibility | Very high | Moderate |
Stretch | High elongation | Lower elongation |
Tear Resistance | Lower | Higher |
Action in Water | Subtle / “alive” | Tighter / controlled |
Durability | Lower | Higher |
Best Use | Finesse, trout, panfish | Flipping, heavy cover |
3. Why Not All Soft Plastics Feel the Same
Two baits can look identical but feel completely different.
That difference usually comes down to formulation control in three areas:
1. Plasticizer Ratio
A high-plasticizer finesse worm will:
Collapse easily
Quiver with minimal movement
Feel oily or extremely soft
A low-plasticizer flipping bait will:
Hold shape under pressure
Resist tearing
Feel dense or firm
2. Resin Particle Size
Not all PVC resins are identical.
Finer resins:
Fuse smoother
Produce clearer plastisol
Create more uniform texture
Coarser resins:
May feel slightly grainier
Affect clarity
Change how additives disperse
3. Additive Loading
Salt, stabilizers, pigments, and other additives all alter performance.
For example:
Heavy salt loading:
Increases density
Dampens action
Makes a bait feel more rigid
Floating agents:
Reduce density
Increase buoyancy
Can soften perceived structure
Every additive shifts the behavior of the final lure.
How Additives Change Soft Plastic Performance
Additive | Effect on Density | Effect on Action | Effect on Feel |
Salt | Increases | Dampens | Firmer |
Floating Agents | Decreases | Increases lift | Softer perceived |
Elastomers | Neutral | Smoother | Rubber-like |
Stabilizers | Neutral | None | Heat stability |
Why Some Soft Plastic Fishing Lures Feel “Alive"
When anglers say a bait feels alive, they are usually describing:
High flexibility
Low stiffness resistance
Rapid recovery after deformation
Minimal dampening of movement
Technically, this comes from:
Proper plasticizer balance
Controlled fusion during heating
Correct additive loading
Clean resin dispersion
If the formula is off — even slightly — the bait may:
Feel rubbery
Snap back too slowly
Resist subtle rod input
Appear stiff in cold water
The “alive” feeling is not accidental. It is the result of precise chemical balance.
Why Some Baits Feel Stiff or Rubbery
Stiffness can come from:
Lower plasticizer ratios
Excessive salt
Overheating during fusion
Incorrect plasticizer type
Poor resin dispersion
Rubbery texture often indicates:
Too much elastomeric additive
Incomplete fusion
Excess stabilizer interaction
Cold-temperature performance issues
These are formulation decisions, not random outcomes.
The Critical Reality
Soft plastic performance is not determined by shape alone.
You can have the best mold design in the world. If the plastisol formula is wrong, the bait will not perform correctly.
Action begins at the molecular level.
PVC provides structure, plasticizers control flexibility, and additives fine-tune behavior.
Change any one of those, and the bait changes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are soft plastic fishing lures made of rubber?
No. Most soft plastic fishing lures are made from PVC-based plastisol systems, not rubber or silicone. Although they may feel flexible, their softness comes from plasticizers blended into PVC resin. The final texture and action are controlled through formulation and heating, not natural rubber compounds.
What is plastisol in fishing lures?
Plastisol is a liquid suspension of PVC (polyvinyl chloride) resin particles in plasticizer. When heated to approximately 320–350°F, the PVC particles absorb the plasticizer and fuse into a homogeneous, flexible solid. After cooling, the material retains its shape and becomes the finished soft plastic fishing lure.
What makes one soft plastic bait softer than another?
Softness depends on plasticizer ratio, PVC resin characteristics, additive loading, and processing quality. Higher plasticizer levels reduce stiffness, while resin particle size and fusion control affect elasticity and recovery. Small formulation differences change flexibility, density, and action, which is why some baits feel supple and responsive while others feel stiff or rubbery.
Key Takeaway
Soft plastics are engineered systems built from:
PVC resin (structure)
Plasticizer (flexibility)
Controlled additives (performance modifiers)
The difference is not brand magic. It is formulation control.
Understanding the material system is only the first step. How those material choices are applied in actual lure design determines how a bait performs in real fishing conditions.
To see how these material principles translate into real-world trout and panfish designs, we outline how we design our soft plastics for trout and panfish.
In Part 2, we break down how heating and fusion affect the final performance of plastisol — and why improper processing can ruin even a perfect soft plastic fishing lure formula.




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