Pole spear vs speargun for beginners is the first real decision you'll make as a new spearo, and the honest answer is that both are excellent first weapons — for different reasons. A pole spear is cheap, simple, and forces you to become a better hunter; a speargun gives you reach and power for a wider range of fish. This guide compares them on how they work, range, cost, learning curve, and which suits your local water, then gives you our pick.
This comparison expands on the weapon section of our Spearfishing for Beginners: The Complete Starter Guide. If you want the full gear picture alongside it, start there.
How Each Weapon Works
A pole spear is the simpler of the two: a single shaft, usually 1.2 to 2 metres long, with a loop of rubber tubing at the back. You stretch the loop along the shaft, grip the band against the spear with your hand to load tension, aim, and release by relaxing your grip. The whole spear shoots forward, tethered to nothing — you hold onto it the entire time.
A speargun stores far more energy. Band-powered (rubber) guns use stretched latex bands to fire a shaft along a barrel; pneumatic guns use compressed air. The shaft is attached to the gun by a line, so you fire it, then retrieve shaft and fish together. A trigger mechanism holds the load until you choose to release it, so you can aim at full power without straining.
Range, Power, and the Fish You Can Take
This is where the two diverge most. A pole spear is a genuinely short-range tool — effective inside about a metre, sometimes less. That forces you to get extremely close, which is brilliant for stealthy reef and structure fish but useless for spooky open-water species. The power is modest, ideal for small to medium fish.
A speargun reaches farther — a couple of metres or more depending on length and band setup — and hits much harder, letting you take larger, warier fish and punch through bigger bodies for a clean kill. If your local fish keep their distance or run big, a speargun's range is a real advantage.
Cost and Maintenance Compared
On price, the pole spear wins easily. It's one of the cheapest pieces of gear you'll own, has almost nothing to break, and the only maintenance is rinsing it and occasionally replacing the rubber loop. It's close to indestructible and shrugs off bouncing around in a kit bag.
A speargun costs more upfront and asks for ongoing care: rinse it in fresh water after every dive, check and replace perishing bands, watch the line and wishbone for wear, and keep the mechanism clean and salt-free. None of it is hard, but it's real maintenance a pole spear simply doesn't need.
The Learning Curve for Each
A pole spear is unintimidating to learn but demands real hunting skill to use well. Loading it is dead simple, but its short range means you'll miss a lot until your stalking and patience improve. In that sense it's a fantastic teacher — it rewards getting close and punishes rushing.
A speargun is more forgiving on range, so beginners often land fish sooner, but there's more to manage: loading bands safely, aiming a longer weapon, handling the line, and the maintenance above. There's also more to go wrong if you're careless.
Which One Fits Your Local Waters
Let your environment decide as much as your preference. Choose a pole spear if you'll hunt shallow reefs, rocks, and structure where you can sneak close to small and medium fish, or if you dive in clear, calm water where stalking is realistic. It's also ideal if budget is tight or you want maximum simplicity.
Choose a speargun if your fish are warier, larger, or hold farther off, if visibility is good enough to use the range, or if you're hunting more open water. In murky water, neither weapon's range matters much — fish appear close — so the pole spear's simplicity often wins there.
Our Pick for a First Weapon
If we had to hand a total beginner one weapon, it would usually be a mid-length band speargun around 75–90 cm. It's versatile across most conditions and target fish, lands fish soon enough to keep you motivated, and grows with you as your skills develop. The maintenance is a worthwhile habit to build early.
That said, if you dive clear shallow reefs, are on a tight budget, or want to fast-track your stalking, a pole spear is a genuinely great — and arguably more instructive — first choice. There's no wrong answer here; both will put fish on your stringer. Pick based on your water, and once you've chosen, read up on the rest of your beginner kit so your weapon isn't the only thing you've thought about.
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