The 8 Best Turkey Calls of 2024, Tested and Reviewed

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Video best turkey calls on the market

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Like all my turkey hunting gear, my accumulation of turkey calls started a long time ago. I killed my first gobbler, an Ohio bird, back in 1990. My wife, Julie, killed her first, a Washington state Merriams, in 1994. Since then, she’s gone on to kill two Grand Slams. We even killed a slam as a couple in 2005, and have to date, put tags on 109 Spring longbeards.

Bragging? No. But I am awfully proud of her and our field accomplishments together over the past three decades. I provide this background primarily as proof that, as serious turkey hunters, we’ve gone through and currently have a lot of turkey calls. Box calls. Pot calls. Diaphragm calls. You name it, and there’s a good chance that during the last thirty seasons, we’ve played with it at least once.

That all said, I went through my arsenal of calls and hand-picked some of my favorites. Below you will find recommendations on box calls, mouth calls, slate calls, owl calls, and more. These are the best turkey calls to help you bag a gobbler this spring.

The Best Turkey Calls

  • Best Turkey Call Overall: Houndstooth Game Calls Dixie Hen Slate

  • Best Box Call: Lynch World Champion Box Call

  • Best Mouth Call: Woodhaven Custom Calls Ninja Ghost Mouth Call

  • Best Slate: Zink Wicked Series Slate

  • Best Push Button Call: Quaker Boy ‘Cyclone’ Easy Yelper

  • Best Owl Hooter: Haydel’s CO-03 Compensator Owl Call

  • Best Locator: Hunter’s Specialties/Drury Outdoors Signature Howler

  • Best Budget: Primos Early Bird Box Call

How We Picked The Best Turkey Calls

These are most of our go-to calls, the ones we reach for first when we step into the field each spring. We have plenty of hands-on experience with all of them. Our working turkey vests have changed over the years as old calls wear out and new ones take their coveted spots.

Slayer makes some of our favorite mouth calls. Slayer

Here’s how we decide which calls will ride with us into the turkey woods each season:

  • Personal Experience: These are the calls we have used or used for years. If a call spends more than a single season in our vest—or more than a single hunt, for that matter—it has something going for it.

  • Ease of Use: Turkey hunting is hard enough without running a call requiring a genius-level IQ to operate. We like simple-to-use calls, and those are the ones that make the cut time and time again. However, we don’t let simplicity outweigh realistic sound. This line-up affords both.

  • Sound: The best turkey calls, regardless of price tag, sound like real-life birds. Each call on this list will produce life-like sounds, although some may require more practice. The common denominator here is affordable calls from respected companies that can sound just like a mama (or soon-to-be) bird.

Best Turkey Call Overall: Houndstooth Game Calls Dixie Hen Slate

Best Turkey Calls: Reviews and Recommendations

Best Overall: Houndstooth Game Calls Dixie Hen Slate

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Pros

  • Durable, laminated design

  • Suitable for long-range and close-range calling

  • Easy to use

  • Produces a wide range of realistic tones

Cons

  • Requires two hands to operate

Houndstooth Game Calls is a promising young company out of Alabama that knows more than a thing or two about hunting turkeys. Their Dixie Henpot call is an old-school, traditional-style pot call that produces an uncommonly good sound.

It produces lyrical clucks and soft, inviting clucks yet has enough pluck to get cuts and cackles loud enough to bust through thick, early morning fog.

The two-tone walnut and cherry finish also makes this thing quite a looker. You’ll want to show this thing off like a fine violin, but not just because it’s pretty. In practiced hands, it can produce some downright beautiful music.

This call comes with a two-piece Dymondwood striker. It is preconditioned and works like a dream straight out of the package.

Specs

  • Type: Pot call

  • Material: Walnut and cherry pan, slate over glass surface, Dymondwood striker

Best Box Call: Lynch World Champion Box Call

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Pros

  • Extremely user-friendly

  • Straight grain mahogany gives excellent mellow tones

  • Made by a company with a long-standing reputation for excellence

  • Versatile volume range

Cons

  • Rubber bands can break

  • Wood has limitations in wet weather

The Lynch World Champion Box Call is a great-sounding call that’s easy to use, costs under $45, and looks like a custom-crafted instrument. It’s hard to beat the realism of this wooden call and the reputation of Lynch World Champion calls. It’s made from straight grain mahogany, cut and assembled to precise tolerances, and then tweaked to make it sound just right before it leaves the plant. I’m confident it can strike up a gobbler right out of the box, although I don’t recommend doing that. Sand the lid and rails, chalk it up, and then practice before going afield. You won’t be disappointed.

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Specs

  • Type: Box call

  • Material: Mahogany

Best Mouth Call: Woodhaven Custom Calls Ninja Ghost Mouth Call

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Pros

  • Incredibly versatile

  • Good volume

  • Sounds like a real hen

  • Great for beginners

Cons

  • Experts may prefer something more complex

I tend to collect mouth calls the same way some girls hoard shoes. And because I love them all for different reasons, it’s almost impossible to narrow that stockpile to an all-time favorite. I’m a firm believer that you should carry at least a dozen different diaphragm calls in your turkey vest. That’s why I’ve narrowed this category down to a trio of calls.

Woodhaven’s Ninja 3-Pack includes the company’s popular Ninja Ghost, Ninja V, and Ninja Venom mouth calls. Each one is a straightforward triple-reed call that is easy for even beginners to produce realistic turkey tones.

Each call is made from hand-stretched proph (that’s turkey-call speak for the type of ultra-thin thin latex material used to make condoms) and thicker latex to produce three different turkey sounds.

The Ninja Ghost features a small ghost-style cut in the middle of the top reed that produces crisp yelps, clucks, and kee-kees with minimal rasp. If you want realistic yelps that start with a clear front note followed by a nasal rasp, you can reach for the Ninja Venom, which has a unique cut that is easy for newbies to control. The Ninja V rounds out the threesome. Featuring a tired-and-true V cut, this diaphragm call can produce some seriously loud cuts that work wonders for coaxing in tough toms from a distance. You can also dial this one back to produce soft, gentle purrs once he comes strutting into range.

Specs

  • Type: Mouth call

  • Material: Latex

Best Slate: Zink Wicked Series Slate

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Pros

  • Attractive visually

  • Great turkey sounds

  • Built-in striker tip conditioner

  • The rubberized grip around the circumference makes holding the call easy

Cons

  • Expensive

  • Slate may not be as loud as glass or crystal

I shot my first specklebelly goose with Fred Zink in northern North Dakota back in the early 1990s, and I’ve been a fan of the boy from Buckeye Land ever since. A champion goose caller and waterfowl call designer, Zink built his reputation on making duck and goose calls. Turns out, he’s just as good at making turkey calls.

I love the rubber ring around the edge of Zink’s pot call because this makes gripping the Wicked Series with my fingertips a sure thing. And this grip helps me get as much sound clarity and volume out of the instrument as possible.

You can also flip this call over to use a second calling surface. Dubbed “The Sweet Spot,” this added bonus is a great way to make those delicate, super soft, close-range calls.

It’s a plain and pretty call, with no skulls or bones or devil tongues. And it sounds like a million bucks. Soft and close; loud and far. This one does it all. However, I’m a fan of the flared-tip strikers, but swapping it for a Mad Calls purple heart/acrylic stick—my favorite— is pretty simple.

Specs

  • Type: Pot call

  • Material: Brazilian cherry pan, slate surface, Dymondwood striker

Best Push Button Call: Quaker Boy ‘Cyclone’ Easy Yelper

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Pros

  • Very easy to use

  • Adjustable

  • One-handed operation

  • Affordable

Cons

  • Lacks the volume of larger box calls

To me, there’s just something missing with a push-button turkey yelper. True, they’re undeniably easy to use, and some, like the Cyclone, sound pretty darn good. I’ve just always been a glass and diaphragm guy. However, you’ll get no argument from me about Quaker Boy’s Cyclone. Push a button, and a good hen yelp emerges. Push it slowly, and the yelp becomes a purr. Lay your thumb on the maple lid, and the purr turns into a whine. With practice, cuts and cackles are on the menu too. As for the so-called clucker button, a light tap, and you’re clucking like an old mama turkey. Is a push-button like the Cyclone for everyone? No, but it is for anyone looking for something easy and a little different.

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Specs:

  • Type: Push button friction call

  • Material: Mahogany sides, maple striker

Best Owl Hooter: Haydel’s CO-03 Compensator Owl Call

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Pros

  • Easy to use

  • No hand manipulation (back pressure) needed

  • Compact

  • Good volume

Cons

  • Not as mellow as a wooden owl hooter

One of the best locator calls on the market, this owl hooter is easy to blow and produces shock gobbles without problem. With the Compensator Owl Hooter, you just need to get the rhythm down—Who cooks for you? Who cooks for you all?—and the call essentially does the rest. The CO-03 has all the volume necessary to carry the distance and, more importantly, cut through any wind, reaching out and touching those old roosted gobblers. Built from a tough polycarbonate, the Compensator should last many seasons, regardless of the rigors.

Specs:

  • Type: Locator call

  • Material: Polycarbonate plastic

Best Locator: Hunter’s Specialties/Drury Outdoors Signature Howler

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Pros

  • Incredible distance

  • High pitch makes even tight-lipped longbeards gobble

  • Simple to use

Cons

  • May incite a riot among your local coyote population

Since my first gobbler, I’ve used somewhere in the neighborhood of 1.529 million locator calls. Peacock screams. Goose calls. Train whistles. Cow bawls. Slamming doors. Nothing instigated gobblers into sounding off to the degree that Mark Allen Drury’s (MAD) coyote howler has. Nothing. I’ve packed one of these—first generation—coyote howlers for over 30 years now, and can’t tell you how many turkeys have gobbled at this thing. It works.

This is as simple as it gets, and you damn near can’t screw it up. The pitch and volume? Off the charts, if that’s what you’re looking for. It gets on every last nerve—trust me—but that’s why it works so well. It’s no work of art, but doesn’t matter because it’s the sound you’re looking for. Not good looks.

Specs:

  • Type: Locator call

  • Material: Hardwood body with plastic horn

Best Budget: Primos Early Bird Box Call

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Pros

  • Great volume when needed; quiet when necessary

  • Weighted paddle helps cut down on lid bounce

  • Affordable

Cons

  • Wood doesn’t do well in the rain

Will Primos’ name has become synonymous with some of the finest hunting calls available—and at prices that won’t put a serious hurting on your wallet. For right around $30, the Early Bird Box Call brings great sound and versatility to the table. It’s easy to use, and the combination of the oak body and purple heart lid makes a wide range of turkey sounds and volumes possible right out of the package. The heavier weighted paddle is a nice touch for easy control and feel. And, if it matters, the Early Bird doesn’t look too shabby, either.

Specs

  • Type: Box call

  • Material: Oak body, purpleheart wood lid

What To Look for in a Turkey Call

There are three main criteria for choosing a turkey call—Physical ability, skill level, and personal preference. After that, there on some secondary considerations like price point and application. Remember these three things when buying your next turkey call:

Physical Ability

There may be physical considerations in play when it comes to choosing what type or style of turkey call you to decide upon. You might able to use one call well, and another not so much. Everyone is different. My father is a perfect example. As a full denture wearer, he can’t make a roof of the mouth diaphragm call do what it’s supposed to do. Nor can he make a pot style call work due to a slight neurological malfunction. But he can use a box call. Proof that there’s a call for everyone.

Skill Level

Of the three major categories of turkey calls – box calls, pot style calls (slate/glass/aluminum), and diaphragm calls – it’s the mouth calls that often prove the most troublesome for folks, particularly new turkey hunters/callers. There’s no question there’s a learning curve involved with diaphragms, and my best advice for someone wanting to learn is to stick with it. Watch instructional videos. And do not make it harder than it needs to be.

The box call is responsible for the demise of more gobblers every Spring than all the other types of calls combined. Why? Because it’s simple to operate and it sounds good. Now, I’m not implying there’s no learning curve associated with the box call—because there is—but for the novice, it’s most certainly the way to go.

See also  3 things you must know to chase carp on the fly. Carp have been rising up on the list of desired freshwater fish to experience on the fly.Some will even go so far as to compare this freshwater monster to the notorious bonefish, earning the carp the nickname of the golden bone.Many factors will greatly determine your success rate when fly fishing for carp. To name a few: location, mood, posture of the fish, and time of year.For example, if it’s winter you’re not going to throw a 3” crawfish pattern at huddled carp. Why you ask? Crawfish are dormant in the winter due to being cold blooded. If you throw that rusty orange pattern at a carp in the winter he’s going to know something's up because it’s not normal for him to see that in the winter months. He will be gone just as fast as he appeared.If you've been wanting to try your hand at chasing these golden ghosts of the shallows, here are 3 tips you must know to get in the action with these easily spooked creatures. 1. Being able to read the carp and know how to act accordingly.Dane Schmucker caught the big fish of the weekend at the Midwest Golden Bones Fly Tournament near Chicago, IL. The 2018 event is coming up July 27-28 and is sponsored in part by Flymen Fishing Co.The number one mistake that beginning carp anglers make is casting to non-receptive carp.Here's how to read carp in some common fishing situations. Carp splashing on topwater.If you happen to spot this, you might as well put down your fly rod and head on your way.These carp won’t pay attention to even the tastiest-looking pattern in the world; they have one thing on their mind, and that’s reproduction.However, the upside to this process is the awesome post-spawn bite! Fast-moving pods.Once again, don’t waste your time – these carp are either spooked or heading on a mission, not even a bag of pellet carp food will stop these beasts. Keep searching for more fish to cast to. Slow-cruising pods/singles.Get a fly right in front of their faces and below them.Why? Carp like to cruise while searching the bottom for a quick and easy snack. This means their eyes will be focused below them right where your fly should be! Heads down and tails to the sky with a mud cloud around them.This is the most important one of all!Slow down, take your time, and cast to this feeding mud monkey, then hang on because you’re about to have a gnarly fight on your hands! Sunning carp.These carp are the ones kicked back enjoying the warmth of the sun. Toss a small unweighted fly to them and hope for the best. 2. Choosing the right fly weight and pattern (I can’t stress this one enough!).Fly patterns and weight are often overlooked when carp fishing. Most people think anyold pattern that looks appetizing will work.Wrong!Carp have feeding patterns and certain food sources they like better than others. Carp are very boring when it comes to fly patterns. They like rusty, orange, olive, brown, and black. These color patterns are usually the go-to for carp fishing, but it depends on what location you’re fishing in. I’ve heard a great tale of western carp actually chasing streamers, but I haven’t seen this firsthand.The Fish-Skull CrawBody paired with a Shrimp & Cray Tail can be a deadly combination.I fish and guide in the waters of North Carolina where we have the more calm and gentle carp that have very subtle takes.Do your research on the body of water you’re fishing and stop and watch the carp. If you stop and watch you can usually figure out what they’re feeding on.People overlook weight because they think it isn’t important in carp fishing, but weight is crucial in carp fishing.Fly selection and speed of current. Unweighted flies.These unweighted flies are those you throw at the sunning carp. You don’t want it sinking too fast because these carp are closer to the surface, but you also don’t want it to float.You want a slow gentle descent to get the carp's attention. Medium-weight flies / Heavyweight bombs.These are used for slow-cruising carp and those mud-sifting bulldozers who are bottom feeding.You want to send your fly straight to them and get it down on the bottom right in front of their faces. 3. Presenting your fly .Fly presentation is important when carp fishing – if you throw the fly too hard and smack the water, the fish is going to spook.Pursuing carp on the fly takes a skilled and accurate cast, so before heading out on the water, take a few practice casts to get ready.You may only get three chances on a carp in a whole day of fishing, so you don’t want to blow these chances by not being ready. It pays off to take the extra time to prepare for the main event.The most known and productive action method for carp fly fishing is called the drag and drop. To do this, drag your fly away from the carp and let it sink, mimicking a fleeing crawfish or nymph. This is usually used for slow-cruising carp and sometimes for the feeding carp.Follow these tips to increase your number of hookups and catches when fishing for this elusive fish.As always, best fishing to you all! Want more articles like this? Subscribe to the Flymen mailing list at the bottom of the page!About Jakob Barlow:Jakob Barlow is the head guide/owner of High Grass Guides in Western North Carolina. He has been fly fishing since he was 6 years old. From the pumpkin seed sunfish to the big bull trout to the tarpon of the salt flats, he has experience in it all. He's been guiding locally for 10 years and then decided to take it to the next level so he opened High Grass Guides with two of his buddies, hoping to make it into a living. “I've experienced nothing that consumes my mind like fly fishing, it’s all I think of all day every day.” Jakob is well seasoned with most freshwater species around his area with some saltwater species as well. Jakob has a passion for getting new anglers involved with his obsession of fly fishing. "I live to see that big smile on my client's face when hooking the fish of a lifetime.” You can follow him on Instagram @the_jakob_barlow or check out his website at www.highgrassguides.com. Written by Jakob Barlow Filed under carp,  fly fishing,  fly fishing tips,  freshwater Tweet Comments on this post (12) Jun 29, 2022 Thank you for your insight!— Greg Bright Jun 09, 2022 I live in Lake Havasu AZ, a great fishery and one of the most under rated carp fisheries in the states. Huge carp here, up to 50 lbs. NOBODY fly fishes carp here so I’m giving it a try. Found a nice shallow beach where early morning carp feed, from 3 to 15 lbs. Great article and tips, all makes sense.— james Dec 03, 2020 Have chased carp for several years. berleyed with white bread and fished with bread flies, great fun good results. 70 – 120 per day. A pest species that is fun to fish for. All removed from the waterway. a win for the angler and the waterways— Ben Hicks Dec 03, 2020 I got 13carp and 3 cat fish on a 6wt fly rod and reel 6lbs test with a 6wt floating line and 6lbs line 8lbs all up to 25 lbs cats were 3 lbs to 8lbs on carp best have 200 yards of backing @ least 3 bigger ones almost spun 100 yards out I used a really slow sinking method for my carp fly’s I am so hooked on fly fishing carp— Alvin vaughn Dec 03, 2020 Hooked on carp on the fly— Harold Fenhaus Dec 03, 2020 About fly fishing for carp.— Don Smith Dec 03, 2020 Nice Blog ! Try fly fish Colorado here : www.shoprma.com/fly_fishing_classes.htm— Shoprma Dec 03, 2020 Here in the desert of Central Washington, carp offer opportunities to chase big, hard fighting fish during the heat of summer. Very good information!— Patrick Burdick Dec 03, 2020 Hit the 17 year cicada hatch. Carp on the top. Best fish was 29+ lbs. Talk about fun!— Andy Braznell Dec 03, 2020 @Wayne Walts, no they’re not as fast as a bone but: if you hook a big one they just go, slow but they go and it’s like you hooked a garden tractor!— Keith Antell Dec 03, 2020 They are not bonefish nor will they ever swim like a bonefish. Bonefish can swim over 30mph. That being said they are fun to catch, when I can’t go bonefishing— Wayne Walts Dec 03, 2020 Great information on Carp fishing and have been having a blast tying up and creating pattern targeted for crap.— Rick Takahashi Leave a comment Name Email Message

My personal favorite? The pot style call, specifically, a glass call or the slightly more mellow glass-over-slate. I think it falls right in the middle between the box call and the diaphragm in terms of the learning curve. However, if you can hold and operate an ordinary lead pencil, you have the skills necessary to successfully operate a pot style call. Sure, there’s a little more involved, but not much.

Personal Preference

This might seem obvious, but sometimes you like a call, well, just simply because you like it. And that’s ok. I have my own favorites. I like the way they sound. The way they look. The way they feel. After you test out a bunch of calls, you’ll get a feel for what you like and what you don’t like.

FAQs

Q: Which is better: a glass or slate turkey call?

This question comes down to personal preference. Both are pot style calls used in conjunction with a peg, aka striker, and both are operated in the same fashion. A softer material than glass, slate calls will generally have a more mellow sound than will the harder glass, the latter often producing a clear, crisp tone of mid- to higher volume. As for the better of the two calls? The answer is really neither, as both are excellent choices for all styles of turkey hunting.

Q: Will a slate call work in the rain?

Maybe. A slate call can be used in the rain or when wet, if it’s played with a non-wooden striker made of carbon, acrylic plastic, or fiberglass. Why? Because wood and water generally don’t mix well, and such is the case here. If you’re hunting in wet conditions, it is best to choose a glass, glass-over-slate, or crystal (a hard glass) calling surface and match it with a non-wood striker.

Q: What is the loudest turkey call?

All three styles of turkey calls—box calls, pot calls, and diaphragms—can produce high volume sounds. However, the higher a call goes in volume, the less realistic or natural the calls become. Most would agree a box call can achieve the highest volume without a loss in realism, followed by the pot style calls, and then mouth calls.

Q: How long do turkey mouth calls last?

Typically, I’ll get one season out of my mouth calls if I take care of them. That means drying them, separating the reeds with a toothpick post-hunt, and storing them in a multi-call case in the refrigerator. Mouth calls, though, are relatively inexpensive, so if I have to replace one or more each Sprin, which I do, so be it.

**Q: What is the easiest turkey call type to use?**

If you can rub two sticks together, you can operate a box call, which is probably the easiest of the three call styles to use. However, I’m of the mind anyone can make sounds with all three types of calls. It’s knowing what the sounds mean to that old gobbler. That’s the challenging part of the equation. That said, box calls are the hands-down winner in terms of ease of use.

Q: What is the most difficult turkey call type to use?

A mouth call. The trick with a mouth call is to find one that fits properly, one that seals as it should, allowing you to present air between your tongue and the call positioned in the roof of your mouth. Practice makes perfect.

What Is the Best Turkey Call?

We firmly believe the Houndstooth Game Calls Dixie Hen Slate is one of the best turkey calls ever to hit the turkey woods. It produces some of the richest, clearest real-to-life tones we’ve ever heard from anything that wasn’t a living, breathing hen bird. However, turkey calls are a lot like musical instruments; they are only as good as the musician behind them. Whether you prefer a mouth call or a scratch box, it’s a good idea to practice before you hit the woods this spring.

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Ethan Smith is a seasoned marine veteran, professional blogger, witty and edgy writer, and an avid hunter. He spent a great deal of his childhood years around the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest in Arizona. Watching active hunters practise their craft initiated him into the world of hunting and rubrics of outdoor life. He also honed his writing skills by sharing his outdoor experiences with fellow schoolmates through their high school’s magazine. Further along the way, the US Marine Corps got wind of his excellent combination of skills and sought to put them into good use by employing him as a combat correspondent. He now shares his income from this prestigious job with his wife and one kid. Read more >>