If you're bowhunting whitetails this fall, now is the time to get your broadheads dialed. Shooting field points all summer is good practice, but it doesn’t mean much if your broadheads don’t fly true or fail when they hit. Choosing the right head is one of the most important decisions you'll make before opening day.
You’ve got two camps: mechanicals and fixed blades. Mechanicals offer large cutting diameters and tend to fly like field points. Fixed blades are simple, tough, and built to drive through bone. Both can get the job done if your shot is on, but not all broadheads are created equal.
Here are six broadheads that rise above the rest: three mechanicals and three fixed blades, all of them proven where it counts: in the field, not just in a catalog.
Top 3 Mechanical Broadheads for Whitetail
Evolution Outdoors Whitetail Fury – $63.45 (3-pack)


The Whitetail Fury is built for one purpose: killing whitetails quickly and efficiently. It’s a hybrid-style mechanical with a 2 3/8-inch cutting diameter that combines field-point flight with a devastating wound channel. The patented Hyde locking system keeps the blades locked tight in flight, then throws them wide open on impact.
The front blade is .060 inches thick, giving it fixed-blade durability, while the rear blades slice deep with minimal resistance. Available in 100-grain aluminum and heavier stainless steel options, this head is made for serious hunters running tuned bows and solid arrow builds. If you want big entry and exit holes, fast blood trails, and consistent performance, this one’s worth the money.
Specs:
100-grain 7075 aluminum
125- and 150-grain stainless options
.060 inch main blade
.030 inch deployable blades
Best Use: Treestand or ground blind setups where you want maximum cutting and dependable deployment.
Tip: Inspect the locking system and blade pins before season. When tuned right, these heads fly just like field points past 70 yards.
SEVR Ti 2.0 – $16.99 each (sold individually)

The SEVR Ti 2.0 is built for hunters who want mechanical broadhead flight with fixed-blade reliability. It uses a rear-deploying blade system that locks open on impact and pivots around bone to stay on target. The titanium ferrule gives it a strength advantage over most aluminum options, especially at higher arrow speeds or when shooting through tough angles.
SEVR’s design also includes a practice mode screw, allowing you to shoot your actual hunting head without deploying the blades on the range. That means less guesswork, more confidence, and tighter groups when it counts. With a generous 2-inch main cut and optional 1.5-inch model, the Ti 2.0 is a versatile killer that performs well across a range of setups.
Specs:
100- and 125-grain
titanium ferrule
replaceable rear-deploy blades
Best Use: High-energy compound bows or crossbows where structural strength and accuracy matter.
Tip: Use the practice-mode screw to dial in your zero with the exact broadhead you’ll hunt with.
Grim Reaper Pro Series – $44.99 (3-pack)

The Grim Reaper Pro Series is the kind of broadhead that just works. No bands. No collars. No gimmicks. Instead, it uses a simple spring-loaded blade system that opens on contact and creates a nasty wound channel without fail. Available in multiple cut diameters, the Pro Series three-blade models are especially popular with whitetail hunters sitting 20 feet up in a tree.
These heads fly true, penetrate well, and have been dropping bucks for decades. While they may not be the flashiest option on the market, they make up for it with consistency and field-proven results. If you want a mechanical head that’s tough, sharp, and gets the job done without overthinking it, this is it.
Specs:
Multiple diameters from 1.3 to 2 inches
Spring-tension, 3-blade design
Best Use: Treestand or rut hunting where close-to-mid-range shots are common.
Tip: Works best with mid-weight arrows and a bow that’s properly tuned, get your paper tuning right, and they’ll fly like darts.
Top 3 Fixed-Blade Broadheads for Whitetail
Iron Will S Series – $129.95 (3-pack)

The Iron Will S Series is built for hunters who want zero compromise when it comes to penetration and durability. Machined from A2 tool steel, cryo-treated, and honed to a razor edge, this head is made to break bone and keep going.
They’re expensive, no doubt, but the S Series is also one of the few broadheads that can punch through a shoulder blade and still come out shaving sharp on the other side. Available with vented or solid blade options and in a wide range of weights, the S Series is ideal for hunters who shoot heavy setups or demand confidence in marginal situations. If you’ve got your bow tuned right, these heads fly true, cut deep, and often live to kill again.
Specs:
Vented or solid
100–200 grains
.062-inch blade thickness
Best Use: High-momentum arrows, shoulder-breaking setups, or deep-woods whitetail hunters who want pass-throughs no matter what
Tip: Iron Will sells sharpening tools matched to their blade angle — touch up the edge before the season starts and after each hunt to keep them lethal.
Slick Trick Standard – $49.99 (4-pack)

The Slick Trick Standard is one of the most proven fixed‑blade broadheads in modern whitetail hunting. It features a compact stainless steel ferrule and a true four‑blade design that delivers consistent flight and a clean, wide wound pattern. While the cutting diameter is just 1 inch, the additional blades open up the hole for serious blood loss and fast hits.
These heads are known for tight groups out to 40 yards when your bow is correctly tuned. Hunters trust them for durability, replaceable blades, and field repairability if needed. They may not be flashy, but they’ve earned their place in thousands of whitetail kills for good reason.
Specs:
1‑inch cutting diameter
Four‑blade fixed design
100‑grain stainless steel
Best Use: Whitetail setups where reliability, ease of tuning, and value matter most
Tip: Spin‑test and paper tune your arrows: you’ll see just how straight these fly when setup right
G5 Montec M3 – $44.95 (3-pack)

The G5 Montec M3 is a one-piece, no-frills fixed-blade built for whitetail hunters who value strength and simplicity. It's cut from a solid piece of stainless steel and features a cut-on-contact tip, giving it the kind of durability that stands up to bone, mud, and brush without failure.
The M3 is easy to sharpen, corrosion-resistant, and doesn’t require any blade replacement; just touch it up and shoot again. It’s a great choice for hunters who want a rugged head they can practice with and hunt with all season. At just under $45 for a 3-pack, it delivers solid performance without draining your gear budget. It might not win beauty contests, but it does win blood trails.
Specs:
100- and 125-grain options
Cut-on-contact tip
One-piece stainless steel
Best Use: Treestand or ground blind setups where toughness and dependability matter.
Tip: Be sure to spin test arrows after practice to ensure good arrow flight for hunting season.
Broadhead Tuning Tips

When it comes to broadheads, there is no perfect choice, just the one that flies true from your setup and gives you confidence when a shot presents itself. Whether you lean mechanical or fixed, the best head is the one you have tested, tuned, and trust to do its job.
Do not wait until the week before the opener to figure it out. Shoot your broadheads now, test your arrows, and walk into the woods with zero doubt. When a buck steps out, that confidence might be the difference between a long trail and a short drag.
Spin check every arrow
Before anything else, spin-test each arrow with a broadhead installed. If it wobbles, the insert is likely crooked or the shaft is out of square. Fix it or toss it. Wobbly arrows don’t group.
Tune for impact, not theory
Shoot a 3-arrow group with field points, then a 3-arrow group with broadheads at 20 yards. If broadheads hit off-center, adjust your rest toward the broadhead impact. Repeat until they group together.

Step it out
Tuning at 20 yards is a start. Do it again at 30, and then again at 40. A small tuning issue gets worse the farther you go. Broadheads don’t lie, if they hit off, your bow’s not right.
Match your arrows
Keep everything identical in all of your hunting arrows, including spine, length, insert weight, and vanes. Broadheads expose inconsistencies that field points hide. Number your shafts and bench any flyers.
Finish with broadheads
Sight in your final pins using your actual hunting broadheads. Don’t assume your broadhead zero matches your field point zero, especially at longer distances.
Sharpen and inspect
Blades get dull fast, even in practice. Resharpen or replace them before opening day. Make sure everything’s tight. A loose blade or nicked edge is a lost deer waiting to happen.