I think the first question is always whether you want a euro-only rod or something that can throw a regular fly line too.
I lean toward the latter. I like having a 3wt fly line on my spool and being able to put on a regular leader, so I can do some swinging or dry fly. There’s no free lunch, though; a versatile euro rod is going to be less accurate, less sensitive and probably slightly harder to cast (particularly at distance).
If you want a versatile euro rod, a 10ft 3wt Echo Carbon XL, Echo Shadow II or Orvis Recon would be a good choice. These are all relatively old rod designs, before the euro game got really specialized. That’s why they can tolerate a fly line.
If you want a euro-only rod, there’s many good options. 10ft 6in-ish 3wt Moonshine Epiphany, Cortland Nymph Series or Diamondback Ideal Nymph would be my recommendations. If you want a really cheap setup to try it out, the Greys Fin combo is very good value.
Make sure you get a proper “euro” reel. I can’t be bothered explaining why, but don’t listen to folks that just tell you to use a Lamson Liquid or something like that. Below are some good options, in order of price. Note that there’s a lot of expensive “euro” reels out there, from high end brands, that are poorly designed; the companies don’t actually know what they’re doing and are just trying to get their cut of the euro hype. If it isn’t in the list below, it’s probably poorly designed, too expensive or I haven’t heard of it.
- Greys Fin
- Danielsson DryFly
- Vision Hero Nymph & Dry
- Diamondback Ideal Nymph
- Sage ESN
Lastly, don’t use a euro line. Look up the Troutbitten mono rig.