Alaska fishing reports
106 reports for Alaska — what's biting, water temps, and where to focus.
Spring Kings Expected as 40°F Gulf Waters Hold Rough Offshore Swells
NOAA buoy 46001 is recording water temps of 40°F and wave heights of 15.1 feet as of early morning May 5 — conditions that are both seasonally appropriate and operationally challenging for offshore Gulf of Alaska fishing. Buoy 46066 corroborates the picture with 40°F water and 13-foot seas; buoy 46080 shows a slightly warmer 42°F with winds pushing 12 meters per second. None of this cycle's angler-intel feeds carried Gulf of Alaska-specific reports, so species assessments below are grounded in buoy readings and typical seasonal patterns for the region. In most years, early May marks the opening ramp of the spring Chinook salmon run in Gulf waters, with Pacific halibut fishing in full stride across the outer shelf. Low-40s water temperatures are right where both species typically hold at this time of year. The current swell — 15 feet offshore — is the dominant constraint on fishing access. Check with local operators before committing to any offshore run this week.
Gulf of Alaska: 40–42°F Water, Heavy Swells Challenge Offshore Access
NOAA buoy 46001 is registering water temperatures of 40°F alongside 9.8-foot seas and sustained winds of 13 m/s — a characteristically turbulent early-May picture for the Gulf of Alaska. Companion stations NOAA buoy 46066 and buoy 46080 confirm the pattern, with sea-surface temps holding between 40°F and 42°F across the region. That cold, nutrient-rich baseline is typical for this stretch of the calendar and sets the table for the Gulf's signature species: Pacific halibut, king salmon, and Pacific cod. No Gulf of Alaska–specific charter or tackle-shop dispatches appeared in this cycle's angler-intel feeds — available reports skewed heavily toward Atlantic and Florida waters. Based on seasonal patterns, May marks the traditional opening stretch for halibut charters along the Gulf coast, and early chinook runs can begin staging near bay mouths. Offshore access remains the primary challenge: the current swell profile across all three buoys warrants serious caution before any open-water departure.
Kenai at 38°F and 2,280 cfs: King Salmon Season on the Doorstep
USGS gauge 15266300 logged the Kenai drainage at 38°F and 2,280 cfs on May 4 — cold, snowmelt-fed, and running at typical early-spring volume. None of this week's regional feeds carried Kenai- or interior-specific angler intel, so this report leans on gauge data and seasonal patterns known for this time of year. At 38°F, water temperatures are keeping fish metabolism slow; resident rainbow trout and Dolly Varden are the primary accessible targets right now, best approached with egg patterns or beads fished deliberately near structure in slower side channels. On interior drainages, arctic grayling are becoming available as ice recedes from upper reaches. The early king salmon season — typically opening on the lower Kenai in mid-May — is still roughly two weeks out, but early fish may already be staging in tidal reaches below the river mouth. Field & Stream's current early-season primer advises slowing presentations and targeting deeper lies in cold water: sound counsel for the Kenai right now.
Kenai River at 37°F and 2,220 CFS: Trout Window Opens Before King Season
USGS gauge 15266300 recorded the Kenai drainage at 37°F and 2,220 cfs this morning (May 4) — cold, clear-tending conditions typical of peak Alaska snowmelt season. With water temperatures this frigid, resident rainbow trout and Dolly Varden are the primary targets right now, holding in slower seams and eddies where they can conserve energy without fighting heavy current. None of the angler-intel feeds available for this report carried Alaska-specific dispatches this week; the conditions described here are grounded in gauge data and what is typical for Kenai and interior river systems at this point in the calendar. The early king salmon run is still weeks out — first-run kings typically begin entering the Kenai in mid-May — but the cold, oxygen-rich water is prime for winter-holdover rainbows on weighted nymphs and egg patterns drifted tight to the bottom.
Gulf of Alaska at 40–42°F: Halibut Season Underway as Spring Winds Hold Steady
NOAA buoys 46001 and 46066 are logging 40°F surface water across the Gulf of Alaska this morning, with buoy 46080 reading a slightly warmer 42°F at its station. Winds are running 6–8 m/s across all three stations — brisk but workable for offshore-capable vessels. Angler-intel feeds included in this report carry no Gulf of Alaska–specific dispatches this cycle; the outlook below draws on typical early-May patterns for these waters. Pacific halibut are the headline saltwater target in the Gulf right now, with the halibut season typically in full swing by this point and fish expected to be holding on deep rocky structure. King salmon returns are building toward their late-May through June peak, with encounters expected to increase through the rest of the month. Water in the low 40s tends to keep fish tight to bottom and favors slower, vertical presentations over fast-moving retrieves. The waning gibbous moon typically brings moderate tidal swings and productive dawn bite windows.
Kenai flowing at 2,140 cfs and 40°F — king season two weeks out
The USGS gauge at site 15266300 recorded 2,140 cfs and 40°F water temperature on May 3rd — cold, clean pre-runoff conditions on the Kenai system. King salmon (Chinook) are still weeks from their early-run arrival; rainbow trout and Dolly Varden are the primary targets right now. No sport-angler reports from AK freshwater guides, shops, or charters came through this cycle, so conditions below reflect gauge data and typical seasonal patterns for this region. Outdoor Hub reports Alaska's commercial fishing market is recovering strongly, with spring halibut fetching a record $9.25 per pound in Homer and Seward — the highest price ever recorded — a positive economic backdrop heading into the sport season. Interior rivers are finishing ice-out, opening grayling and northern pike water to early-season anglers. At 40°F, nymphing egg and bead patterns in deep pools and along structure is the most reliable approach for rainbow trout before runoff turbidity arrives.
40–42°F in the Gulf: King Salmon Season Opens Under a Full Moon
NOAA buoys 46001, 46066, and 46080 are all reading 40–42°F across the Gulf of Alaska this morning — right in line with typical early-May conditions for these waters. Winds are running from a moderate 4 m/s at buoy 46066 to a brisker 10 m/s at buoy 46080, with air temperatures near freezing on the lower end; wave height data is currently unavailable from all three stations. No Gulf of Alaska–specific angler reports were available in the intel feeds for this edition, so species activity assessments below reflect seasonal and temperature-based expectations rather than direct on-water testimony. King salmon and Pacific halibut are both in their traditional early-season windows, and tonight's full moon will produce the strongest tidal exchanges of the monthly cycle — a timing factor that Gulf anglers traditionally plan around for both species.
Kenai Running Cold at 39°F — Trout & Grayling Lead the Early-May Window
USGS gauge 15266300 logged 39°F and 2,180 cfs on the morning of May 3 — cold, clear, and running at a pace consistent with the tail end of spring's low-water window before peak snowmelt builds. No Alaska-specific angler reports reached the major fishing outlets this week; national feeds were focused on the Atlantic striper migration and a Midwest crappie spawn at Grenada Lake. That leaves the gauge as the primary signal. At 39°F, king salmon have not arrived in numbers, and the late-May opener remains weeks out — check current state regulations before planning a king trip. Rainbow trout and Dolly Varden, however, are well within their productive cold-water range. Interior-river grayling are likely spreading from winter holds into side channels post ice-off. The full moon on May 3 typically extends low-light feeding windows at dawn and dusk — early entry is worth the alarm clock.
Kenai Gauge at 37°F and 2,140 cfs as King Salmon Pre-Season Approaches
USGS gauge 15266300 logged 37°F water and 2,140 cfs on the morning of May 1 — typical early-spring levels for the Kenai drainage ahead of peak snowmelt. At these temperatures, salmonid metabolism remains suppressed and fish activity is limited, though resident rainbow trout and Dolly Varden are still accessible to patient anglers working slower runs and deep pools. This week's national angler-intel feeds carried no Alaska-specific reports; conditions here draw on gauge data and established early-May patterns for this region. Field & Stream's current primer on aquatic insects offers a timely reference for fly anglers who will soon encounter early stonefly and midge activity as water warms toward the 40°F threshold. King salmon — Chinook — are not yet expected in the Kenai main stem in fishable numbers; the sport season typically doesn't open until mid-May. Interior rivers are in a similar holding pattern, with Arctic grayling representing the best near-term opportunity for anglers willing to explore.
Gulf of Alaska Water Temps Hold 39–42°F as Late-April Halibut Season Ramps Up
NOAA buoys across the Gulf of Alaska logged water temperatures between 39°F and 42°F on April 29, with light winds of 4–6 m/s — readings that place conditions squarely in the Gulf's typical late-April window. Buoy 46080 recorded the warmest reading at 42°F, while buoys 46001 and 46066 came in at 40°F and 39°F respectively. Air temperature at buoy 46001 registered 4.1°C, confirming chilly but fishable conditions for offshore work. None of this week's angler-intel feeds — Saltwater Sportsman, Anglers Journal, Coastal Angler Magazine, or Field & Stream — carried Gulf of Alaska-specific bite reports, so the species outlook below draws on typical late-April seasonal patterns rather than direct on-the-water testimony. Pacific halibut is the headline species this time of year, with charter and sport seasons in full swing. King salmon are typically beginning to stage offshore, and bottomfish including rockfish and lingcod remain available on deeper structure. Verify current season dates and bag limits through state regulations before heading out.