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Texas fishing reports

221 reports for Texas — what's biting, water temps, and where to focus.

221
Current reports
5
Regions covered
7
Hot bites
76°F
Avg water temp
TXLower Laguna Madre & South Padre
Saltwater

75°F Water Signals Prime Trout and Redfish Season at Lower Laguna Madre

Water temperatures of 75–76°F recorded at NOAA buoys 42020 and 42043 place the Lower Laguna Madre squarely in the late-spring sweet spot for inshore fishing. Open-Gulf wave heights of 9.2 feet at buoy 42020 make offshore runs inadvisable right now — the Laguna's protected shallows are the better play. Speckled trout are typical targets as warming water concentrates bait on grass flats along the lagoon's west shoreline, while redfish should be actively working the same shallow zones under the waning gibbous moon's moderate tidal push. Salt Strong's Gulf Coast redfish footage underscores how aggressively these fish herd bait in organized schools — expect similar behavior on Laguna flats as conditions remain prime. Field & Stream recently noted snook expanding their Gulf range northward into Mississippi waters, a trend worth monitoring for South Padre's jetty and surf zones in May. No specific firsthand reports from Lower Laguna Madre guides or shops appeared in this week's intel feeds; the assessments below reflect environmental readings and established seasonal patterns for the region.

75°F
water · 7-day
Speckled Trout
Active bite
Speckled TroutRedfishFlounder
TXEast Texas (Toledo Bend, Sam Rayburn)
Freshwater

East Texas Bass Lock Onto Shallow Beds; Neches Running 4,130 CFS

With water temperatures climbing toward typical spawn windows in East Texas, largemouth bass at Toledo Bend and Sam Rayburn are moving into predictable shallow-structure patterns. Wired 2 Fish contributor Brandon Coulter this week detailed a swimbait-plus-finesse-bait approach tailored for exactly this stage: fan-cast a swimbait to locate fish holding near beds, stumps, and shallow cover, then drop a finesse plastic on any follower to finish the deal. The Neches River is flowing at 4,130 CFS per USGS gauge 08030500 (recorded 2:45 AM CT, May 4), reflecting moderate late-spring conditions in the Sam Rayburn basin. Crappie are staging for the spawn across the broader region: Wired 2 Fish and Outdoor Hub both reported heavyweight-limit crappie catches at Grenada Lake in neighboring Mississippi on April 24, a seasonal pattern that typically mirrors East Texas lakes in the first week of May. No on-site water temperature data is available at this time.

N/A
water temp
Largemouth Bass
Active bite
Largemouth BassCrappieBlue Catfish
TXHill Country lakes (Travis, LBJ, Buchanan)
Freshwater

Hill Country Lakes Bass in Late Spawn as Colorado Flows 405 cfs

The Colorado River feeding the Highland Lakes chain is running at 405 cfs at the Austin gauge (USGS gauge 08158000) as of the predawn hours of May 4 — a moderate, stable flow that bodes well for lake levels on Travis, LBJ, and Buchanan. No real-time temperature readings are available from the gauge, but early May in Central Texas typically puts surface temps in the upper 60s to low 70s°F, which puts largemouth bass squarely in late-spawn mode. Wired 2 Fish breaks down a productive approach for this window: cover shallow structure with a swimbait to locate bed fish around stumps and rocky points, then switch to a finesse soft plastic to convert follows into bites. Crappie are likely staging for the spawn in 8–15 feet near standing timber, and white bass — whose annual Colorado River run typically peaks March through April — may still be accessible in the creek arms and river channels feeding the upper ends of each impoundment.

N/A
water temp
Largemouth Bass
Hot bite
Largemouth BassCrappieWhite Bass
TXGulf Coast (Galveston-Corpus)
Saltwater

Gulf Settles at 75°F as Spring Bite Windows Open from Galveston to Corpus

Water temperatures logged at 75–76°F across the central Gulf buoy network—NOAA buoy 42035 and NOAA buoy 42020—mark a textbook early-May warm-up for the Galveston-to-Corpus stretch. A rough-water pulse, with 9.2-foot waves recorded at buoy 42020 on May 2, has given way to calmer 2-foot seas by May 4, reopening wade and nearshore windows that were largely shut earlier in the week. With water in the mid-70s and a waning gibbous moon, this region's core spring species—speckled trout, redfish, Spanish mackerel, and black drum—should be well-positioned along grass flats and nearshore structure. None of the angler-intel feeds reviewed this week carried TX Gulf-specific charter or tackle-shop reports, so species assessments here reflect seasonal norms and buoy readings rather than first-hand on-water testimony. Check with local captains and bait shops for real-time bite windows before heading out.

75°F
water · 7-day
Speckled Trout
Active bite
Speckled TroutRedfishSpanish Mackerel
TXTexas lakes & rivers
Freshwater

Texas Bass in Full Spawn at 74°F — Swimbait/Finesse the Key Combo

USGS gauge 08211200 logged 74°F on the morning of May 4 — right in the heart of Texas's bass spawn window. Wired 2 Fish writer Brandon Coulter broke down exactly the setup that's working for these conditions this week: a swimbait to cover shallow water and locate bed fish near stumps and submerged structure, followed by a finesse bait to convert the lookers. River flows on the same gauge are running a quiet 31.6 cfs, pointing to clear, calm conditions where finesse presentations outperform power fishing. Across the South, crappie are also stacking up on structure — Wired 2 Fish and Outdoor Hub both reported a 4.10-pound slab pulled from Grenada Lake, Mississippi on April 24, a signal that slab crappie are actively staging and biting throughout southern reservoirs at similar temperatures. With a waning gibbous moon, the best solunar feeding windows will be concentrated in the early morning hours — plan your launch accordingly.

74°F
water · 7-day
Largemouth Bass
Hot bite
Largemouth BassCrappieCatfish
TXTexas lakes & rivers
Freshwater

Texas Waters Hit 78°F — Bass Post-Spawn, Crappie on Structure

USGS gauge 08211200 logged 78°F water temperature and 32.4 cfs flow on May 3, placing Texas rivers and reservoirs firmly in post-spawn bass territory. Largemouth that have finished spawning are retreating to deeper structure — main-lake points, submerged timber, and channel edges — where crankbaits and soft plastics in crawfish and shad patterns typically draw strikes. Field & Stream's current crankbait coverage highlights medium- and deep-diving models for exactly this seasonal transition. No Texas-specific charter or shop reports surfaced in this week's feeds, but a 4.10-pound white crappie landed at Grenada Lake in Mississippi — covered by both Wired 2 Fish and Outdoor Hub — signals that crappie across the South-Central region are at or near the end of their spawn cycle, a pattern consistent with what Texas reservoir anglers typically encounter in early May. The Waning Gibbous moon favors dawn and dusk windows over midday sessions.

78°F
water · 7-day
Largemouth Bass
Active bite
Largemouth BassCrappieChannel Catfish
TXLower Laguna Madre & South Padre
Saltwater

76°F Water and Full Moon Prime Lower Laguna Madre for Spring Inshore Push

NOAA buoy 42020 clocked 76°F water temps in the southern Gulf on May 2, with buoy 42043 confirming that same surface reading on May 3 — warm, favorable conditions for the Lower Laguna Madre's signature spring inshore fishery. Offshore caution: buoy 42020 also recorded 9.2-foot wave heights, indicating rough Gulf seas that could complicate navigation near South Padre's open-coast launches. The protected laguna itself should be largely insulated from that chop. A full moon today sharpens tidal movement and compresses the prime bite into early-morning and late-afternoon windows. No regional charter, shop, or state agency reports specifically covering Lower Laguna Madre or South Padre surfaced in this cycle's intel feeds, so the species assessments below draw on water-temperature and seasonal patterns typical for this stretch of the Texas coast in early May rather than direct on-the-water testimony.

76°F
water · 7-day
Spotted Seatrout
Active bite
Spotted SeatroutRed DrumTarpon
TXEast Texas (Toledo Bend, Sam Rayburn)
Freshwater

Crappie Spawn Peaks Under Full Moon at Toledo Bend and Sam Rayburn

Flow on the Sabine River above Toledo Bend registered 2,520 cfs at 7:45 a.m. Sunday (USGS gauge 08030500), pointing to moderate inflow and stable reservoir conditions heading into the weekend. No surface temperature reading was available from the gauge, but early May typically puts East Texas lake temps in the upper 60s to low 70s°F — squarely within peak crappie spawn range. Across the broader region, both Wired 2 Fish and Outdoor Hub reported a 4.10-pound crappie at Grenada Lake, Mississippi (April 24), where fish were actively staging for spawning; Wired 2 Fish described the lake as "on fire with big crappies" with heavyweight-limit catches running common — a strong regional signal for what to expect at Toledo Bend and Sam Rayburn under this weekend's full moon. Largemouth bass are likely transitioning out of the spawn and moving to secondary structure along channel ledges.

N/A
water temp
Crappie
Hot bite
CrappieLargemouth BassBlue Catfish
TXHill Country lakes (Travis, LBJ, Buchanan)
Freshwater

Full Moon Opens Crappie Spawn Window on Travis, LBJ, and Buchanan

USGS gauge 08158000 logged the Colorado River at 146 cfs early Sunday morning — stable, moderate inflow that keeps Hill Country lake levels steady and preserves the water clarity anglers depend on during the spawn push. No temperature reading came through the gauge, but early May typically puts Lakes Travis, LBJ, and Buchanan in the 65–70°F band, historically the heart of crappie spawning season for this chain. This week, Wired 2 Fish reported that crappie across the broader South were actively staging for the spawn — guide Trent Goss on Grenada Lake in Mississippi was logging heavyweight-limit slabs as fish stacked on shallow structure — and that same full-moon trigger fires reliably on Hill Country reservoirs each May. Largemouth bass are broadly in post-spawn recovery: females have moved off beds to deeper transition zones while males may still be guarding fry in the shallows through early week.

N/A
water temp
Crappie
Hot bite
CrappieLargemouth BassStriped Bass
TXTexas lakes & rivers
Freshwater

Texas Lakes Hit 74°F as Full Moon Kicks Off Crappie Spawn

USGS gauge 08211200 logged 74°F water early this morning with flow running at a modest 32.4 cfs — a combination that puts Texas crappie squarely in spawn territory. Add the full moon overhead and you have a textbook trigger for crappie pressing into the shallows to bed. Outdoor Hub and Wired 2 Fish both covered a 4.10-pound white crappie taken on April 24 at Grenada Lake in Mississippi, where guide Trent Goss was working staged fish with forward-facing sonar — a pattern nearly identical to what Texas reservoirs produce at matching water temperatures. Largemouth bass are simultaneously in or just past their own spawn at 74°F, with the post-spawn feed-up window opening on many lakes. Field & Stream's recent breakdown of crankbait selection is well-timed: squarebill and medium-diving crankbaits shine for bass moving off beds to chase shad. Conditions look stable, and the gauge reading suggests fishable levels throughout the region.

74°F
water · 7-day
Crappie
Hot bite
CrappieLargemouth BassCatfish
TXTexas lakes & rivers
Freshwater

Texas Freshwater at 78°F: Catfish Hot, Post-Spawn Bass Going Deep

USGS gauge 08211200 recorded 78°F water and a moderate 41.3 cfs flow as of May 2 — warm enough to push Texas freshwater fishing squarely into early-summer patterns. Largemouth bass have largely completed their spawn at this temperature and are transitioning into post-spawn recovery, typically pulling back from shallow flats toward deeper adjacent structure and feeding more selectively. Catfish, by contrast, are in prime feeding mode as water climbs through the 75–80°F band. No Texas-specific charter, tackle shop, or agency reports came through in this cycle's angler-intel feed, so species outlooks here reflect seasonal baseline expectations rather than fresh on-water testimony. Worth flagging: Wired 2 Fish reports that crappie are staging heavily and generating heavyweight limits on comparable Southern reservoirs this week — similar conditions are typical on Texas impoundments at the full moon in early May, though local verification is always the smart move.

78°F
water · 7-day
Largemouth Bass
Active bite
Largemouth BassCrappieCatfish
TXGulf Coast (Galveston-Corpus)
Saltwater

Gulf Water Hits 77°F but 10-Foot Swells Bottle Up Offshore Fleet Along TX Coast

NOAA buoy 42020 is logging 77°F water and 10.2-foot wave heights this morning alongside sustained 14 m/s (27-knot) winds — conditions that effectively ground offshore runs for most recreational anglers. Nearshore buoy 42035 paints a more workable picture: 76°F water, 4.6-foot seas, and 11 m/s winds. With a full moon driving the strongest tidal flows of the month, current movement through bays and passes is elevated, which typically concentrates bait at drain points and channel edges. Coastal Angler Magazine notes that May is historically prime time for king mackerel along Gulf Coast waters, and mid-70s water temps are exactly the thermal trigger those fish respond to on nearshore reefs and structure. Until the offshore swell settles, the smart play is the back bays, jetty bases, and shallow grass flats reachable from Galveston to Corpus Christi. Speckled trout and redfish should respond well to full-moon tide changes, especially during early-morning and late-afternoon windows.

77°F
water · 7-day
Speckled Trout
Active bite
Speckled TroutRedfishKing Mackerel