Washington fishing reports
191 reports for Washington — what's biting, water temps, and where to focus.
Summer Bass Tournament Season Kicks Off Across the Columbia Basin
Per Outdoor Hub's Washington Bass Tournament Calendar for Summer 2026, bass season is in full swing across Eastern Washington's Columbia Basin, with events running through August at Moses Lake, Potholes Reservoir, and Banks Lake — a lineup shared by WDFW and the Inland Empire Bass Club covering both open and club-only competitions. That calendar is a fishery signal in itself: tournament anglers don't schedule on dead water. On the river side, the Yakima at Ellensburg is reading 3,020 cfs as of Sunday morning (USGS gauge 12484500), reflecting active snowmelt drainage that keeps flows elevated and water cold. No temperature reading is available from the gauge. New moon conditions this weekend should sharpen low-light feeding windows at dawn and dusk. Wired 2 Fish flagged drought-driven fish kills hitting Western reservoirs broadly this week, though Eastern WA impoundments are not cited in those reports.
Chinook Season Builds Across Puget Sound and Washington's Pacific Coast
WA WDFW Fishing Reports confirms statewide creel survey and fish-stocking programs are actively running this week, though no specific on-the-water bite data reached this report for Puget Sound or Washington's Pacific coast in the current cycle. No buoy readings are available to anchor surface temperatures. Drawing on typical mid-June patterns: summer Chinook populations generally begin appearing across Puget Sound marine areas by mid-month, with troll and mooching action building through late June as early runs stage in the northern Sound. Pacific halibut retention along the Washington coast is typically in full swing by this date, with favorable summer weather opening up longer runs to offshore grounds. The new moon today tends to produce the month's strongest tidal exchanges, a window historically favorable for salmon feeding on the turn. Anglers should verify marine-area-specific retention rules with WDFW before any trip, as seasons shift rapidly this time of year.
Olympic Peninsula Salmon Rivers Enter Early Summer Window as Flows Stabilize
USGS gauge 12041200 recorded 1,040 cfs and gauge 12035000 logged 591 cfs on Olympic Peninsula river systems Sunday morning, readings consistent with a post-snowmelt decline that historically coincides with the first meaningful push of summer Chinook into Peninsula drainages. Water temperature data was unavailable from either gauge this week. Specific bite reports from shops, charters, or state agency creel surveys were absent from this week's intel feeds — WA WDFW Fishing Reports maintains active angler-interview monitoring on Peninsula systems, but no detailed catch data was available at press time. Conditions are seasonally appropriate for sea-run cutthroat staging in tidal reaches and for early summer steelhead beginning to show in lower mainstem reaches. The new moon today can trigger baitfish movement and fish activity at river mouths. Verify current season status and retention rules with WDFW before targeting any salmon species — regulations on these systems change annually and sometimes within-season.
Columbia Basin bass season rolls as summer steelhead gear up on WA rivers
USGS gauge 14113000 registered 975 cfs and 57°F on the Columbia system at dawn Sunday — conditions that put both coldwater and warmwater fishing firmly in range. The sharpest signal this week comes from Outdoor Hub, which reports that bass season is rolling across Washington state, with a full summer tournament lineup planned at Moses Lake, Potholes Reservoir, and Banks Lake through August. Smallmouth and largemouth are the draw at those Columbia Basin impoundments, and the new moon tonight sets up low-light feeding windows at dawn and dusk worth planning around. Field & Stream's trout temperature guide places 57°F squarely in the comfort zone for rainbow trout and steelhead — well below the stress thresholds that trigger hoot owl-style restrictions — so coldwater rivers and tailwaters are in good shape. Summer steelhead typically begin building numbers in Columbia mainstem reaches by mid-June, and moderate, clear-running flows at this level are exactly the conditions that make them catchable.
Columbia Basin bass season hits full stride with summer tournament action
Bass season is rolling across Eastern Washington's Columbia Basin, with Moses Lake, Potholes Reservoir, and Banks Lake hosting a packed tournament schedule from now through August, per Outdoor Hub. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife and the Inland Empire Bass Club have a full lineup of open and club events on the calendar for summer 2026. The Yakima River is flowing at 2,990 cfs as of early this morning (USGS gauge 12484500) — elevated but within manageable summer range. No water temperature was recorded on the gauge this cycle; mid-June conditions on the Yakima typically favor trout activity when temperatures stay below stress thresholds. Wired 2 Fish flagged drought-driven fish kills hitting reservoirs across the West, a useful reminder to monitor local water levels through July. The new moon today removes lunar pressure, which often sharpens mid-morning bass feeding windows on the Columbia Basin lakes.
Chinook and Halibut on the Menu as Puget Sound Hits Mid-June Stride
Washington Sea Grant is rallying volunteers for the third annual Salish Sea-wide Molt Blitz on June 26, a citizen-science event that doubles as a reminder that Dungeness crab are in their active summer growth phase throughout Puget Sound. No NOAA buoy readings or on-the-water captain reports reached this update's data feed, so specific current conditions are unavailable; consult WA WDFW's creel and catch reports for the freshest access-site interviews. That said, mid-June is a productive window across the region. Chinook salmon move through Puget Sound passes in earnest this month, and Pacific halibut season on the Pacific coast side is typically in full swing. Today's New Moon sets up strong spring tides; the transitions between flood and ebb tend to concentrate baitfish schools and draw predators to current seams. Lingcod season is open and fish are typically holding over rocky structure. Anglers planning weekend runs should verify current emergency closures via WDFW before heading out.
Columbia Basin bass rolling; summer steelhead beginning to build
USGS gauge 14113000 recorded 63°F and 975 cfs on June 14, placing the monitored Columbia system reach at moderate late-spring flow as water temperatures reach the upper edge of comfortable trout range. The clearest fishing signal this week comes from Outdoor Hub's Washington bass tournament calendar, which documents the Columbia Basin in full swing through August, with events at Moses Lake, Potholes Reservoir, and Banks Lake confirming warmwater species are producing well. Summer steelhead, the region's marquee mid-season run, typically begin filtering into Columbia tributaries in June and should be finding workable holding water at current flows. Trout anglers face a narrowing productive window: Field & Stream's temperature guide notes that 63°F is where trout begin to show heat stress, making early-morning sessions in shaded, well-oxygenated canyon reaches the strongest play right now. Verify current state regulations on salmon retention before heading out, as spring Chinook windows vary by reach.
Columbia Basin Bass in Full Swing at Moses Lake, Potholes, and Banks Lake
Bass season is firmly in gear across Eastern Washington's Columbia Basin, with Outdoor Hub reporting a packed summer tournament calendar running through August at Moses Lake, Potholes Reservoir, and Banks Lake. Events span Inland Empire Bass Club competitions and WDFW-supported open draws, drawing tournament competitors and recreational anglers alike as water temperatures climb. Meanwhile, the Yakima River is running at 2,950 cfs per USGS gauge 12484500 near Ellensburg, carrying elevated late-snowmelt flows that are making wading conditions difficult for trout anglers. No water temperature reading is available at this gauge. Field & Stream's mid-June trout guide notes how quickly summer heat can stress fish; anglers targeting rainbows on the Yakima should watch for any state hoot-owl advisories and plan early-morning sessions. The New Moon today opens improved low-light bite windows for bass across the Columbia Basin reservoirs.
Puget Sound Enters Mid-June Salmon Window as Boating Season Peaks
Washington Sea Grant confirmed this week that Washington's boating season is officially underway, with Puget Sound and Pacific coast waters seeing increasing recreational traffic. Specific bite reports are sparse in this cycle: no NOAA buoy readings or charter updates came through in time for press, but WA WDFW Fishing Reports notes the department runs regular creel surveys at access sites statewide, and on-the-water numbers should surface through their portal as weekend traffic builds. Mid-June is historically one of the more active windows for Chinook salmon through the Strait of Juan de Fuca and Central Sound, with marine halibut season running concurrently. Washington Sea Grant is also flagging the third annual Salish Sea-wide Molt Blitz for June 26, a citizen-science crab-molt survey signaling that Dungeness are actively cycling through summer growth phases. Crab anglers should watch local WDFW closure dates and plan accordingly.
Columbia Basin bass fire up as mid-June steelhead push begins
USGS gauge 14113000 logged 64°F and 975 cfs on June 13, placing the Columbia system squarely in early-summer mode. Smallmouth bass are the headline story right now: Outdoor Hub's Washington tournament calendar confirms bass season is rolling across the Columbia Basin, with events already scheduled at Moses Lake, Potholes Reservoir, and Banks Lake through August — a strong indicator that anglers are actively finding fish. For trout, that 64°F reading sits at the upper edge of comfortable territory. Field & Stream's temperature guide for trout fishing notes that stress builds meaningfully past 65°F, making early-morning sessions in shaded, spring-fed reaches the smart play. Summer steelhead typically begin entering Columbia tributaries in mid-June, though no direct catch reports were available this cycle to confirm exact timing. Check WA WDFW's creel and stocking reports for current access conditions. With a new moon this weekend, low-light windows at dawn and dusk should produce the best bite across all species.
Puget Sound & Pacific Enter Early-Summer Salmon and Halibut Window
WA Sea Grant's announcement of the Third Annual Salish Sea-wide Molt Blitz on June 26 is a useful seasonal marker: Dungeness crab are actively molting across the Salish Sea as summer temperatures take hold. No real-time buoy or gauge data arrived in this report cycle, and no charter or tackle-shop reports were captured for Puget Sound or the Pacific coast, so specific catch numbers are not available. WA WDFW Fishing Reports tracks creel data statewide, and anglers should check that resource for the latest access-site interviews and hatchery stocking updates before planning a trip. Seasonally, mid-June is typically when summer Chinook build through the Sound's narrows and river mouths, when outer-coast Pacific halibut season is underway, and when bottom species like rockfish and lingcod hold on nearshore structure. New moon tides on June 13 can compress tidal movement, worth factoring into any Puget Sound salmon or crab plan.
Columbia Basin bass season rolling as summer steelhead window builds
USGS gauge 14113000 put the Columbia at 57°F and 993 cfs on the morning of June 13 — conditions that sit well below the warm-water stress threshold for trout and salmon. On the bass front, Outdoor Hub confirms tournament season is in full swing across the Columbia Basin, with events at Moses Lake, Potholes Reservoir, and Banks Lake scheduled through August, organized in conjunction with the Inland Empire Bass Club and WDFW. That calendar signals smallmouth and largemouth are actively drawing competitive anglers to the Columbia's mid-basin impoundments. Specific creel data for steelhead and Chinook is not available in this cycle's intel feeds; WA WDFW Fishing Reports maintains creel and stocking updates on their site, and that remains the most reliable place to confirm current summer-run opener status. New Moon falls today, which typically extends productive low-light feeding windows into the early morning hours — worth planning around for any species you're targeting this weekend.