Wisconsin fishing reports
103 reports for Wisconsin — what's biting, water temps, and where to focus.
Lake Michigan Coho and Chinook Primed for the Late-May Push
The WI DNR Lake Michigan Fishing Report confirms the Rowley's Bay boat launch in Door County reopens this afternoon, May 31, after being closed for concrete slab improvements since ice-off, restoring full northern access just as the late-spring salmon window gets underway. Per the WI DNR Lake Michigan Fishing Report, 2024 delivered a record coho harvest of more than 210,000 fish and over 160,000 Chinook (the strongest since 2012), gains attributed to several healthy alewife year-classes that improved stocked salmon survival rates. Those fish are now maturing in the system. No live buoy or gauge data was available for this report, so anglers should check local forecasts for current surface temps, which typically run upper-40s to mid-50s in late May, squarely in the prime trolling range for both species. Smallmouth bass along Door County's rocky Green Bay shoreline are in or near the post-spawn phase and typically begin feeding aggressively once they clear the beds.
Post-spawn bass run hot as Chequamegon Bay whitefish fishery builds momentum
Tactical Bassin reports multiple giant bass in post-spawn mode are biting hard on chatterbaits, swimbaits, dropshot, and neko rigs around isolated offshore structure across Wisconsin's inland waters — a pattern kicking into gear as the general fishing season, open since May 2, matures toward summer. On Lake Superior's Chequamegon Bay, a separate story is developing: lake whitefish have emerged as a standout open-water target, drawing enough angler interest that WI DNR Lake Superior Fishing convened a public meeting and released an online questionnaire to gauge preferences for managing this growing fishery. Jason Mitchell Outdoors (YT) rounds out the mid-season picture with May walleye responding to shallow trolling. The Wisconsin River at USGS gauge 05391000 reads 561 cfs this morning, a moderate level keeping wading accessible and walleye staged on current structure.
Driftless brown trout active on streamers as late-May hatches begin firing
Root River Rod Co, featured in MidCurrent's most recent Tying Tuesday, spotlights their go-to Driftless streamer — a pine squirrel jig built to bounce the rocky bottom without hanging up in the tight, technical spaces of these spring creeks — as a direct signal that late-May stream action is building. USGS gauge 05407000 on the Wisconsin River registered 9,780 cfs on May 26, indicating elevated regional flows from recent precipitation; the groundwater-fed nature of most Driftless streams should buffer that pulse, but smaller rain-fed tributaries may carry off-color water for a day or two. No surface temperature reading was available from the gauges we checked. MidCurrent's surface-and-film pattern roundup also notes hatches beginning to fire across the region, with anglers building full water-column toolkits from dry film to subsurface. Hatch Magazine's spring creek coverage underscores this as a pivotal window: selective, pressured fish reward fine tippets and patient presentation over hardware.
Post-Spawn Walleye and Bass Fire Up the Upper Mississippi Pools
USGS gauge 05344500 clocked 21,700 cfs on the Upper Mississippi at Prescott this morning, signaling elevated but fishable late-spring flow as walleye and bass move into post-spawn feeding mode. Wired 2 Fish notes that post-spawn bass run the gamut right now: a portion are "super aggressive, gorging themselves on shad spawns," while others stay shallow and finicky — both populations likely present simultaneously across the pools. Jason Mitchell Outdoors is dedicating coverage to "May Walleye Craziness" this week, and AnglingBuzz features guide Jason Freed breaking down slip bobber rigs and big-water walleye tactics — both strong indicators that walleye-sauger are in active feeding mode across Upper Midwest river systems. Fishing the Midwest notes that large rivers "can provide some outstanding fishing action" at this point in the season, with shallow-water casting approaches working well on flats and backwater cuts. Water temperature is unavailable from today's gauge; target eddy slack zones behind wing dams where warmer pockets tend to concentrate fish.
Late-May Driftless hatches set up a two-way bite on streamers and evening dries
Root River Rod Co's pine squirrel jig, spotlighted this week by MidCurrent as a go-to Driftless streamer built to bounce rocky bottoms without hanging in tight, technical water, captures the current moment on Wisconsin's spring-fed limestone streams. USGS gauge 05407000 returned no live readings at report time; anglers should pull current flows directly before wading. What context we do have points squarely at a late-May sweet spot: MidCurrent's water-column roundup notes that hatches are beginning to fire, with patterns covering every feeding lane from surface film to open water now carrying real weight. Flylab underscores the evergreen value of midge imitations, with larvae, pupae, and adults all taken freely by trout. Hatch Magazine's spring creek skills piece is a timely reminder that soft, drag-free presentations matter most on the flat, clear currents the Driftless is known for. Sulphur and caddis emergences are typical for the final week of May; plan for evening risers on the slower flats.
Northwoods walleye and musky staging shallow as Minocqua lakes warm into the 60s
Lakes in the Minocqua area are running mid-50s to low-60s, per Rollie & Helen's Musky Shop's late-May 2026 report, and fish are beginning to stage in shallower water after a cool spring. The shop recommends starting shallow and working systematically outward, a smart early-season approach when fish are still scattered. This year's walleye and musky openers coincided for the first time since the early 1980s, per Rollie & Helen's, drawing added angler attention to Vilas and Oneida county waters. Musky in particular are showing the effects of increased pressure: the shop notes that LiveScope-educated fish have grown wary of big traditional presentations, making finesse tactics increasingly important. As the season deepens and water temps push toward the upper 60s, emergent cabbage and coontail beds will concentrate both predators and bait. No USGS gauge data was available this cycle; rely on Rollie & Helen's for the freshest local lake readings.
Salmon Trolling Season Gains Steam on Lake Michigan as Door County Access Shifts
The Wisconsin DNR confirmed the Rowley's Bay boat launch in Door County, near Newport State Park, will reopen at approximately 4 p.m. on May 31, 2026, following concrete improvement work that started at ice-off. Door County anglers should plan alternative launches through Memorial Day weekend. The 2024 Lake Michigan harvest summary from the WI DNR offers a strong backdrop for the season now opening: anglers recorded over 210,000 coho salmon last year, a new record, alongside more than 160,000 Chinook, the best king salmon haul since 2012. The WI DNR credits recent strong alewife year classes for improved smolt survival driving those numbers. No buoy water-temperature readings were available for this report; late May surface temps off Door County and Sheboygan typically trend in the upper 40s to mid-50s°F, with salmon often holding near a developing thermocline. Anglers running trolling programs should probe multiple depth ranges to locate fish.
Walleye Running Hot in May as Chequamegon Bay Whitefish Attract Crowds
Jason Mitchell Outdoors (YT) captures the moment with 'May Walleye Craziness,' and conditions across Wisconsin are matching the headline. Post-spawn walleye have moved into hard-feeding mode on the Wisconsin River system and connecting flowages. The USGS gauge at site 05391000 on the Wisconsin River logged 663 cfs at 6 a.m. on May 25 — a moderate, workable spring flow that keeps drift fishing and jigging presentations accessible from both boats and shore. Up on Lake Superior, WI DNR Lake Superior Fishing reports that angling pressure on Chequamegon Bay lake whitefish has grown enough to prompt a DNR management meeting and public questionnaire this spring — a signal the bite is real and the fishery is expanding. AnglingBuzz (YT) bridges both waters with a segment pairing shallow-water walleye alongside Lake Superior sturgeon tactics, confirming multiple species are active across the region. With the First Quarter moon this week, we're seeing the best action concentrated in early-morning and evening feeding windows.
Post-spawn walleye craziness peaks across the Upper Mississippi pools
USGS gauge 05344500 at Prescott logged 23,400 cfs on May 24, a moderate spring flow that keeps current seams, wingdam tips, and slackwater pool edges in play for walleye and sauger. Jason Mitchell Outdoors (YT) is headlining this window "May Walleye Craziness," framing the post-spawn transition as one of the year's peak periods for river walleye. AnglingBuzz (YT) backs that read, featuring fishing guide Jason Freed's walleye slip-bobber rig setup this week alongside big-water walleye tactics applicable to the Mississippi's deeper pool interiors. Fishing the Midwest notes that spring shallow presentations — slow trolling and casting to flats — are producing walleyes along with crappie and bass across the broader Midwest. Water temperature data is unavailable from the gauge this week, but late May on the Mississippi typically puts surface temps in the upper 50s to mid-60s°F, consistent with bass wrapping up their spawn on protected sand flats and flathead catfish beginning to feed aggressively after dark.
Driftless browns primed for evening hatches as late-May window opens
MidCurrent's latest Tying Tuesday coverage calls out Root River Rod Co's go-to Driftless streamer, a pine squirrel jig built to tick the rocky bottom through tight, technical runs without hanging up, and it is a reliable fallback when trout are not looking up. No live readings returned from USGS gauge 05407000 this cycle, so verify current flows before wading. Late May is historically one of the strongest windows in Wisconsin's limestone spring creeks: Sulphur and caddis hatches typically build toward dusk, drawing brown trout off the bottom and into the film. Hatch Magazine's recent coverage of spring creek technique is a timely reminder that Driftless water demands fine tippet, careful approach angles, and patience. The fish are pressured and the water is clear. With a First Quarter moon this weekend, nighttime light stays subdued, which should keep fish in evening feeding lanes longer than a full-moon cycle typically allows.
Northwoods Walleye and Musky Stage Shallow in Late-May Opener
Rollie & Helen's Musky Shop in Minocqua reports that lakes across the Northwoods have warmed to the mid-50s to low-60s in late May 2026, with both walleye and musky beginning to stage in shallower water after a cold start to the season. Fish remain somewhat scattered, but the shop's current advice is to lead shallow and work progressively deeper, a search pattern well-suited to the post-spawn transition these species are navigating. Adding to the season's early interest, the 2026 musky opener coincided with the walleye opener for the first time since the early 1980s, giving Northwoods anglers simultaneous access to both trophy fisheries from day one. The First Quarter moon this weekend favors moderate feeding activity around low-light windows. USGS gauge 05400650 returned no data this period, leaving lake-level conditions unconfirmed by instrumentation. Expect improving bite consistency as temperatures continue climbing toward the mid-60s.
Late-May Salmon Season Builds on Lake Michigan's Door County Shore
Record coho numbers from 2024 set the tone for this season: the WI DNR Lake Michigan Fishing Report confirmed 210,000-plus coho harvested statewide, a new record, alongside 160,000-plus Chinook, the best King total since 2012. The DNR credits strong alewife year classes with boosting stocked-fish survival through critical early-life stages. For Door County this week, a key access note: the Rowley's Bay boat launch near Newport State Park remains closed until approximately 4 p.m. on May 31 while concrete ramp improvements are completed; plan for alternate launches in the Sturgeon Bay area. No current buoy readings or on-water charter reports are available this cycle, leaving water temperature unconfirmed. With the First Quarter moon aligned with late-May timing, salmon trolling and smallmouth bass action are seasonally expected to be building. Confirm conditions locally before launching and monitor marine forecasts closely, as Lake Michigan can build significant wave heights on short notice.