Fishing reports
6969 reports across all 50 states — current conditions and what's biting.
Red Drum Lead the Pack as July Surf Mix Fires Up the Outer Banks
Anglers fishing NC coastal waters are locking onto red drum this week, and the pattern extends right into Outer Banks territory. Fisherman's Post (NC) July reports from the Pamlico and Neuse River systems note red drum of all sizes working the flats and structure along main river shorelines, with some big fish mixed in — a strong signal that the seasonal drum push is in full swing around the sounds. At Topsail/Sneads Ferry, the early morning topwater bite on reds has been the standout session of the week, per Fisherman's Post (NC). On the surf, Swansboro/Emerald Isle reports confirm bluefish, spots, sea mullet, and some pompano in the mix. Dirty water and floating seaweed have been factors at southern beaches, so water clarity is worth confirming before heading out. No NOAA buoy readings were available for the Outer Banks in this reporting cycle; verify current water temps locally before launching.
Smith Mountain Lake and Buggs Island stripers shift to deep summer mode
With no buoy or gauge readings available for this cycle, conditions at Smith Mountain Lake and Buggs Island are drawn from seasonal patterns and regional angler-intel feeds. Virginia DWR Wildlife Blog's posts this week covered deer harvest summaries and hunting regulation releases — no freshwater fishing updates for either water body arrived from state sources. That leaves the picture incomplete, but the seasonal template for early July in central Virginia is well established: warm surface temperatures push striped bass into deeper, cooler water through the heat of the day, with productive surface and near-surface windows compressed to first light and post-sunset. Per Tactical Bassin blog, July is actually one of the stronger months for bass overall — elevated metabolisms mean fish are actively feeding — but timing and depth discipline separate productive outings from slow ones. Topwater at first light and deep-structure presentations from mid-morning through afternoon are the patterns most likely to produce on both lakes this weekend.
Eastern WA Bass Hit Peak Form as July Heat Pushes Trout Deep
Tactical Bassin's July bass roundup puts it plainly: fish metabolisms are at a seasonal high this month, and shallow-structure smallmouth on the Columbia and Snake systems should be responding aggressively to topwater plugs and soft jerkbaits through this Fourth of July weekend. WDFW's active stocking program continues placing rainbow trout in regional lakes, giving stillwater anglers a shot at recently planted fish during early-morning hours before summer heat takes hold. No USGS gauge data was returned for Eastern Washington rivers this cycle, so specific flow and temperature readings are unavailable; plan around seasonal norms, which typically have Yakima-area rivers running low and warm through July. Fishing the Midwest reinforces the summer weedline approach for walleye, noting that anglers who work the weed edge and vary retrieves consistently out-produce those locked into a single depth or presentation. Holiday weekend pressure will be heavy on popular ramps — first-light starts and mid-week follow-ups are the play.
Bass bite rolling strong across North Georgia reservoirs for the July 4 holiday
The GA Sportsman / Georgia Outdoor News July 4 Southern Water Fishing Report notes that 'the bass have been biting this week,' with good reports coming in from lakes and ponds across Georgia heading into the Independence Day holiday. The Georgia Wildlife Blog — Fishing echoed the same regional optimism in its June 26 update, confirming summer fishing is fully underway statewide. No NOAA buoy or USGS gauge data was available for Lanier and Allatoona at publication time, so precise water temperatures remain unconfirmed. Tactical Bassin advises July bass anglers to focus on shallow cover aggressively during low-light hours, with topwater as the prime early-morning producer and the Neko rig standing out as a reliable finesse option during sunny midday windows. A waning gibbous moon this weekend favors pre-dawn and late-evening runs. Both Lanier and Allatoona are traditional summer strongholds for largemouth and spotted bass, with striper and hybrid action typically shifting into deeper, cooler thermocline zones as surface temperatures peak through mid-July.
Summer bass bite heats up across Connecticut's inland waters
Tactical Bassin notes that July pushes bass metabolisms to their annual peak, with fish "aggressively feeding on a variety of prey species" — a pattern that applies squarely to Connecticut's inland lakes, reservoirs, and ponds this Fourth of July weekend. No buoy or USGS gauge data was available for this update, so specific water temperatures cannot be confirmed; anglers should check conditions locally before launching. With a waning gibbous moon providing low-light feeding windows into the early morning hours, largemouth bass are the prime target right now. Fishing the Midwest reports success on largemouth working moving baits through emerging weedlines this season. Tactical Bassin's recent shallow-water coverage highlights dawn power-fishing as the high-percentage play when air temps climb. Panfish — bluegill and sunfish — remain dependably active on most CT public waters and offer a solid backup when bass fishing slows midday. Carp, highlighted by Hatch Magazine as a legitimate fly-rod target, are also accessible in many CT rivers and coves and tolerate summer warmth well.
Chinook and coho action peaks as Chicago's July salmon season hits stride
The WI DNR Lake Michigan Fishing Report documented a record 2024 lakewide harvest — over 210,000 coho and more than 160,000 Chinook salmon taken — crediting robust alewife year-classes for exceptional stocked-fish survival, a positive indicator for the lake's 2026 cohorts. For Chicago-area anglers heading offshore this Fourth of July weekend, no real-time buoy data or local charter reports were available at publication, but the seasonal picture aligns with what July historically delivers: kings and coho stacking along thermocline breaks 6 to 15 miles from the lakefront. Trolling spoons and meat rigs on downriggers are the standard setup for reaching fish holding at depth. No charter or tackle-shop reports from the Chicago fleet were available for this update — confirm local fleet conditions and check the NOAA marine forecast before running offshore.
Salmon trolling peaks along Indiana's Lake Michigan shoreline
The WI DNR Lake Michigan Fishing Report documented a standout 2024 harvest across the lake — a record 210,000-plus coho salmon and more than 160,000 Chinook, the highest Chinook count since 2012 — with biologists crediting strong recent alewife classes for elevated stocked-fish survival. That favorable forage base carries into this season. Early July along Indiana's southern Lake Michigan shoreline historically puts offshore trollers in range of suspended Chinook and coho as surface layers warm and fish settle into the thermocline. No NOAA buoy or USGS gauge data was received for this cycle, so precise water temperatures are unavailable. Near shore, Tactical Bassin reports that July bass metabolism is at its seasonal peak, with warming surface temps making shallow cover productive during early-morning and evening windows. Fishing the Midwest highlights weedline edges as priority summer structure. Check local forecasts and Indiana harvest advisories before heading out.
Texas Hill Country Bass Bite Peaks Through Fourth of July Heat
TPWD's weekly fishing reports are currently on pause while the agency finalizes a new format, per My Canyon Lake Fishing, leaving Hill Country anglers to rely on field intelligence for current conditions. Nearby Canyon Lake is sitting at 886.46 feet, 58.6% of capacity but a full 8 feet higher than this time last year, according to My Canyon Lake Fishing, suggesting improved water availability across the region compared to recent drought lows. On Travis, LBJ, and Buchanan, July marks the season's peak for bass aggression: Tactical Bassin reports that bass metabolisms hit an annual high this month, with fish feeding heavily throughout the water column. Shallow cover produces early and late in the day, while submerged brush piles become the midday go-to once surface temps climb. Texas Fish and Game Magazine points to forward-facing sonar as the critical edge for locating offshore brush concentrations holding bass and crappie through the summer heat.
Western Basin walleye drop to structure as July heat peaks on Erie
Fishing the Midwest contributor Bob Jensen opened this week with a call to work structural transitions rather than revisiting spring spots, noting that versatile anglers chasing depth on Midwest freshwater are outperforming those fishing from memory. That advice lands squarely on the Western Basin right now. No NOAA buoy readings or USGS flow data are available for this cycle, leaving water temperature unconfirmed, but early July typically pushes Lake Erie's shallowest basin into the mid-to-upper 70s F at the surface, sending walleye to mid-depth structure in the 18-to-28-foot range over hard-bottom transitions. A Waning Gibbous moon favors dawn and dusk windows; midday action in summer heat is generally limited. July 4 holiday traffic will clog the basin by midmorning; plan a first-light launch or an evening run after recreational boats clear. Verify current bag limits and size minimums with state regulations before harvesting any fish this season.
Shenandoah Smallmouth in Full Summer Form as Potomac Bass Season Peaks
Tactical Bassin calls July 'an awesome month to go fishing' as elevated water temperatures push bass metabolisms into high gear -- and the Shenandoah and Potomac are primed to deliver on that promise. No USGS flow data or local fishing reports are available from Virginia-specific sources this week; the Virginia DWR Wildlife Blog's current coverage focuses on deer harvest data and hunting regulations rather than fishing conditions. That said, seasonal patterns on the Shenandoah point to smallmouth bass in full summer mode, stacking in deeper pools and shaded ledges through the midday heat before moving to rocky shoals and riffles at dawn and dusk. On the Potomac, topwater and soft plastics near shallow cover are the recommended early-morning play per Tactical Bassin, while flathead and channel catfish pick up the evening action along deeper channel bends. Hatch Magazine highlights carp as an underrated warm-water fly target, noting they are reachable 'no matter where you might roam across the United States' -- the Potomac's healthy population makes a 7-weight worth rigging this time of year.
Northwoods summer transition underway: musky on jerkbaits, walleye going deep
Water temps holding in the low 70s across Vilas and Oneida County lakes, per Rollie & Helen's Musky Shop's late-June Northwoods report, as the early-to-mid summer transition takes full hold heading into July. The shop notes muskies are fully post-spawn and spread across multiple patterns, with Guide Jake Smith logging consistent catches on jerkbaits worked through weed edges. For walleye, the same weedy transition zones are worth targeting: as shallow mud bays warm past prime feeding temperatures, fish push to main-lake structure, rock humps, and the outer edges of cabbage and coontail beds. Bob Jensen writing in Fishing the Midwest highlights weedline edges as the most reliable multi-species contact zone at this stage of summer. Wild weather swings and persistent wind over the past week have shifted fish positions across the basin, so spending time on the sonar to locate new fish zones will pay off more than grinding familiar spots. Check local forecasts before heading out.
Rangeley togue go deep as July heat tests brook trout and salmon
Trout Unlimited's 'Is it too hot?' summer piece puts it plainly: trout are cold-blooded, and warm water means they struggle. That warning is directly relevant on the Fourth of July weekend at Rangeley Lakes and along the Androscoggin headwaters. No NOAA buoy or USGS gauge readings were returned for this region in today's data pull, so confirmed water temperatures are unavailable, but early July typically pushes surface waters toward thermal stress territory for salmonids. Brook trout and landlocked salmon activity is expected to be slow through midday, with any meaningful bite concentrated at dawn and dusk when water is coolest. Togue (lake trout) are the most reliable summer target, retreating to depth along the thermocline — typically 40–60 feet in midsummer — where trolling streamer rigs or sewn smelt rigs can still connect. Terrestrials are beginning to matter, per Trout Unlimited's seasonal guidance; ant and beetle patterns along shaded banks are worth a try in morning hours before the surface heats.
Cape Cod Bay Peaks: Tuna Off Chatham, Stripers in the Rips
On The Water reports a sewer main break in Haverhill is dumping an estimated 8 million gallons of raw sewage per day into the Merrimack River, fouling prime striper habitat on the North Shore — though Cape Cod Bay sits well south of that impact zone. Down the Cape, OTW Saltwater's feature on Chatham as a 'Tuna Town' puts bluefin squarely in focus for the outer Cape and bay approaches, where tuna historically concentrate each July as bait schools stack along the outer bars. No real-time buoy data was available for this report cycle, but Saltwater Edge Blog (RI) noted in late June that 'water temperatures have been staying cool' across southern New England — a favorable sign for stripers holding in bay shallows longer into summer than warmer years typically allow. OTW Surfcasting recently highlighted rigged Slug-Gos as a go-to presentation for big bass in the surf, a technique that translates directly to Cape Cod Bay beaches and outer rip edges.
Stripers Staging on Maine Beaches; Avoid Merrimack River Corridor
The sharpest fishing news affecting the Gulf of Maine this July 4 weekend comes from On The Water, which reports a sewer main break in Haverhill, MA, is dumping roughly 8 million gallons of raw sewage daily into the Merrimack River — fouling prime striper habitat at its tidal mouth near Plum Island and the MA/NH/ME border. Anglers should avoid that corridor and shift focus east along the Maine coast. Away from the spill zone, the striper picture is encouraging: OTW Surfcasting reports that surfcasters from New York to Maine have been finding schools of bass staging on shallow beaches with little obvious structure, and rigged Slug-Gos have been the standout producer on these fish. Bluefish are entering their prime season window across the Gulf, per OTW Saltwater. No NOAA buoy readings were available this cycle. A waning gibbous moon is driving strong tidal currents, and dawn and dusk tide transitions offer the best bite windows heading into the holiday weekend.
Cobia Run Peaks at the Bay Mouth as Midsummer Heat Sets In
OTW Surfcasting raised concerns this week about declining striper spawning success along the Atlantic Coast, a development with direct implications for the Chesapeake Bay, one of the species' primary spawning systems. No buoy or gauge data was available for this report cycle, so specific water temperatures and real-time tidal readings could not be confirmed. That said, early July sits at the heart of the Chesapeake mouth's cobia season, when fish typically stack along the Bridge-Tunnel pilings and cruise the nearshore shoals. Striped bass have been retreating to deeper structure as midsummer heat builds, a pattern Saltwater Edge documents in their Rhode Island fishery and one that applies broadly across the mid-Atlantic. Bluefish are entering their reliable July-through-October active window, per On The Water. Without direct local charter or tackle-shop intel for this zone this cycle, assessments here reflect seasonal norms rather than fresh on-the-water testimony.
Narragansett Bay Stripers Shift to Deeper Summer Haunts as July Opens
Saltwater Edge Blog (RI) closed out June calling the striper and squid bite "fantastic," but by early July, seasonal patterns signal a notable shift is underway. Per Saltwater Edge's June Full Moon forecast, striped bass tend to abandon the shallows as summer sets in, pushing to the oceanfront and deeper, cooler water. Scup, black sea bass, and fluke, however, are settling into their usual summer structure spots around the Bay. The squid run, strong through the June New Moon period, was predicted by Saltwater Edge to be tapering off by now. Surf anglers working the oceanfront should cover the full water column; Saltwater Edge's recent bag-packing feature with Phase Gear's Pete Utschig emphasized carrying presentations for bottom, mid-column, and surface. No NOAA buoy or gauge data was available at time of report. A waning gibbous moon on July 4 favors moderate tidal flows; check local tide tables for optimal windows.
Summer flounder, drum, and cobia anchor Eastern Shore July 4th fishing
Early July marks the heart of summer flounder season along Virginia's Eastern Shore, with inshore channels and inlet edges historically producing keeper fish when the tide runs — though no direct Chincoteague charter or shop reports reached our feeds this cycle. The data here reflects established seasonal patterns rather than live angler testimony, so verify current conditions locally before heading out. Red drum are a warm-weather fixture along the barrier island surf, and cobia — the mid-Atlantic's signature summer migrant — typically push north along the lower Chesapeake and barrier coast through mid-July. Per On The Water, bluefish remain an active and accessible target across the mid-Atlantic from July through October, with kayak anglers finding productive action on surface presentations. The waning gibbous moon this weekend produces strong tide movement, which tends to concentrate flounder and drum on the moving current. No buoy data was available for water temperature or sea state this cycle.
Red Drum Stack Up on Pamlico Sound Flats for the July 4th Weekend
Anglers on the Pamlico/Neuse River are finding red drum of all sizes along main river shorelines and flats, with some big drum in the mix, per Fisherman's Post (NC). Donald of Custom Marine Fabrication reports drum working structure consistently throughout the system, while Nathan of East Coast Sports at Topsail/Sneads Ferry calls the early morning topwater bite the week's inshore highlight, with bottom fishing taking over as daylight advances. Rich of The Reel Outdoors at Swansboro/Emerald Isle confirms red drum has been steady in the sounds as well. Bluefish are showing alongside drum in adjacent areas. No NOAA buoy or USGS gauge data was available for this report cycle; water temperature and current tide conditions should be confirmed locally before heading out, as July heat typically pushes the most active feeding windows toward early morning and late evening hours.
Keys Snapper Bite Lights Out as Summer Spawn Window Rolls On
Charter captain out of Key West is calling this one of the best summer snapper seasons in 16 years on the water. Per ALL IN Key West, mutton and yellowtail snappers are stacking in large numbers and actively feeding, with the captain describing "huge yellowtails, tons and tons of mutton snappers — just so much life, so many fish." A recent Gulf of America outing from the same operation yielded grouper, cobia, kingfish, and barracuda in a single session, underscoring the breadth of species in play right now. The waning gibbous moon follows the peak full-moon spawn window that drives mutton snapper aggregations, and the bite has been consistent throughout early summer. Offshore, mahi-mahi are part of the summer rotation. No NOAA buoy data is available for Keys waters this cycle, so anglers should verify real-time sea state and water temperatures locally before heading out.
Illinois River bass and catfish hit peak as July heat locks in summer patterns
Tactical Bassin's July bass fishing roundup flags this as one of the most aggressive feeding windows of the year, with bass metabolisms running 'at an all-time high' as water temperatures peak across Midwest fisheries. For Illinois River and Lake Michigan shore anglers, that translates to early-morning topwater runs on shallow cover before midday heat pushes fish deeper, with the Neko rig excelling on bright, flat-calm afternoons, per Tactical Bassin. Fishing the Midwest's Bob Jensen writes that weedlines are this season's marquee structure play, holding walleye, bass, and panfish across the region's open-water fisheries. The Illinois River's classic summer catfish window is in full swing — flathead and channel cats are typically at their annual peak through mid-July on night soaks with cut bait. Hatch Magazine flags carp as a seriously underrated warm-water fly target; the Illinois River corridor offers productive sight-fishing for common carp through the summer months. No local gauge or buoy readings were available for this cycle.
July heat pushes Catawba and Roanoke bass into a dawn-and-dusk pattern
Tactical Bassin's July coverage notes that bass metabolisms hit their annual peak this month, making early mornings and evenings the prime windows — a pattern that applies squarely to Catawba and Roanoke freshwater heading into the Fourth of July weekend. No gauge readings came through for either system this cycle, and Piedmont-specific angler reports are absent from current feeds, so this update draws on seasonal norms. Largemouth on Lake Norman and Kerr Lake should be holding on deep structure or shaded wood through midday, with the best topwater action compressed to the first hour of light. On the Roanoke drainage, landlocked striped bass at Kerr Lake typically suspend near the thermocline by July, taking live shad or deep-running plugs at 20–40 feet. Channel and flathead catfish are prime targets after dark along the main river channels. No reports confirm a crappie bite — default to brush piles at 10–15 feet.
Smallmouth and catfish peak on Susquehanna and Allegheny rivers
Tactical Bassin's July fishing roundup calls the first week of July one of the best windows of the year for aggressive summer bass on warm-water rivers — timing that aligns squarely with the Susquehanna and Allegheny's peak smallmouth season. No water temperature or flow readings came through for this report cycle, so check your local USGS gauge before launching on either system. Both rivers are historically in prime smallmouth form through early July, with fish recovered from spawn and feeding hard across rocky runs, riffles, and deeper pool edges. Flathead and channel catfish round out the mid-summer menu on the main-stem Susquehanna, most active after dark on live bait. Pennsylvania Sea Grant's late-June Harmful Algal Blooms webinar flagged elevated cyanobacteria risk in slow-moving, warm backwaters across Pennsylvania's river systems — a meaningful safety note for anyone exploring quiet tributary coves during the holiday weekend. No biologist field reports were available from PA Fish & Boat for this cycle.
Green Crab Reaches Orcas Island as Puget Sound's July Salmon Windows Open
WA Sea Grant flagged the first detection of invasive European green crab on Orcas Island in May 2026 — a northward range expansion into the San Juans that anglers in that region should track as the season progresses. Setting that developing story aside, real-time buoy and gauge data were unavailable for this report, so environmental context draws from seasonal knowledge. WA WDFW Fishing Reports is the authoritative creel source for Puget Sound, but specific catch tallies did not come through in today's data pull — check their site before launching this Independence Day weekend. Early July is historically one of Washington's strongest periods for Chinook salmon in marine feeding areas, with fish staging ahead of late-summer river returns. Halibut and lingcod fishing on Pacific coast reefs typically peaks this time of year as well. WA Sea Grant's summer 2026 coverage highlights healthy bull kelp canopy along the North Pacific coast — a positive habitat signal for rockfish and other nearshore structure species.
Gulf of Alaska halibut and early coho mark peak summer window
Scientists gathered at Kodiak Island for the 34th Lowell Wakefield Fisheries Symposium, where AK Sea Grant reported that marine heatwaves in high-latitude Alaska waters were the central research focus — a signal that conditions across the Gulf continue to shift and warrant close attention this season. Direct on-the-water catch reports for the Gulf of Alaska are absent from this data cycle, so species assessments below reflect general July seasonality rather than confirmed real-time bites. That said, mid-summer is typically the Gulf's most productive all-around window: Pacific halibut anchor the offshore and nearshore fishery, coho (silver) salmon begin their inshore staging push, and bottomfish like rockfish and lingcod offer consistent backup action. Check current state regulations for salmon openings — dates, bag limits, and closures shift frequently in summer. No buoy or gauge readings were available in this pull; verify marine conditions and tides with local resources before departure.