Gulf Coast Fishing Report: Tides, Topwater, and Tasty Offshore Bites Podcast By  cover art

Gulf Coast Fishing Report: Tides, Topwater, and Tasty Offshore Bites

Gulf Coast Fishing Report: Tides, Topwater, and Tasty Offshore Bites

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

Good morning Gulf Coast anglers—Artificial Lure here with your narrative fishing report for June 21, 2025, covering the Florida Gulf of Mexico waters.

Let’s talk tides and sunrise first. Along the Gulf coast, sunrise comes in around 6:34 AM with sunset just after 8:22 PM. This gives us nearly 14 hours of daylight action. Today’s tide chart for Fort Myers shows a high tide peaking mid-morning around 9:47 AM and another in the evening at 7:47 PM. Low tides hit just before dawn and again in early afternoon, making those shifting currents prime feeding windows, especially at first light and dusk, so plan your trips accordingly. The average tidal coefficient today is 61, meaning we have decent water movement—enough to get those game fish active without being too tricky to fish, even for newer anglers, according to Tides4Fishing.

Weather’s cooperating with light breezes and typical summer warmth, meaning topwater action should be on fire early and late. As water temps rise, we’re seeing game species getting lively—reports from the Gulf of Mexico Daily Fishing Report say fish are actively feeding all day right now.

Inshore, the snook bite is hot as these fish push out of the back bays to stage along passes, according to the most recent Hubbard’s Marina Fishing Report. Early morning and evening are your best bets for these linesiders, with live pilchards or pinfish under a popping cork, or topwater plugs like a Rapala Skitter Walk for those explosive strikes. Redfish and speckled trout are also active around oyster bars and grass flats, especially on the moving tide—throw a Gulp! Shrimp or MirrOlure for consistent action.

Beach and surf fishing continues to produce pompano and whiting. Florida’s Forgotten Coast Springs Fishing Report recommends FishGum, Sand Flea Fishbites, and fresh shrimp as top baits—cast into the sandbar breaks 15–25 feet out. If you’re after Spanish mackerel running the beach, switch to silver spoons or gotcha plugs as they chase bait pods close to the sand.

Offshore, it’s wide open. Black seabass, cobia, triggerfish, king mackerel, and red snapper are all coming in strong on the 4-hour trips, according to Captain Experiences. Offshore crews fishing 100–160 feet over hard bottom or ledges are catching red and scamp grouper with live pinfish, squid, and cut threadfin. Snapper—vermillion, red, and mangrove—are loving squid strips and double-snelled rigs. Don’t forget the pitch rod for surprise cobia; a 4-ounce jig with a plastic eel body works great when a brown bomber pops up next to the boat.

Hot spots right now:
- Destin Pass: Snook, specks, reds, plus king mackerel just offshore.
- Anclote Key: Trout and reds on the flats, and cobia around the channel markers.
- John’s Pass/ Madeira Beach: Snook staging up, nearshore snapper and kingfish active.

Thanks for tuning in to today’s Florida Gulf fishing report with Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for all your up-to-date fishing news and tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
No reviews yet