Spawn winding down; fish back in mangroves.
Inshore migration calendar
Southeast Florida migration calendar.
- South Atlantic
- Florida
- 7 species tracked
Southeast Florida is true subtropical inshore — snook and tarpon dominate, jacks crash bait year-round, and migrating mackerel and pompano push down the beach in winter. Inlets and bridge structure concentrate fish on every tide.
Fishing regulations change every season. This page is a summary maintained by Bield — bag limits, exact dates, and species-specific rules must be verified with Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (Saltwater) before each trip.
What's running now
June on the water.
Map
Southeast Florida hotspots.
Productive locations
- Boynton Inlet
- Jupiter Inlet
- Government Cut
- Biscayne Bay flats
Active this month
- SnookGood
- TarponGood
- Speckled TroutGood
- Red DrumGood
- Jack CrevalleGood
- Spanish MackerelFair
All species
Sorted by current month.
- SnookCentropomus undecimalisGoodFull Snook calendar for Southeast FloridaBest months: April · May · OctoberTop lures: Live pilchards (whitebait), Live mullet, Topwater plugs
- TarponMegalops atlanticusGoodFull Tarpon calendar for Southeast FloridaBest months: March · April · May
Resident summer fish in passes and backcountry.
Top lures: Live threadfin herring, Live mullet, Crab patterns (palolo hatch) - Speckled TroutCynoscion nebulosusGoodFull Speckled Trout calendar for Southeast FloridaBest months: No peak month identified
Summer pattern.
Top lures: Soft plastic paddletails on jigheads, MirrOlure suspending plugs, Live shrimp under popping cork - Red DrumSciaenops ocellatusGoodFull Red Drum calendar for Southeast FloridaBest months: No peak month identified
Summer flats and mangrove pattern.
Top lures: Live mullet under popping cork, Cut mullet on bottom, Gold spoons - Jack CrevalleCaranx hipposGoodFull Jack Crevalle calendar for Southeast FloridaBest months: October
Summer pattern.
Top lures: Topwater plugs, Big metal spoons, Live mullet - Spanish MackerelScomberomorus maculatusFairFull Spanish Mackerel calendar for Southeast FloridaBest months: March · October · November · December
Hot summer pattern.
Top lures: Clark spoon trolled, Gotcha plugs, Small metal jigs - Florida PompanoTrachinotus carolinusPossibleFull Florida Pompano calendar for Southeast FloridaBest months: March · November
Few fish present.
Top lures: Sand fleas, Fresh shrimp, Fishbites pompano formula
Month-by-month
Top 5 species, full year.
Quick reference for trip planning across the year. Each cell shows the typical migration status for that month.
| Species | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Snook | ||||||||||||
| Jack Crevalle | ||||||||||||
| Tarpon | ||||||||||||
| Red Drum | ||||||||||||
| Spanish Mackerel |
Regional notes
Top species — the longer read.
Snook in Southeast Florida
Year-round on the SE FL coast but cold-front sensitive. Spring spawn at inlets and passes April–June; mullet run blitzes October–November.
Tarpon in Southeast Florida
Wintering schools in southern FL passes and bridges December–March; spring migration north begins March (palolo worm hatch on the lower Keys). Resident summer fish in passes and backcountry. Fall departure south September–October.
Speckled Trout in Southeast Florida
Year-round resident; hot summer water pushes fish to deeper and earlier windows. Cool nights reactivate flats.
Marine forecast
NOAA Zone AMZ630Wind, swell, and tide-stage forecasts that drive whether fish are feeding inshore or holding offshore.
State agencies
Bag limits, slot rules, and seasonal closures live with the agencies — verify before keeping fish.
Real-time migration alerts for Southeast Florida.
Bield: Fish ties NOAA buoy data, water-temperature readings, and your saved species list together — and alerts you when arrivals reach your home water.
Start free trial →