Pre-Spawn
Trophy fishing window68–70°F
Pre-spawn red drum form massive schools (bull red schools) at inlet mouths and along beaches in late summer and fall, staging for offshore spawning.
Fall bull red schools at Outer Banks inlets, Lowcountry passes, and Gulf coast beaches are iconic — peak season for trophy reds (40+ inches).
70–88°F (peak 75–84°F)
Active spawning behavior. Broadcast spawners. Adults move offshore for spawning; juveniles and sub-adults remain inshore year-round.
Federal commercial harvest of red drum has been closed in federal waters since 2007. Recreational harvest is state-managed with slot limits — keeping reds within slot, releasing oversized bull reds is
Conservation context
Federal commercial harvest of red drum has been closed in federal waters since 2007. Recreational harvest is state-managed with slot limits — keeping reds within slot, releasing oversized bull reds is the standard.
Post-Spawn
Recovery feeding88–96°F (~21 days)
Post-spawn reds return to inshore habitat through winter and spring. Females may produce multiple egg batches per season.
Winter back-bay reds are the post-spawn pattern for many southern inshore fisheries.
Summer Pattern
Standard patternsAbove 96°F
Fish disperse to summer habitat and feeding patterns. Spawn cycle complete until following year.
Standard summer fishing tactics apply.