Tide stage fishing guide

Maine & New Hampshire Inlets tide fishing guide.

  • Northeast
  • 812 ft tidal range
  • semidiurnal

Maine and New Hampshire's macrotidal-influenced inlets produce some of the strongest tidal currents on the East Coast. Striped bass and bluefish key on the strongest moving water of the cycle. Tide stage timing is exceptionally important here.

Tidal character

Tide type: Semidiurnal (two highs and two lows daily)
Range: 812 feet typical
Wind influence: moderateWind setup matters but tide stage is generally the dominant variable.

Macrotidal-influenced semidiurnal tides with strong currents and 8–12 ft typical range. Inlet currents are extreme.

NOAA tide stations

Live tide predictions and observations from NOAA — pair with this guide for trip planning.

Species activity

Tide stage × species.

Activity level for each Maine & New Hampshire Inlets primary target species across the four tide stages. Tap a species for the full tide guide.

SpeciesIncomingHigh SlackOutgoingLow Slack
Striped Bassgoodpoorpeakfair
Bluefishgoodpoorpeakpoor

Dominant water types

In Maine & New Hampshire Inlets.

Best stage reference

Best stage by species — Maine & New Hampshire Inlets.

SpeciesBest stageTop water typeTop presentation
Striped BassAny Moving TideInlets & JettiesSoft plastic shad on jighead
BluefishOutgoing TideInlets & JettiesMetal-lipped popper

Live tide times for Maine & New Hampshire Inlets.

Bield: Fish reads NOAA tide tables, applies the species guidance from this page, and alerts you when the optimal window for your target species is about to begin.

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