Pushes through inlets following bait; aggressive bait-busting on incoming during fall migration.
Where: Inlet channels, jetty pockets, beach corners just inside inlets.
- Metal-lipped popper
- Diamond jig
- Cut bunker on wire leader
Single-region tide guide
In Massachusetts & Cape Cod Estuaries, bluefish fish best on outgoing tide. Outgoing tide at inlet mouths during fall bait migration is the iconic blue scenario — choppers blitzing bunker and mullet in inlet rip lines.
Top presentation: Metal-lipped popper
Tide cycle
Stage-by-stage
Pushes through inlets following bait; aggressive bait-busting on incoming during fall migration.
Where: Inlet channels, jetty pockets, beach corners just inside inlets.
Activity drops sharply at slack; bluefish are aggressively current-dependent.
Where: Deeper structure adjacent to inlet channels.
Outgoing tide at inlet mouths during fall migration is one of the most productive scenarios in northeast inshore fishing — choppers blitzing bait in the rip lines.
Where: Outside inlet mouths, jetty rip lines, beach corners adjacent to inlets.
Activity essentially stops; fish reposition for the next current cycle.
Where: Deeper holding water near structure.
Top water types
Inlet rip lines on outgoing tide during fall migration are the iconic bluefish water type.
Open bay blues are typically smaller fish (snapper class); larger blues are inlet- and beach-tied.
NOAA tide stations for Massachusetts & Cape Cod Estuaries
Bield: Fish reads NOAA tide tables for Massachusetts & Cape Cod Estuaries and alerts you when the outgoing tide window is about to start at your home location.
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