
Fort Lauderdale is unique in Florida’s coastal cities — the urban canal network runs through the city center, creating an extraordinary tarpon fishery minutes from downtown. The New River, Middle River, and the 300 miles of navigable canals that earned Fort Lauderdale its “Venice of America” nickname are inhabited year-round by large tarpon and snook. Offshore, the Gulf Stream runs extremely close — at its nearest approach the 100-fathom curve is barely 2 miles from the beach, making Fort Lauderdale one of the most accessible offshore ports on the entire East Coast.
Top Species in Fort Lauderdale Waters
Inshore/Canal: Tarpon (the canal system holds fish year-round — resident and migrating), snook (around Port Everglades, bridges, and canal mouths), redfish, flounder, jack crevalle, and barracuda.
Nearshore: Wahoo and sailfish begin within 3–5 miles, permit and bonefish on the nearshore flats and wrecks, pompano and kingfish in the surf zone.
Offshore: Sailfish (peak November–April — some of the most accessible sailfish fishing in Florida), mahi (peak spring), wahoo (fall/winter), swordfish (daytime swordfishing on deep drops 5–8 miles offshore), blackfin and yellowfin tuna year-round.
Top Fishing Spots
- Fort Lauderdale Urban Canals: Night fishing under bridge lights for tarpon in the New River and downtown canals is a Fort Lauderdale institution. Fish arrive in late spring and some remain year-round.
- Port Everglades Inlet: The inlet mouth and jetty area produce excellent snook, tarpon, and jack crevalle throughout the year. The south jetty is accessible for shore fishing.
- The Ledge (offshore 2–3 miles): The nearshore reef ledge drops quickly to 60–80 feet and holds mutton snapper, grouper, and cobia close to the beach.
- The Gulf Stream (2–10 miles): The most accessible stretch of Gulf Stream on the East Coast — sailfish, mahi, wahoo, and swordfish on short runs from Port Everglades.
Seasonal Fishing Calendar
Winter (November–February): Peak sailfish season — multiple daily releases possible on kite-fished live baits. Wahoo on the deep reef. Tarpon in canals year-round.
Spring (March–May): Mahi arrive on the weedlines. Cobia at the nearshore reef. Permit on the nearshore wrecks. Tarpon migrate through in large numbers.
Summer–Fall: Swordfish daytime drops (Fort Lauderdale pioneered recreational daytime deep-dropping for swordfish). Mahi and wahoo. Urban canal tarpon very active.