March 2025 — Fort Lauderdale: Final sailfish month, cobia appearing, first mahi. March is a early spring month with water in the 60-68°F range — cobia migration building; inshore species moving onto warming flats. Here’s the full breakdown of what’s biting, where to fish, and the most productive tactics.
What’s Biting — March 2025
Primary targets this month: Sailfish, Cobia, Snapper, Tarpon.
Sailfish
Peak sailfish season on the deep blue water 1-3 miles off the beach — Fort Lauderdale sits right on the edge of the Gulf Stream. Live bait (goggle-eyes, threadfins) on kites or slow-trolled. North current with falling barometer triggers the best bites. The Stuart-Palm Beach-Fort Lauderdale corridor is the East Coast sailfish capital.
Cobia
Peak cobia migration. Sight-fishing along the beach, around the offshore wrecks, the reef edge, and following stingrays on the beach in spring, and following stingrays in clear water. Need calm seas (1-2 ft) and sun overhead. 4-6″ bucktails (chartreuse, white, pink), large soft plastic eels, or live eels and pinfish. Cobia often follow first refusals — make a second cast.
Snapper
Snapper bottom fishing on the deep reef in 80-300 feet — mutton, mangrove, vermilion, yellowtail, and queen on the deeper sites — vermilion, lane, and mangrove snapper open year-round in most areas. Lighter tackle (20-30 lb), 3/0-5/0 hooks, cut squid or live shrimp.
Tarpon
Tarpon mostly absent — a few resident fish in deeper backwater rivers and warm-water outflows (canals, power plants).
Water Conditions & Patterns
Water temperatures are running 60-68°F. Cobia migration building; inshore species moving onto warming flats. Port Everglades inlet runs fast and deep — outgoing tide flushes bait and big snook and tarpon set up at the jetties. Offshore, Gulf Stream current matters more than tide; north current makes the deep reef bite predictable.
Check the NOAA marine forecast and tide charts before launching. Wind direction often matters more than wind speed for inshore fishing — clean water beats churned water nine times out of ten.
Tactics & Tackle for This Month
- Cobia readiness. Keep a heavy spinning rod (8000-class, 40-50 lb braid, 60-80 lb fluoro) ready with a bucktail or live eel — cobia don’t announce themselves.
- Sight-fishing weather. Plan trips around calm seas and sun overhead. Polarized lenses essential.
- Bait migration. Spanish, kings, and predators follow bait pods — watch for diving birds and surface activity.
March Outlook
Spring transitions accelerate — water warming, fish moving onto flats, migrations intensifying.
Regulations Reminder
Red Snapper: federal season; verify NOAA/state dates. Mangrove snapper: 10″, 5 per day. Cobia: 36″ fork length, one per harvester (FL state waters — verify current rules). Tarpon: Catch-and-release only — tarpon over 40″ must remain in water. Always verify current state regulations before each trip — slots, bag limits, and seasons change.
Local Resources
Bait & Tackle: LMR Tackle (Fort Lauderdale, 954-941-8245); Custom Rod & Reel (Pompano); Hookers Marine (Dania Beach); Bass Pro Shops Outdoor World (Dania Beach).
Public Boat Ramps: George English Park (ICW), Dania Beach Marina, Hugh Taylor Birch State Park, Hollywood North Beach Park ramp.
Charter Fishing: $700-$1,400 sailfish (close offshore); $1,200-$2,200 deep drop/wahoo/tuna; $500-$800 inshore.
More Fort Lauderdale Resources
Fort Lauderdale Fishing Guide · Fort Lauderdale Seasonal Calendar · All Fort Lauderdale reports →
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