Lake Fork is the most celebrated bass fishing lake in Texas and one of the top 5 largemouth bass fisheries in the United States. Since its impoundment in 1980, the reservoir has produced more bass over 13 pounds than any other lake in the country — including the current Texas state record, a 18.18-pound fish caught in 1992 that stood as the world record for many years. The combination of fertile East Texas timber-lined coves, an established trophy bass management program, and more than 70,000 acres of prime habitat makes Lake Fork the destination for anglers seeking a legitimate shot at a double-digit bass.
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Lake Fork by the Numbers
- Surface acres: 27,264 (main lake) — part of a larger system
- Texas record bass: 18.18 lbs (1992) — held the world record
- State record class fish per year: More than any other Texas lake historically
- Special regulation: Only 1 bass over 14 inches may be kept per day — one of the most protective harvest regulations in the South
Lake Fork Bass Fishing Techniques
Pre-Spawn (January–March) — The Trophy Window
The pre-spawn period is Lake Fork’s premier bass fishing season. Female bass averaging 8–14 pounds are building weight ahead of their February–April spawn, and the fish that bite during this period are the largest of the year. Large swimbaits (8–10 inch paddle tails on 2–3 oz jig heads), big football jigs (3/4–1 oz in brown/green pumpkin), and large suspending jerkbaits in clear to slightly stained water produce the trophy-class fish that define Lake Fork’s reputation. Target main-lake points, submerged roadbeds, and the deep edges of timber-lined coves in 12–20 feet.
Spawn (March–April) — Sight Fishing
Lake Fork’s stained water (typical Secchi depth 2–4 feet) limits pure sight-fishing opportunities compared to clear-water fisheries, but the shallow spawning flats in protected coves produce excellent bass on Texas-rigged Senkos, wacky-rigged plastic worms, and shallow-running crankbaits in March and April. Fish 2–6 feet of water in protected secondary coves with wood structure.
Post-Spawn through Summer (May–September)
Summer bass on Lake Fork suspend on timber structure at 15–25 feet, following shad schools along thermocline-defined depth bands. Carolina rigs with 10-inch worms in red shad or watermelon, deep-diving crankbaits in chartreuse/blue back targeting the timber at depth, and drop shot rigs on the main lake points produce consistently. Night fishing in summer with large black spinnerbaits and buzzbait along the shoreline timber is the highest-percentage technique for large fish in the heat of July and August.
Fall (October–November) — The Other Great Season
Fall bass fishing on Lake Fork rivals the pre-spawn in quality as cooling water temperatures trigger aggressive feeding. Bass follow shad schools into creeks and coves, stacking on main creek channel bends and timber transitions. Lipless crankbaits (1/2 oz Rat-L-Trap in chrome), topwater frogs and prop baits at dawn, and medium-diving crankbaits on the timber lines produce fast action from October through November.
Lake Fork Regulations
Lake Fork has some of the most protective bass regulations in the South: only 1 bass over 14 inches may be kept per day per angler (remainder must be released). The 14-inch minimum size limit and single-fish harvest allowance are the primary reasons the lake produces so many trophy fish. A Texas fishing license and a freshwater stamp are required.
Access and Guide Services
Lake Fork is located approximately 70 miles east of Dallas near Quitman and Emory, TX. Multiple public boat ramps provide access. Lake Fork Marina and the town of Alba are the primary service centers. The Lake Fork guide industry is extensive — full-day guided bass fishing runs $300–$450 for two anglers and is worth considering for first-time visitors who want to maximize trophy opportunities.