February 2026 — Hawaii: Wahoo Peak, Shortbill Spearfish Season Building. February is a late winter month with water in the 72-76°F range — ono peak; ahi strong; striped marlin. Here’s the full breakdown of what’s biting, where to fish, and the most productive tactics.
What’s Biting — February 2026
Primary targets this month: Wahoo, Yellowfin Tuna, Striped Marlin, Shortbill Spearfish.
Wahoo
Wahoo on PEAK WINTER (December-April) — Kona, Penguin Banks, the offshore current edges; trolling at 8-12 knots. High-speed troll (12-15 knots) with heavy lures (Marauders, Yo-Zuri Bonita), or live bait at slower speeds. Wire leader essential — 80-130 lb single-strand or coated.
Yellowfin Tuna
Yellowfin tuna on Kona, Penguin Banks, the offshore current edges around all islands — ahi 100-300 lbs routine; trophy fish over 300 possible. Chunking (cut sardine, butterfish) at anchor, live bait drifting, or trolled feathers and cedar plugs. Heavy stand-up tackle (50-80 lb class) for the bigger grades.
Striped Marlin
Striped marlin on Kona in winter (December-April), Molokai, Oahu — smaller billfish, peak winter. Smaller than blue marlin (100-300 lbs typical). Trolled lures and rigged ballyhoo; live bait when fish are concentrated. Peak Hawaiian winter season.
Shortbill Spearfish
Shortbill spearfish on Kona — the only place in the world this species is a target fishery; January-May peak. Kona is the world’s top destination for this species — peak January-May. Trolled small lures and rigged ballyhoo at 5-7 knots. Lighter tackle (30-50 lb) than blue marlin; release encouraged.
Water Conditions & Patterns
Water temperatures are running 72-76°F. Ono peak; ahi strong; striped marlin. Hawaii tides are minimal (1-2 ft typical) — fishing is driven by current direction, moon phase, and water temperature rather than tides. Offshore, watch for current breaks and temperature edges visible on satellite (Hilton’s, RipCharts). Reef fishing is best on the moving water around tide changes.
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
February Outlook
Winter patterns hold; cobia/spring migrations begin showing in southern waters by month-end.
Regulations Reminder
Tuna: NOAA HMS permit required. Strict size and bag limits — verify current NOAA rules. Always verify current state regulations before each trip — slots, bag limits, and seasons change.
Local Resources
Bait & Tackle: Charter Desk at Honokohau Harbor (Kona); Pacific Fishing Supply (Honolulu); J. Hara Store (Big Island); West Side Bait & Tackle (Oahu); Maui Sporting Goods.
Public Boat Ramps: Honokohau Harbor (Kona — main billfish port), Kewalo Basin (Honolulu), Maalaea Harbor (Maui), Manele Bay (Lanai), Nawiliwili (Kauai), Kaunakakai (Molokai).
Charter Fishing: $1,200–$2,500 Kona billfish; $1,800–$3,500 trophy hunts (Pacific Blue Marlin); $250–$400 per person walk-on; $600–$1,200 inshore/reef trips; $1,500+ multi-day open boat.
More Hawaii Resources
Hawaii Fishing Guide · Hawaii Seasonal Calendar · All Hawaii reports →
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