This week out of Pensacola, the summer bottom-fishing machine is running at full throttle. Snapper season has the ramps busy before dawn, and the inshore crowd is finding trout and reds in the cooler morning hours.
What’s Hitting
Red snapper remain the main event on the public wrecks and live bottom in 80 to 150 feet, with quality fish coming off the less-pressured spots. King mackerel are patrolling the nearshore bait schools and the sea buoy area, Spanish mackerel are in the bay chasing glass minnows, and speckled trout are on the grass edges in Santa Rosa Sound at first light. Redfish are around the bridges and docks.
Where to Find Them
The snapper bite improves the farther you run from the pass — the close-in public numbers get hammered. Kings are around the pods off Pensacola Beach and near the sea buoy. Trout want the grass in 3 to 5 feet along Santa Rosa Sound and Big Lagoon early, before the jet skis show up.
Tides & Conditions
Light morning winds and a manageable chop have made the offshore runs comfortable most days. The afternoon sea breeze stacks it up by two. Inshore water temperatures are pushing 88 by midday — fish early or fish deep.
Tackle & Tactics
For snapper, a double-drop rig with live pinfish or big dead cigar minnows on 60-pound fluorocarbon gets the grade. Kings want a slow-trolled dusky or cigar minnow on a stinger rig. Trout are eating topwaters at dawn and live shrimp under a cork after the sun climbs.
Local Intel This Week
Shoreline Park in Gulf Breeze, Navy Point in Pensacola, and Galvez Landing on Innerarity Point are the go-to public ramps. Fish are concentrating on the deeper offshore structure and the sound-side grass early. Red snapper season dates and bag rules change year to year and differ between state and federal waters — check current FWC and Gulf Council regulations before keeping fish.
This Week’s Tip
On the snapper grounds, drop one bait to the bottom and keep one halfway down. The biggest fish in the school — snapper included — often suspend well above the wreck, and the mid-column bait routinely out-produces the one in the rocks.
