February 2026 — Tampa Bay: Sheepshead Peak, Warm Discharge Snook, First Signs of Spring. February is a late winter month with water in the 57-67°F range — sheepshead peak; cobia migration begins late month. 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: Sheepshead, Snook, Redfish, Seatrout.
Sheepshead
Sheepshead are stacked for the winter/early-spring spawn. Target the Skyway piers (north and south), the Howard Frankland and Gandy Bridge pilings, the Sunshine Skyway approach piers, and the Pier 60 piling field. Fresh fiddler crabs and live shrimp on a #1 or #1/0 octopus hook with minimal weight. Bites are subtle — set on the slightest tap. Vertical jigging tight to structure produces best.
Snook
Snook in the Skyway Bridge piers and rock piles, the Sunshine Skyway approach, the Howard Frankland Bridge, the Gandy Bridge, Fort De Soto cuts, and the Egmont Channel. Live pilchards, scaled sardines, finger mullet. Artificial: white DOA Bait Buster, MirrOdine, walking topwaters at first and last light. Always verify current FWC snook season — slot is 28-33″ with seasonal closures.
Redfish
Winter reds in Weedon Island, Cockroach Bay, the Manatee River mouth, Joe’s Creek, Picnic Island, and the Apollo Beach flats. Look for the warmest water — dark mud bottoms, deeper canals, creek mouths warming on afternoons. Gold spoons, scented soft plastics, live shrimp under a popping cork.
Seatrout
Trout holding in the deep grass flats of Tampa Bay — Cockroach Bay, Pinellas Point, Mullet Key, the southeastern flats off Apollo Beach. Live shrimp under a popping cork, soft plastic jigs in natural colors (root beer, new penny, opening night).
Water Conditions & Patterns
Water temperatures are running 57-67°F. Sheepshead peak; cobia migration begins late month. Tampa Bay has minimal tidal range (1-2 feet) but current concentrates bait at choke points — the Skyway, Egmont Channel, and major bridges. 1-2 hours either side of high tide produce best.
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
- Slow it down. Cold water means cold fish — work jigs, soft plastics, and live bait with patience. Bites are subtle.
- Fish the warmest water. Dark-bottom flats, deeper canals, and creek mouths warm fastest. Afternoons usually outproduce mornings in winter.
- Light fluorocarbon leader. 15-20 lb plenty for inshore — winter water is clear and fish are line-shy.
February Outlook
Winter patterns hold; cobia/spring migrations begin showing in southern waters by month-end.
Regulations Reminder
Snook: 28-33″ slot (Atlantic and Gulf), one per day; seasonal closures vary by zone — verify FWC. Redfish: 18-27″ slot, one per angler per day (verify FWC zone-specific rules). Seatrout/Speckled Trout: FL: 15-19″ slot, 3 per day (verify zone). TX: 15-25″ slot, 3 per day. LA: 12″ minimum, 15 per day (verify current). Sheepshead: 12″ minimum, 8 per day (FL). Always verify current state regulations before each trip — slots, bag limits, and seasons change.
Local Resources
Bait & Tackle: Tampa Bay Fishing Company (St. Pete, 727-525-6360); Bait Pro Tackle (Tampa); Dogfish Tackle (St. Pete).
Public Boat Ramps: Demens Landing (St. Pete), Maximo Park (St. Pete south), Fort De Soto Park ramps, Williams Park (Riverview), Picnic Island, Apollo Beach.
Charter Fishing: $450-$700 inshore; $700-$1,000 nearshore; $1,000-$1,800 offshore.
More Tampa Bay Resources
Tampa Bay Fishing Guide · Tampa Bay Seasonal Calendar · All Tampa Bay reports →
Reports updated every Thursday on fishing.digital.
