September 2025 — Fort Lauderdale: Wahoo Peak, Early Sailfish Building, Fall Transition. September is a early fall month with water in the 78-84°F range — snook season reopens; bait migrations begin; bull redfish show. Here’s the full breakdown of what’s biting, where to fish, and the most productive tactics.
What’s Biting — September 2025
Primary targets this month: Snapper, Grouper, Sailfish, Snook.
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.
Grouper
Grouper on the offshore wrecks and ledges in 80-250 feet — black, gag, scamp, and snowy grouper. Live pinfish, large cut sardines, or jigs on 50-80 lb tackle. Federal Gulf season for gag and red grouper varies — verify NOAA/FWC dates. Goliath grouper catch-and-release only.
Sailfish
Sailfish around the deep blue water 1-3 miles off the beach — Fort Lauderdale sits right on the edge of the Gulf Stream. Slower season — fish are scattered. Live bait and high-speed trolling both produce.
Snook
Snook in the inlet (Port Everglades), the docks and bridges of the Intracoastal, Whiskey Creek, and the New River. 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.
Water Conditions & Patterns
Water temperatures are running 78-84°F. Snook season reopens; bait migrations begin; bull redfish show. 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
- Mullet run. Massive bait migrations trigger feeding frenzies — every predator follows. Target inlets, passes, and beach troughs.
- Topwater dawn. Fall coolness extends the topwater window — walk-the-dog baits produce explosive strikes.
- Front timing. 24 hours before a cold front is typically lights-out; the day after is often slow as fish reset.
September Outlook
Transition month — snook season reopens, false albacore arrive, bait migrations begin.
Regulations Reminder
Snook: 28-33″ slot (Atlantic and Gulf), one per day; seasonal closures vary by zone — verify FWC. Red Snapper: federal season; verify NOAA/state dates. Mangrove snapper: 10″, 5 per day. 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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