October 2025 — Pensacola: Redfish and Flounder Peak, Excellent Fall All Around. October is a fall month with water in the 74–80°F range — peak fall pattern; mullet run; flounder migrate; inshore bite excellent. Here’s the full breakdown of what’s biting, where to fish, and the most productive tactics for this month.
What’s Biting — October 2025
Primary targets this month: Redfish, Flounder, Seatrout.
Redfish
Peak fall redfish action — schools push the flats and oyster bars. Target Big Lagoon, the grass flats inside Santa Rosa Sound, Ono Island shorelines, Garcon Point, and Escambia Bay’s eastern shore. Bull reds (28+ inches) often show in the passes and inlets during the fall mullet run. Cut mullet, live finger mullet, and topwater plugs at dawn all produce. Slot reds (18–27″) chew weedless gold spoons (Johnson) and soft plastics on jigheads in pothole-rich grass.
Flounder
Peak flounder migration. Fish are staging at Three Mile Bridge pilings, the Pickens Pier sand pockets, Pensacola Pass, and Big Lagoon docks before pushing out to spawn. Bucktail jigs (1/2 oz, white, chartreuse) tipped with Berkley Gulp! 4″ swimming mullet or live mud minnows are deadly. Drag baits SLOW along the bottom with frequent pauses. Inlet and pass mouths during outgoing tides are prime ambush points.
Seatrout
Seatrout are gathering in Santa Rosa Sound deep grass edges, Big Lagoon, Garcon Point flats, and the East Bay grass beds. Larger fish (gator trout 20″+) hold in deeper potholes in 4–6 feet. Soft plastic paddletails (DOA CAL, MirrOlure Lil John) on 1/4 oz jigheads, MirrOdine suspending baits, and live shrimp under popping corks are the standard producers. Slow your retrieve as water cools.
Water Conditions & Patterns
Water temperatures are running 74–80°F. Peak fall pattern; mullet run; flounder migrate; inshore bite excellent. Pensacola Pass moves serious water; the strongest bite is the last two hours of incoming and first two hours of outgoing. Cobia sight-fishing requires sun overhead and calm seas — plan trips around forecasts of 1–2 ft chop or less.
Check the NOAA marine forecast and tide charts before launching. Wind direction matters more than wind speed for inshore fishing — east winds tend to push clean water in, while strong westerlies can muddy the bays.
Tactics & Tackle for This Month
- Mullet run. Massive bait migrations south along the coast trigger feeding frenzies — every predator follows. Target inlets, passes, and beach troughs.
- Topwater dawn. The fall coolness extends the topwater window — walk-the-dog baits (Heddon Spook, MirrOlure Top Dog) produce explosive strikes.
- Front timing. The 24 hours before a cold front pushes through are typically lights-out; the day after is often slow as fish reset.
October Outlook
Peak fall fishing across the board — flounder migration intensifies, redfish school up, the mullet run is in full swing. One of the best months of the year.
Regulations Reminder
Redfish: 18–27″ slot, one per angler per day (verify current FWC zone-specific rules). Seatrout: 15–19″ slot, three per day in most zones (verify current FWC zone rules). Flounder: 14″ minimum, five per day (Florida). Always verify the current FWC regulations at myfwc.com before your trip — sizes, bag limits, and season dates change.
Local Resources
Bait & Tackle: Outcast Bait & Tackle (Pensacola Beach, 850-432-9203); Hot Spots Bait & Tackle (Pensacola, 850-453-6789); Gulf Coast Bait & Tackle (Gulf Breeze, 850-934-3474).
Public Boat Ramps: Sherman Cove (Pensacola Naval Base area, public), Galvez Landing (Santa Rosa Sound), Mahogany Mill (Big Lagoon), Shoreline Park (Gulf Breeze).
Charter Fishing: $450–$700 inshore; $1,200–$2,400 offshore (red snapper, AJ, grouper). Book ahead during cobia migration (March–April), red snapper opener (June), and the fall run (October–November).
More Pensacola Resources
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