April 2026 — Alaska: Halibut Opens, First Kenai Kings, Rivers Opening. April is a spring break-up month with water in the 34-42°F range — rivers opening; early king salmon at Sitka; first halibut trips begin late month. Here’s the full breakdown of what’s biting, where to fish, and the most productive tactics.
What’s Biting — April 2026
Primary targets this month: Chinook Salmon, Halibut, Lingcod, Rainbow Trout.
Chinook Salmon
Chinook salmon trolling on the Kenai River (the world’s largest king salmon fishery — fish over 90 lbs documented), the Kasilof River, the Karluk River, the Nushagak (Bristol Bay), Cook Inlet at Anchor Point and Deep Creek, the Naknek, and Sitka winter king fishery. Spoons (Pro-King, NK 28), J-Plugs, and meat rigs (flasher-fly combos) at 50-120 feet on downriggers. Speeds 2.0-2.8 mph.
Halibut
California halibut on Sitka, Homer (the halibut capital), Kodiak, Seward, Whittier, Juneau, Ketchikan — Pacific halibut, fish 50-200 lbs routine, 300+ lb trophies possible. Live bait (anchovy, smelt) on Carolina rigs slow-trolled along sandy bottom; soft plastic swimbaits hopped along the bottom. 20-30 lb tackle.
Lingcod
Lingcod on the rocky bottom of southeast Alaska and Prince William Sound — 100-300 feet. Large swimbaits (8-10″), live bait (small rockfish, mackerel), or big iron jigs. They hammer baits aggressively. Stout tackle (60-80 lb braid) to lift fish off structure.
Rainbow Trout
Rainbow trout in Bristol Bay rivers (the legendary trophy rainbow fishery — fish 25-30″+ routine in fall) — the Kvichak, Nushagak, Naknek, Kulik, Iliamna; also Lake Iliamna proper. Most Alaska rivers iced over in winter; some interior lakes hold rainbows accessible by ice fishing.
Water Conditions & Patterns
Water temperatures are running 34-42°F. Rivers opening; early king salmon at sitka; first halibut trips begin late month. Alaska tidal range is enormous (15-25+ ft in many areas — Anchorage has the second-highest tides in North America). Cook Inlet currents are powerful and dangerous to small boats. Salmon fishing in rivers is driven by water level and run timing more than tides; ocean halibut fishing is tide-driven, with the strongest tides producing the best bites.
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
April Outlook
Peak spring migrations — cobia (Gulf/SE), striped bass (mid-Atlantic), spawning movements everywhere.
Regulations Reminder
Rockfish/Lingcod: CA seasons highly variable by depth zone — verify CDFW current rules. Lingcod 22″ minimum. Salmon: Great Lakes — state-specific (3-5 per day combined). Always verify current state regulations before each trip — slots, bag limits, and seasons change.
Local Resources
Bait & Tackle: Bob’s Trophy Charters (Sitka); Trustworthy Tackle (Anchorage); Mossy’s Fly Shop (Anchorage); Sportsman’s Warehouse (Anchorage/Fairbanks); Kenai Cache Outfitters (Soldotna).
Public Boat Ramps: Kenai River public ramps (Cooper Landing, Soldotna, Kenai), Homer Spit (halibut), Seward small boat harbor, Sitka, Whittier, Ninilchik, Anchor Point — verify state and federal access permits.
Charter Fishing: $300–$450 per person halibut day trips (Homer, Seward, Sitka); $600–$1,000 Kenai king/sockeye guides; $5,000–$10,000+ Bristol Bay fly-out lodges (multi-day packages); $200–$400 per person Sitka winter king.
More Alaska Resources
Alaska Fishing Guide · Alaska Seasonal Calendar · All Alaska reports →
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