April 2026 — Fort Myers / Sanibel: Cobia Peak, Snook Pre-Spawn, Pine Island Sound Redfish. April is a spring month with water in the 68–76°F range — cobia peak; Spanish mackerel and bluefish arrive; spawning movements. Here’s the full breakdown of what’s biting, where to fish, and the most productive tactics for this month.
What’s Biting — April 2026
Primary targets this month: Cobia, Snook, Tarpon, Redfish.
Cobia
Peak cobia migration. Sight-fishing along the beach, around Boca Grande Pass, the nearshore reefs (ARC, Bokeelia Wreck), and pots/buoys in 30–60 feet, and following stingrays in clear water is the move. You need calm seas (1–2 ft) and sun overhead to spot fish. Run the beach 1/4 to 1/2 mile off the sand looking for dark torpedoes — single fish, pairs, or pods of 4–6. Cast 4–6″ bucktails (chartreuse, white, pink), large soft plastic eels, or live eels and pinfish. Cobia will often follow the boat after first refusal, so make a second cast.
Snook
Snook are in the mangrove shorelines of Pine Island Sound, Matlacha Pass docks, the Caloosahatchee River bridges (Edison, Midpoint, Cape Coral), and the Sanibel Causeway. Live pilchards, scaled sardines, and finger mullet are top live baits. Artificial: white DOA Bait Buster, MirrOdine, and walking topwaters at first and last light. Always check current FWC snook season dates — slot is 28–33″ Atlantic, 28–33″ Gulf, with seasonal closures.
Tarpon
Tarpon are around Boca Grande Pass (the world’s tarpon capital), the beaches off Captiva, Sanibel, and Fort Myers Beach, the Caloosahatchee mouth, and Charlotte Harbor. Fish are still moving and feeding well. Live crabs and threadfin produce best.
Redfish
Redfish are in Pine Island Sound mangrove edges, the Matlacha Pass flats, San Carlos Bay, Tarpon Bay (Sanibel), and the oyster bars north of Cabbage Key. Cut bait, gold spoons, and soft plastics on light jigheads all produce. Match the tide and look for activity on shorelines with clean water.
Water Conditions & Patterns
Water temperatures are running 68–76°F. Cobia peak; spanish mackerel and bluefish arrive; spawning movements. Pine Island Sound and Matlacha Pass fish best on the early stages of incoming and outgoing tide — strong current pushes bait out of the mangroves. Boca Grande tarpon fishing is built around the strong tides at the pass; check the SOLUNAR major periods for peak bites.
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
- Cobia readiness. Keep a heavy spinning rod (8000-class reel, 40–50 lb braid, 60–80 lb fluoro leader) ready with a bucktail or live eel — cobia don’t announce themselves.
- Sight-fishing weather. Plan trips around calm seas and sun overhead. Polarized lenses (amber or copper for clarity) are essential.
- Bait migration. Spanish, kings, and predators follow bait pods — keep an eye on diving birds and surface activity.
April Outlook
Cobia peak this month — be ready when conditions align. Tarpon begin showing on southern beaches; Spanish mackerel and bluefish push north.
Regulations Reminder
Snook: 28–33″ slot (Atlantic), 28–33″ slot (Gulf), one fish per angler per day; seasonal closures apply (typically Dec 15–Jan 31 and Jun 1–Aug 31 on Gulf; Dec 15–Jan 31 and Jun 1–Aug 31 on Atlantic — verify current FWC dates). Snook stamp required. Redfish: 18–27″ slot, one per angler per day (verify current FWC zone-specific rules). Cobia: 36″ fork length, one per harvester, two per vessel in state waters (Florida — verify current rules). Tarpon: Catch-and-release only — tarpon over 40″ must remain in the water. Tarpon tag required to possess a fish for state record. Always verify the current FWC regulations at myfwc.com before your trip — sizes, bag limits, and season dates change.
Local Resources
Bait & Tackle: Fishin’ Frank’s (Port Charlotte, 941-625-3888); Lehr’s Economy Tackle (Fort Myers, 239-955-1119); Norm’s Fish Camp (Matlacha, 239-283-1131).
Public Boat Ramps: Punta Rassa (San Carlos Bay, near Sanibel), Matlacha Park, Pineland (Pine Island Sound), Burnt Store (Charlotte Harbor), Cape Coral Yacht Club.
Charter Fishing: $450–$750 inshore (Pine Island Sound, Sanibel); $800–$1,400 tarpon at Boca Grande; $1,200–$2,200 offshore. Book ahead during cobia migration (March–April), red snapper opener (June), and the fall run (October–November).
More Fort Myers / Sanibel Resources
Fort Myers / Sanibel Fishing Guide · Fort Myers / Sanibel Seasonal Calendar · All Fort Myers / Sanibel reports →
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