July 2025 — Great Lakes: Offshore salmon and lake trout, musky season. July is a summer month with water in the 64-70°F range — walleye deeper; salmon on the thermocline at 50-120 feet; perch. Here’s the full breakdown of what’s biting, where to fish, and the most productive tactics.
What’s Biting — July 2025
Primary targets this month: Walleye, Chinook Salmon, Smallmouth Bass, Lake Trout.
Walleye
Walleye on Lake Erie (the walleye capital of the world — Western Basin, Bass Islands, the reefs), Saginaw Bay (Lake Huron), Green Bay (Lake Michigan), Lake of the Woods, the Detroit River. Trolling crawler harnesses on bottom bouncers (1-3 oz weights), Erie Dearie spinner rigs, and crankbaits (Reef Runner, Bandit). Speed 1.2-2.0 mph.
Chinook Salmon
Chinook salmon trolling on Lake Michigan (Manistee, Ludington — the world’s premier Pacific salmon fishery in fresh water), Lake Ontario, Lake Huron — trolling at 50-180 feet. 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.
Smallmouth Bass
Smallmouth bass on Lake Erie (the eastern basin produces 5+ lb smallies), the Beaver Islands (Lake Michigan), Drummond Island (Lake Huron), Sault Ste. Marie, and the St. Lawrence. Tubes, drop-shot rigs, jerkbaits, and topwater plugs. Rocky structure is key. Lake Erie’s Eastern Basin produces 5+ lb fish regularly.
Lake Trout
Lake trout on all five Great Lakes in deep water — particularly Lake Superior, Lake Huron, and the deeper portions of Michigan and Ontario. Trolled spoons or cowbell rigs deep (80-180 ft on downriggers); jigging white tube jigs over deep structure; ice fishing with jigging Rapalas and big spoons.
Water Conditions & Patterns
Water temperatures are running 64-70°F. Walleye deeper; salmon on the thermocline at 50-120 feet; perch. Great Lakes have minimal tides; fishing is driven by water temperature, thermoclines, and wind. Salmon hold at the thermocline (typically 50-100 feet in summer). Walleye fishing on Lake Erie is wind-and-current driven — north winds push fish into the reefs. Ice fishing on protected bays is a major winter component.
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
- Salmon thermocline. 50-120 feet on downriggers — find the temp break and fish hold there.
- Walleye on reefs. Trolling crawler harnesses at 1.2-2.0 mph; jigging the rock piles.
July Outlook
Summer pattern locked in — dawn/dusk inshore, deep offshore, manage heat.
Regulations Reminder
Walleye: 15″ minimum, 5-6 per day depending on lake/state. Salmon: Great Lakes — state-specific (3-5 per day combined). Lake Trout: Slot and bag limits vary by lake and state. Always verify current state regulations before each trip — slots, bag limits, and seasons change.
Local Resources
Bait & Tackle: Klein’s Sporting Goods (Pennsylvania), Erie Outfitters (PA), The Tackle Box (Saginaw), Frank’s Great Outdoors (Linwood — Saginaw Bay), Marv’s Tackle (St. Catharines ON).
Public Boat Ramps: Catawba State Park (Lake Erie), Mazurik (Lake Erie), Linwood Beach (Saginaw Bay), Bay Port (Saginaw Bay), Manistee River mouth, Frankfort/Manistee (Lake Michigan), Niagara River ramps.
Charter Fishing: $650-$900 walleye (Lake Erie, Saginaw); $700-$1,000 salmon trolling (Lake Michigan/Ontario); $400-$600 panfish/perch; $500-$700 ice fishing guided.
More Great Lakes Resources
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