May 2026 — Panama City: Offshore Builds Toward June Snapper Opener, Spring Inshore at Full Peak. May is a late spring month with water in the 74–80°F range — tarpon arriving on beaches; snook and redfish on the flats; nearshore action picks up. Here’s the full breakdown of what’s biting, where to fish, and the most productive tactics for this month.
What’s Biting — May 2026
Primary targets this month: Seatrout, Redfish, Snapper.
Seatrout
Summer trout are in the deep grass of West Bay, North Bay docks, Crooked Island Sound, and Watson Bayou — focus on the deeper grass edges and potholes early and late in the day. Live shrimp and pinfish under popping corks produce limits. Trolling MirrOlures over grass flats is effective in slightly deeper water.
Redfish
Summer redfish are in West Bay grass flats, North Bay near Lynn Haven, Watson Bayou, Grand Lagoon docks, and the Cut behind Shell Island. Fish dawn and dusk hard — once the sun gets high and water hits 85°F+, bites slow significantly. Live pinfish, cut ladyfish, and topwater walking baits at first light are top producers. Tailing fish on grass flats around the new and full moons.
Snapper
Snapper bottom fishing on Stage I, Stage II, Sherman’s Reef, the Lower Phillips, the Loberg Reef, and the deeper SAU sites in 80–140 feet — vermilion, lane, and mangrove snapper are open year-round in most areas. Lighter tackle (20–30 lb), smaller hooks (3/0–5/0), and cut squid or live shrimp.
Water Conditions & Patterns
Water temperatures are running 74–80°F. Tarpon arriving on beaches; snook and redfish on the flats; nearshore action picks up. St. Andrews Pass funnels enormous tidal volume; expect strong rips on both sides of slack. The best inshore bite windows on the bay flats are typically the two hours leading into and following a tide change.
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
- Early and late. The 5 AM to 9 AM window and 6 PM to dark are gold; midday water temps push fish deep or into shade.
- Live bait season. Cast-net pilchards, scaled sardines, and threadfins for snook, tarpon, and snapper. Chum with a few live ones to start a feed.
- Storm awareness. Afternoon thunderstorms develop fast — check radar before and during trips. Get off the water at the first thunder.
May Outlook
Tarpon season builds rapidly — by late May, fish are stacked on the major passes and beaches. Snook, redfish, and seatrout are in spring spawning patterns.
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). Red Snapper: 16″ minimum, two per day during federal season (Gulf). Verify with NOAA/FWC each year. Mangrove snapper: 10″, five per day. Always verify the current FWC regulations at myfwc.com before your trip — sizes, bag limits, and season dates change.
Local Resources
Bait & Tackle: Half Hitch Tackle (Panama City Beach, 850-234-2621); Sunjammers (Panama City, 850-769-1090); Anglers (Panama City Beach, 850-249-3300).
Public Boat Ramps: Earl Gilbert Park (St. Andrews), Carl Gray Park (St. Andrews), Lynn Haven Boat Ramp (North Bay), Mexico Beach public ramp.
Charter Fishing: $500–$800 inshore (bays, jetties); $1,400–$2,800 offshore (red snapper, AJ, grouper, deep drop). Book ahead during cobia migration (March–April), red snapper opener (June), and the fall run (October–November).
More Panama City Resources
Panama City Fishing Guide · Panama City Seasonal Calendar · All Panama City reports →
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