Pensacola fishing report - Emerald Coast • Gulf of Mexico

Pensacola Fishing Report — August 2025

Strong offshore continues. Flounder building.

Inshore & Nearshore Fishing

Flounder building in the Pensacola Bay passes and on the Gulf beaches. Seatrout and redfish at dawn on the flats.

Offshore Fishing

Offshore snapper, king mackerel, and mahi continue. Some of the finest offshore fishing of the summer.

Top Techniques This Month

August flounder: Gulp alive 3″ shrimp on a 3/8 oz jighead, slow drift along the sandy margins of the passes.

Fishing Outlook

Good to excellent.

Regulations

Flounder: 12″ minimum. Verify current regulations at state fishing regulations.

Plan Your Trip

See our Pensacola Fishing Guide for full details. Browse all Pensacola fishing reports →

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Offshore — Snapper Season Continues

August keeps the federal red snapper season open (verify exact dates with NOAA), and the offshore fleet is taking advantage. The inshore reefs in 80–120 feet and the deeper wrecks in 120–180 feet are stacked with fish. Use circle hooks (mandatory) and a knocker rig with cut bonito, squid, or live pinfish. Many boats are limiting in 90 minutes once they find a productive piece of structure. Gag grouper, scamp, and the occasional snowy grouper are mixed in on the deeper bottom. Vermilion snapper are everywhere — easy limits as a backup target. King mackerel are stacked along the color change at 20–30 miles out — slow-trolled live menhaden on a stinger rig.

Inshore: Dawn or Don’t Bother

Water temperatures inshore are pushing 86–88°F, and the bite shuts down completely outside of the first 90 minutes of light and the last hour of dusk. Speckled trout will hit topwaters at first light on the grass flats inside Big Lagoon and along the north shore of Pensacola Bay — get on the water before sunrise. After 9 AM, switch to deeper holes with live shrimp or skip fishing entirely. Redfish are doing the same — tailing on the dark-bottom flats at sunrise, then disappearing into deeper water by mid-morning. Snook (catch-and-release only in summer) are around the inlet rocks at dawn.

Tarpon at the Jetties, Spanish on the Beach

Tarpon are stacking at Pensacola Pass and along the beach. Live mullet or threadfin drifted on the outgoing tide at the pass is the textbook approach. Spanish mackerel are blitzing on bait pods along the beaches all day — Gotcha plugs from the pier, or trolled silver spoons from a boat, produce constant action.

Conditions, Regs, Hotspots

Water 84–88°F inshore, 82–84°F offshore. Florida saltwater license required. Federal reef fish endorsement required (free, online). Red snapper bag varies by state/federal — verify before harvest. King mackerel 24-inch minimum, 2-fish bag. Gag grouper 24-inch minimum, 2-fish bag (Gulf). Tarpon over 40 inches release-only without tarpon tag. Hotspots: Pensacola Pass at dawn for tarpon, the inshore reefs at 80–120 ft for snapper, the surf for Spanish all day, Big Lagoon flats at sunrise. Hydrate. Tight lines.

Boat Ramps and Heat Strategy

August in Pensacola requires a strict schedule — on the water by 5:30 AM, back at the ramp by 10:00 AM, then evening bite from 7:00 PM. Sherman Cove ramp gets you to the pass for tarpon at sunrise. Bay Point Marina is the offshore-fleet launch. Bayou Chico ramp is closest for inshore at first light. Stay hydrated, wear lightweight UPF clothing, and watch for afternoon thunderstorms that build over the Gulf and can be dangerous. Marine VHF radio is recommended for any offshore trip. Tight lines.

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