Pensacola Fishing Report — September 2025
Fall transition.
Inshore & Nearshore Fishing
Redfish schooling on Pensacola Bay and East Bay flats. Flounder at the Pensacola Inlet. Seatrout on the grass flats. Spanish mackerel nearshore.
Offshore Fishing
Offshore grouper and snapper continue. King mackerel nearshore.
Top Techniques This Month
September redfish: Schools form in East Bay — find them by looking for nervous water or tailing fish on the flats.
Fishing Outlook
Very good.
Regulations
Redfish: 18–27″ slot. Verify current regulations at state fishing regulations.
Plan Your Trip
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Fall Inshore Kicks Off
September marks the official start of fall fishing in Pensacola. The dog-day heat is breaking, water temps are dropping into the upper 70s, and inshore species are starting to fire on all cylinders. Redfish are scattered across the flats throughout Pensacola Bay, Big Lagoon, and Perdido Bay, with the bite progressively improving through the month. Topwater plugs at first light, then gold spoons or weedless soft plastics through the day. The shallow flats off Innerarity Point and the back of Big Lagoon are holding fish reliably. Tailing fish show on calm mornings — sight-casting opportunity from a kayak or skiff.
Trout on the Grass, Flounder Building
Spotted trout are coming alive on the grass flats again. The cooling water has them feeding aggressively at dawn and dusk, with the best bite in the first 90 minutes of light. Topwaters early, then soft plastics on a 1/8 oz jighead. The grass flats inside Big Lagoon and along the north shore of Pensacola Bay are productive. Flounder are starting their seasonal migration into the channels — the early bite is just beginning and will peak in November. Live bull minnows on a jighead near the channel edges in the pass is the early-season setup.
Offshore Continues, Snapper Closed
Federal red snapper season is closed by now, but the offshore action remains strong. Vermilion snapper, gag grouper (open through December), king mackerel, and amberjack (when open — check exact dates) are all available. Slow-trolled live menhaden on the structure produces kings consistently. The mid-shelf wrecks in 100–150 feet are holding decent grouper and snapper for boats willing to make the run.
Conditions, Hotspots, Regs
Water temps 78–80°F, dropping. Florida saltwater license required. Red snapper federal season closed (verify state-waters status). Gag grouper 24-inch minimum, 2-fish bag (Gulf). King mackerel 24-inch minimum, 2-fish bag. Redfish slot 18–27 inches, 1-fish bag. Spotted seatrout slot 15–19 inches, 5-fish bag. Hotspots: Innerarity flats at dawn for reds, the pass at Fort Pickens for early flounder, Bayou Texar for trout, the offshore wrecks in 100–150 feet for grouper and kings. Tight lines.
Boat Ramps and Local Access
Sherman Cove ramp at Galvez Park is the fastest launch for pass and Pensacola Bay access. Big Lagoon Park ramp puts you near the Innerarity flats. Bayou Texar ramp covers the north bay system. The Pensacola Beach Pier and the Bob Sikes Bridge catwalks are the best shore-angler access points. September water temps drop 2–4°F per week through the month — the bite improves daily. Stay weather-aware: peak hurricane season runs through October. Tight lines.