August 2025 — Stuart: Dawn Snapper Fishing, Redfish on IRL Flats, Offshore Wreck Fishing. August is a late summer month with water in the 82-86°F range — peak heat; fish deep midday; afternoon storms common. Here’s the full breakdown of what’s biting, where to fish, and the most productive tactics.
What’s Biting — August 2025
Primary targets this month: Snook, Tarpon, Snapper, Mahi.
Snook
Snook season is closed for harvest in Florida — catch-and-release only this month. Target the St. Lucie Inlet jetty, the Crossroads (where the St. Lucie meets the Indian River), the Roosevelt Bridge, the Hells Gate area, and the docks of Sewall’s Point for fun. Handle fish carefully and release quickly.
Tarpon
Tarpon around the St. Lucie Inlet, the Crossroads, the deeper holes of the IRL, and the surf zone at Hobe Sound. Fish still moving and feeding well. Live crabs and threadfin produce best; backcountry juvenile fishery in some areas.
Snapper
Snapper bottom fishing on the offshore wrecks and reefs in 60-100 feet, the Donaldson Reef, and Bull Shark Barge — vermilion, lane, and mangrove snapper open year-round in most areas. Lighter tackle (20-30 lb), 3/0-5/0 hooks, cut squid or live shrimp.
Mahi
Peak mahi season on the weed lines and color changes 15-25 miles offshore, the Push Button Hill area, and any floating debris in 100-300 feet. Look for weed lines, color changes, floating debris, and frigatebirds. Trolled ballyhoo with skirts (blue/white, pink/white), or live pilchards pitched to schools. Bull and cow pairs in spring; schoolies (3-12 lb) summer.
Water Conditions & Patterns
Water temperatures are running 82-86°F. Peak heat; fish deep midday; afternoon storms common. St. Lucie Inlet moves serious water; outgoing tide concentrates bait and game fish in the Crossroads area. The first two hours of incoming tide push clean blue Gulf Stream water in.
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
- Early and late. 5-9 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 at first thunder.
August Outlook
Peak summer — offshore prime (canyon billfish, deepwater snapper); inshore challenging in heat.
Regulations Reminder
Snook: 28-33″ slot (Atlantic and Gulf), one per day; seasonal closures vary by zone — verify FWC. Red Snapper: federal season; verify NOAA/state dates. Mangrove snapper: 10″, 5 per day. Tarpon: Catch-and-release only — tarpon over 40″ must remain in water. Always verify current state regulations before each trip — slots, bag limits, and seasons change.
Local Resources
Bait & Tackle: Snook Nook (Jensen Beach, 772-334-2710); Tackle Shack (Stuart, 772-220-2700); Whiticar Boat Works (Stuart).
Public Boat Ramps: Sandsprit Park (St. Lucie Inlet), Phipps Park (St. Lucie River), Jensen Beach Causeway, Stuart Causeway, Sewall’s Point boat ramp.
Charter Fishing: $500-$800 inshore; $900-$1,400 sailfish offshore; $700-$1,100 nearshore/kingfish.
More Stuart Resources
Stuart Fishing Guide · Stuart Seasonal Calendar · All Stuart reports →
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