Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report Today

Early Ice Bite on Lake St. Clair - Walleye, Perch, and More


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This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report.

We’re sliding into early ice season now, and the lake’s acting like it—skim ice tucked back in the canals and marinas, with more open water out on the main basin. Sportsmen’s Direct’s latest ice update from December nineteenth says guys are just starting to poke around for safe ice in the canals and on the west side, but most of the main lake is still a boating game, especially on the rivers.

Weather-wise, the National Weather Service for the Detroit/Port Huron corridor has us in typical late‑December pattern: below-freezing mornings, a light west to northwest breeze, and highs flirting with freezing in the afternoon. Cloud cover is in and out, but any sunny window midday is going to be your best bet. Sunrise is right around 8 a.m., sunset about 5 p.m., giving you a tight nine‑hour light window.

FishingReminder’s solunar tables for St. Clair Shores show the stronger bite windows stacking up around late morning and again toward dusk, which lines up with what locals have been seeing on the water: a slow early grind that builds as the day warms a touch.

Walleye on the St. Clair River and Detroit River continue to be the main story. Local captains have been reporting solid eater bags—5 to 15 fish per boat is common—vertical‑jigging deep winter holes with 3/8 to 5/8‑ounce jigs tipped with minnows or soft plastics. Chartreuse, firetiger, and plain gold have been the steady producers. Running a stinger hook is still putting extra fish in the box with the light winter bite.

Perch fishing inside the mile roads and around the Metro Beach area has been “pick but worth it.” Buckets aren’t overflowing, but guys sitting on pods are walking away with 15 to 30 decent perch, mixed in with a few bonus bluegills and the odd crappie in the marinas. Best bet is a simple spread of perch rigs with emerald shiners or spikes, and tiny tungsten jigs under a float if you’re in the canals.

Smallmouth bass are mostly in wintering holes now, but a few diehards dragging blade baits and 3/4‑ounce silver buddies in the shipping channel edges are still sticking a handful of big bronzebacks when the wind lets them line up on the break. It’s not numbers, but if you’re after one or two giants, it’s worth the effort.

On the muskie front, the main trolling bite is just about wrapped. A couple locals are still long‑lining big rubber and crankbaits on the shipping channel edges and the South Channel, picking off late‑season fish, but most muskie nuts are putting gear away and waiting on good, safe ice for panfish.

Best lures and baits right now:
- For walleye: 3/8–5/8‑oz jigs with emerald shiners, slender spoons, and soft plastic minnows in natural shad and chartreuse.
- For perch: small perch rigs, teardrop jigs, tungsten in glow and gold with spikes or wax worms.
- For bass: blade baits, heavy tubes in green pumpkin, and goby‑pattern swimbaits dragged painfully slow.

Couple of hot spots to circle on your map:
- The mile roads—9, 10, and 11 Mile—inside weed edges for perch transitioning toward early‑ice haunts.
- The St. Clair River wintering holes near the Blue Water Bridge and downriver bends for stacked walleye when current and wind line up.

Remember, ice thickness is not uniform. Spud your way out, wear a float suit, and don’t trust someone else’s footprints.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report.

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Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report TodayBy Inception Point Ai