Florida Keys, Miami Daily Fishing Report

Keys Fishing Report - Hot Bites, Ideal Tides, and All-Clear for Anglers


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Artificial Lure here with your Saturday, August 16th, 2025, fishing report for the Florida Keys and Miami area—delivered honest and straight from local waters.

Sunrise hit at 7:02 AM and you can expect sunset around 8:00 PM, giving you a full day of action. Tides out of Key West today are prime for moving water: high tide rolled in at 3:23 AM, low tide swings at 10:30 AM, with another high at 5:27 PM and the day wraps out with low at 9:18 PM. The tidal coefficients are up—sitting high which means strong current and good feeding opportunities throughout the day, especially early morning and into the dusk hours according to Tides4Fishing.

Weather’s classic Keys: mostly partly cloudy, winds around 10-15 mph out of the southeast, and the heat is steady with lows in the mid-70s and humidity around 90%. The National Weather Service says expect light chop on the nearshore with seas running about a foot. Don’t be surprised by a quick passing shower or boom of thunder, but nothing out of the ordinary for August. Water temps are hanging warm, so target comfort zones near structure and current breaks.

Red tide status from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission is looking good. Karenia brevis is at background levels in the region, no reported fish kills, no major issues for respiratory irritation this week—so it’s all clear to hit it hard.

Fish activity is hot. The Gulf side is lighting up with Spanish mackerel, kingfish, cobia, big jacks, and hungry sharks. Florida Bay and backcountry waters are loaded with speckled trout, snook, redfish, mangrove snapper, and more jacks. Offshore's been steady with mahi-mahi filling the fish boxes, especially for those running the color changes and weed lines about 10-20 miles out. According to Captain Experiences’ recent reports, the Key Largo and Islamorada crews have been crushing a mixed bag: families are bringing home lobster, anglers putting the hammer down on snappers, and bull dolphin up to 25 pounds.

Best baits right now are live pilchards, pinfish, and mullet which you can net up around the grass flats at first light. For artificials, white bucktail jigs tipped with Gulp! or cut bait get it done for almost everything. If you’re in the shallow patch reefs, try a paddle-tail soft plastic or the new wake mullet lure from Salt Strong—the wobble is deadly and requires little effort. Remember the “Four Rights”: use the right lure in the right spot at the right time with the right retrieve, and the Florida Keys will reward you.

Hot spots today include:

- **Long Key Bridge**: Hard-running tide brings in tarpon, snook, and snapper, all stacked around the pilings on moving water. Drift a live bait back for tarpon or cast jigs for snapper.
- **Islamorada Hump**: If you’re running offshore, hit the Hump for blackfin tuna, mahi, and big jacks. Trolled feathers and vertical jigs both work—keep an eye for birds.
- **Marathon Patch Reefs**: Excellent for mangrove snapper, yellowtail, and the odd mutton. Anchoring up with chum and freelining live baits back in the slick draws them out.
- In Miami, the **Government Cut and Haulover Inlet**: always worth the effort for snook, tarpon, and a shot at permit around the channel edges, especially at dawn or dusk when the predators are pushing bait up.

Keep your leaders fresh, watch that livewell oxygen, and match the hatch—this weekend is stacked for success. Thanks for tuning in to your local fishing report with Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for updates and hot tips, and tight lines to ya’.

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Florida Keys, Miami Daily Fishing ReportBy Quiet. Please