Good morning anglers, Artificial Lure here coming to you bright and early with your June 22, 2025 fishing report for the Florida Keys—let’s jump right in because the bite is hot and the fish are hungry!
Sunrise hit the horizon at 6:35 a.m. with sunset due at 8:15 p.m., giving us a long day packed with opportunity. Tides today are running strong—look for a high around midday and a solid low late afternoon, making those slack-water periods prime for both reef and inshore action.
Weather across the Keys is classic summer: expect light winds out of the southeast, mostly sunny skies, and the heat cranking up to the upper 80s by midday with the usual late-day chance of a passing thunderstorm. Water clarity is excellent on the reefs and patch reefs, with offshore lines still holding great structure thanks to scattered weed lines and floating debris.
Offshore, it’s officially mahi madness. According to Manic Sportfishing Charters, limits of mahi-mahi are showing up under weed lines, diving birds, and around driftwood, especially near the Islamorada Hump and out toward the Woods Wall. These dolphin are running from schoolies up to larger gaffers, and mixed in are blackfin tuna, the occasional wahoo, and even sailfish for the lucky few. Trolling dead ballyhoo is the gold standard—rig your baits with a wire leader in case that wahoo shows up, and don’t forget to keep an eye on the birds overhead, as they’re dialed in to the action.
On the reef, the snapper bite is absolutely electric. Mangrove snapper are stacking up in bigger-than-average numbers as the pre-spawn gathers steam, with yellowtail and mutton snapper keeping anglers busy from Key Largo to Marathon. These fish are hitting hard on cut baits—sardines and fresh butterflied ballyhoo are top choices—and the best action is coming when you really get the chum slick going. A healthy cloud of ground chum is pulling snappers up off the bottom, so don’t skimp. Nighttime is still a winning move, with cooler temps and less pressure drawing out the biggest mangroves and yellowtails. If you’re working wrecks in the Gulf, expect permit and cobia showing up—throw a yellow mylar jig tipped with crab for permit or a juicy live pinfish for cobia.
Back inshore, the tarpon migration continues strong in the channels around Key West and Islamorada, as noted by Keys Flats Fishing Charters. These silver kings are taking live mullet, crabs, and even swimbaits early morning and just before dark.
For hotspots, put the Islamorada Hump at the top of your offshore list, and for reef action, hit the Western Dry Rocks or the edge of the reef off Marathon. Inshore, Seven Mile Bridge remains legendary for tarpon and mixed species this time of year.
That wraps it up for today in the beautiful Florida Keys—thanks for tuning in to your morning bite report. Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the latest tips, hot spots, and fish stories. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.