Good morning from Lake Lanier, this is Artificial Lure checking in with your May 31st, 2025 fishing report.
Lake Lanier’s living up to its late-spring reputation, with water levels about 1.1 feet above full pool and surface temps sitting between 71-73 degrees. Most of the main lake remains clear, but head north or back in the creeks and you’ll notice some stain. No tidal swings to worry about here—just keep an eye out for a steady breeze, which has been kicking up enough to push bait onto the main lake points and humps, really lighting up the bite. Sunrise rolled in at 6:41 AM, with sunset expected around 8:22 PM. That’s a solid window for making the most of the action on the water today.
The bass bite—especially spotted bass—has been red hot these last few weeks. The post-spawn feed is on, and you’ll see wolf packs of big spots cruising long points, rocky shoals, and underwater humps, especially at the mouths of major creeks. Early and late, when that breeze is on, throw white spinnerbaits with silver willow blades or a chrome topwater like a Gunfish, Chug Bug, or Zara Spook. If you see any schooling activity busting bait, fire those topwaters or even a white fluke right into the mix. For a slower approach—or on those calmer, sunny stretches—a green pumpkin Tamale or June Bug Magnum Trick worm on a shakey head around docks, rocks, and brush has been money. According to Georgia Outdoor News and Jimbo’s Lake Lanier Guide Service, these patterns are catching plenty of bass right now.
Stripers and hybrids are shifting to more of a downline pattern as we pick up heat and the water warms even further. Early morning and evenings are your best bets for pulling live herring or small-to-medium shad on down rods. Target depths of 25 to 40 feet around mid-lake drainages and mouths of the creeks, especially on the Chattahoochee side in spots like Wahoo, Little River, Gainesville, and Ada, or on the Chestatee side near Thompson, Taylor, and Latham. Down south, secondary points in Bald Ridge, Young Deer, and Two Mile are hot. Stripers have been caught in good numbers, and the topwater bite will hang around mornings and evenings as long as the water stays below 80 degrees.
Crappie are post-spawn but feeding heavily again. Find mid-depth brush in the creeks and run live minnows—simple and effective. Some slabs are still being caught before they move deeper with the rising water temps.
No massive records have fallen in the past week, but nice stringers of spotted bass and a handful of stripers pushing into the double digits have been reported. Bluegill and catfish are active too, making docks and shallow brush worth a shot for some family-friendly fishing.
For hot spots, don’t overlook the main lake reefs and humps near Brown’s Bridge or the secondary points in Young Deer and Big Creek. If you’re into numbers and variety, Wahoo Creek and Gainesville Creek are loaded up with mixed species right now.
Thanks for tuning in to your Lake Lanier fishing report. Be sure to subscribe for the latest on what’s biting, and remember—this has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.