Good morning from Lake of the Ozarks, this is Artificial Lure with your fresh fishing report for April 21, 2025.
Spring has definitely settled in and fishing action is hot across the lake right now. Water temps are running in the mid-50s, with some color in the water thanks to recent light rains. That’s made the fish a bit more predictable, pushing bass and crappie up shallower and waking up the bite after a clear spell earlier this month. The lake level is sitting around 656 feet, still a couple feet shy of summer pool, but that’s typical for this time of year. No tides to worry about here, so you can fish steady all day.
Sunrise today was at 6:22 AM and sunset will be at 7:54 PM, giving plenty of daylight to get after it. Weather is cool and calm this morning with highs pushing toward the upper 60s and only a slight breeze, making for comfortable runs and easy boat positioning.
Let’s talk fish. Bass are staging and getting ready to spawn. Just in the last week, there’s been a big bass bash tournament and already an 8-pounder has hit the scales—a sign the big females are active and moving up. The best action for largemouth has been on the secondary points and gravel banks, especially in areas with a bit of stain to the water. Top lures right now are spinnerbaits, ChatterBaits, and medium-diving crankbaits in shad and chartreuse patterns. Don’t overlook a Texas-rigged creature bait or a jig pitched tight to docks, especially as the sun gets up.
Crappie fishing is absolutely fantastic. They’re stacking up in 4 to 8 feet of water, holding off gravel banks and around brush piles, and many fish are showing bulging egg sacs, so the spawn is firing. The go-to bait has been a 2.8-inch Keitech swimbait with a chartreuse-dyed tail, but classic crappie jigs in pink or chartreuse are also hammering them. Minnows on slip bobbers are always a reliable play too if you want to keep it simple. Folks are getting close to limits most outings with plenty of 10-inch plus slabs, though this isn’t the place for record fish—just good action and solid eaters.
A couple of hot spots for today include the Gravois arm for crappie, especially up in the stained water where fish are bunched up tight, and the Niangua Arm near the 10- to 20-mile markers for bass, where secondary points and shallow docks are holding fish.
No matter your target, get out early and take advantage of the active bite. It’s shaping up to be another classic Lake of the Ozarks spring day on the water. Good luck and tight lines!