Artificial Lure here with your Lake of the Ozarks fishing report for Monday, November 24th, 2025. Water conditions are classic late fall around here: the Bagnell Dam lake level sits steady at 657.0 feet, with light generation holding the surface temps around 65 degrees, ideal for that transition bite. Weather’s starting cold early, but we’ll see warming into the high 50s by afternoon under mostly clear skies, so dress for layers and expect a good window once the sun’s up. Sunrise hit at 6:58 AM, and sunset’s at 4:52 PM, with just over nine hours of daylight to work the banks and coves. Keep in mind we’re dealing with a First Quarter Moon, which is boosting those solunar bite times—major windows were from 6:20–8:20 AM and again tonight from 6:36–8:36 PM, so plan your day with those peaks in mind. There’s no true tide here, but these lunar cycles definitely impact fish movement.
Recent catches have been lively for late November, with local guides reporting solid action on largemouth and spotted bass. Most boats are returning with limits—best bags weighing in around 16–18 pounds, and plenty of fish in the 2–4 pound range. Crappie are running tight to brush, and there’s a handful of muskie and white bass up near the Truman Dam side. Catfish are still biting but mostly deep; flatheads and blues, some in the 8–15 pound slot.
Early morning bites have responded best to shad-style jerkbaits—think 5-inch Deps Sakamata Shad on a 1/2-ounce head or the Z-Man Jerk ShadZ in smelt, especially near timber and steeper channel swings, according to local tournament anglers. The Crock-O-Gator football jig (3/4-ounce) tipped with a NetBait Paca Chunk continues to land bigger bass off main lake points and brush piles. For crappie, double minnow rigs and small tubes in chartreuse or monkey milk are working well around docks and deeper cover.
By midday, gradually shift to a deeper pattern: umbrella rigs loaded with swimbaits like Bass Pro Speed Shad are finding suspended fish over trees and ledges. Don’t ignore a traditional drop shot with a Roboworm Straight Tail for stubborn bass holding deep. If the surface heats up, a War Eagle spinnerbait in white/gold or a Strike King 1.5 squarebill is reliable for covering shallow water in the backs of creeks.
Right now, Jennings Branch Cove and McCoy Branch Cove are hot spots for numbers, especially at dawn when bass are chasing shad. Further up near Bagnell Dam, rocky points remain consistent for larger fish, as do brush piles in Lotell Hollow Cove for crappie and the occasional white bass blitz. Main lake bluffs and deep docks between mile markers 1 and 6 are also producing—those shaded docks tend to hold quality fish when the sun’s high.
Best bait recommendations: live shad or big minnows for trophy catfish, small jigs for crappie, and the aforementioned jerkbaits, jigs, and umbrella rigs for bass. If you’re targeting numbers, stick to plastics and slow presentations; for size, lean on reaction baits in shad and craw colors.
That’s the rundown for today at Lake of the Ozarks—expect decent action, focus your efforts on those major bite windows, and don’t be afraid to try something new if the familiar stuff runs quiet. Thanks for tuning in to your fishing report, and remember to hit subscribe for more updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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