Daily Fish Report for Florida Keys

Late Summer Angling in the Florida Keys: Tides, Targets, and Top Tactics


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Florida Keys anglers woke before sunrise today to clear skies, calm seas, and that unmistakable mid-August humidity clinging to the air. Sunrise came in at 6:53 AM, and we’ll see the sun until 8:01 PM tonight, so pack sunscreen and hydrate early. Winds are expected to stay light out of the southeast, keeping most inshore and nearshore waters glassy and prime for both sight fishing and drifting.

The tidal action is mellow but favorable, with a low tide at 4:44 AM, followed by a gentle incoming to our high at 10:25 AM, peaking around 0.9 feet. Another low swings through for supper at 4:59 PM. Planners should hit the flats and mangroves on that flood for best bait movement — and best shot at the bite.

Offshore, it’s been busy. Florida Sport Fishing TV in yesterday’s report noted excellent action on swordfish during daylight, sailfish slashing through packs of pilchards, and finicky blackfin tuna teasing those trolling deep baits. The pelagic bite is best from sunrise through noon, so charter captains are starting lines early, pulling live baits and skirted ballyhoo in 200–1200 feet, especially off Islamorada and Marathon humps.

Inshore, the bridges are hot. Multiple local reels and channels have fishermen landing solid numbers of snapper, with limits of mangrove and lane coming to hand just before slack tides. Topwater action is strong for tarpon at first light, with a few big snook blowing up walk-the-dog style Super Spooks just before the sun climbs — it’s textbook summer feeding.

Up towards Siesta and inshore near Snake Creek, the grass beds are loaded with redfish. The team at CentralFloridaKayakFishing slammed twelve keeper reds yesterday — cut pinfish and whitebait on bottom rigs outperformed artificials during the afternoon heat. Early morning, though, walk a hollow-body frog like Molix Supernato over heavy grass and matted mangroves for the explosive bite. Mike Iaconelli’s blog echoes that advice, adding that heavy punch rigs with streamlined beaver-style plastics work best when the sun is high and fish bury deep in cover.

Species count is solid so far. Snapper, redfish, and scattered grouper for bay and bridge folks; bonefish are cruising sandy flats on the rising midday tide. Offshore, billfish and tuna dominate, but boats coming in yesterday reported dolphin (mahi), small wahoo, and a few kingfish joining the catch. Swordfish are being targeted by day on long drifts, with multiple hook-ups and a handful iced on deck. Keep an eye out for dogfish — spotty but showing up on some wrecks.

Bait and lure recommendations for today:
- Offshore: Skirted ballyhoo, live pilchard, bonita strips; trolling deep for tuna and billfish.
- Inshore: Live shrimp, pinfish, whitebait. For artificials, go with punch rigs or frogs — Super Spook for early topwater, and soft plastics or jigs for working structure midday.
- Flats: Small crustacean imitations for bonefish; gold spoons for redfish on grassy patches.

Hot spots today:
- Seven Mile Bridge — active snapper, tarpon before sunup, mixed jacks all morning.
- Long Key Channel — consistent snook and reds at sunrise, moving deeper after 10 AM.
- Islamorada Humps — swordfish in the daytime, scattered tuna along the edges.
- Lower Keys grass flats — working artificial frogs over matted grass for reds and snook until it gets too hot.

It’s shaping up to be a classic late-summer day in the Keys: fish early, watch the tides, and work those shade lines as the sun rises high. Remember, August water temps mean fish are deep by midday, so adapt with heavy rigs or plan to anchor in shadowed cuts and troughs. Thanks for tuning in — subscribe for daily updates and never miss the bite!

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Daily Fish Report for Florida KeysBy Quiet. Please