This is Artificial Lure with your Pacific Coast fishing report and the bite’s hot for August 15th, 2025. We’re coming off a weather window that cracked open excellent offshore tuna action, while inshore anglers got an unexpected bonus with the California Fish and Game Commission expanding groundfish opportunities through the end of 2025. You’re not gonna want to miss what’s happening out here.
Sunrise hit at 6:20 AM and we’ll ease into sunset about 7:58 PM, so you’ve got a long window to work the tides and daylight bite. Tides in most SoCal and Central Coast areas started with a low near 3:15 AM, peaked with a modest high around 9:00 AM, and then you’ll see another low in the afternoon, about 3:15 PM. The amplitude is up, especially near San Francisco where the tidal coefficients are reading 75—expect stronger currents and a bit more movement on your baits.
How’s the weather? Classic California summer at the beach: Marine layer in the morning, light southwest wind through the day, and highs in the upper 70s to mid-80s. A slight breeze builds in the afternoon but that’s standard, especially near the open Pacific. Offshore, conditions remain fishable through the weekend. For those fishing inland for bass, things stay hot and still—best bite is first and last light.
Let’s talk hot spots. If you’re looking for trophy bluefin, set your GPS to the Tanner and Cortes Banks. The Pacific Dawn and Pacific Queen just rolled in with LIMITS of bluefin, up to 210 pounds for 15 to 25 anglers, and a side of yellowtail. Trolling the blue water edges with Rapala Sarda lures has been money—drop those big-profile plugs and get ready for a workout. Closer to home, Fisherman’s Landing reported local trips scoring big: Dolphin boats hit up yellowtail (to 36 lbs), bonita, big numbers of calico bass, sheephead, and even a surprise halibut.
Inshore, the kelp beds off La Jolla and PV Peninsula are on fire for calico bass, barracuda, and sheephead. There’s also been a solid push of white sea bass and halibut—one angler landed a 32½-inch flattie on Hookup Baits just north of Bodega Bay recently, so don’t sleep on the shallow sandy patches.
Species count is way up thanks to the new reg changes—no more deep water restriction north of Point Conception, so get ready for wide-open action on rockfish, lingcod, cabezon, and greenling. Fishermen’s Landing, Sportfishingreport, and local docks show limits of rockfish, hundreds of whitefish, plenty of sheephead, and more sand bass and barracuda hitting deck. The day boats have even been nabbing a few white seabass and lingcod, though the bite’s a touch finicky.
Best baits and rigs? For tuna: deep-diving trolling plugs (like the Rapala Sarda), heavy flatfall jigs, and Colt Snipers. If anchovy or sardine are available at the bait barge, bring a scoop—they’re working both offshore and for inshore halibut and bass. For calicos and sand bass, stick with swimbaits or spinnerbaits in green and brown, or slow-roll a plastic on a weedless head. Rockfish are biting cut squid, fresh dead, and jigs tipped with gulp—don’t forget your dropper loops.
If you’re fishing structure, a sliding sinker with live mackerel or squid for white seabass or halibut can’t be beat. Early and late topwater walking baits are drawing some boils for inshore bass whenever you find a surface chop.
Two don’t-miss spots for the next couple days: Point Loma kelp beds for bass and exotics, and the Coronado Islands zone for yellowtail, bonito, and a steady pick of mixed-grade rockfish and sheephead.
That’s your report for today—keep lines tight, check your regs before you launch, and remember, as always: the early bird gets the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe for daily dispatches.
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