Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report - Daily

Summer Sizzle on Lake St. Clair: Walleye, Perch, and Smallmouth Bonanza


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July 6th, 2025, here’s Artificial Lure reporting from the legendary waters of Lake St. Clair, where the summer bite is on fire and local anglers are seeing no shortage of action. Today, skies were mostly clear with light northwest winds, highs reaching the upper 70s, and humidity sitting just right for a comfortable day on the water. Sunrise greeted us at 5:56 am, sunset coming at 9:17 pm—plenty of daylight for anyone looking to get in that evening bite.

No tides to worry about on Lake St. Clair, so you can focus purely on the wind and water conditions. The slight chop this afternoon made for excellent walleye and perch fishing, particularly along the Mile Roads and the St. Clair Flats. According to the Michigan Sportsman Forum, the perch bite has really picked up since the Fourth, with good numbers caught yesterday and this morning. Anglers are reporting solid catches, many limiting out with fish in the 8 to 12-inch range. Top spots include the 9 Mile and 12 Mile areas, as well as the deep edges off the Grosse Pointe shoreline. Some are also doing well near the Metro Beach weed beds.

For smallmouth, the story continues to be quantity and quality. While the biggest weights this week are being seen over on the St. Lawrence for the pro circuits, local sticks on St. Clair are still boating footballs. Expect to find smallmouth cruising anywhere there’s current or rocky structure—boulders and scattered cabbage patches are prime. Drop shots rigged with natural-colored finesse worms, Ned rigs, and Damiki-style minnows are the go-to presentations for numbers and consistency, especially in 8 to 17 feet. The occasional five-pounder is showing up mixed with the bulk of 2.5 to 4 pounders. Don’t overlook a shallow power bite, though: chatterbaits and spinnerbaits run along weed lines in 4 to 6 feet are pulling fish, especially early and late.

Walleye anglers trolling crawler harnesses and small crankbaits along the shipping channel edges are putting fish in the boat, mostly 15–20 inch eaters. Reports from locals show decent catches off the Belle River Hump and the dumping grounds. For panfish, bluegill and sunfish are tight to the docks and inside marinas—waxworms under a float will keep the kiddos busy while you chase something bigger.

If you’re after northern pike, throw large spinnerbaits and white swimbaits around the deeper weed edges; the Clinton River Cutoff remains a consistent producer. A handful of muskie catches were reported this week by anglers trolling big jointed plugs—classic Lake St. Clair summer fishing.

Best baits right now: for perch, nothing beats a lively shiner or a small piece of crawler on a drop-shot rig. For bass, green pumpkin and goby-colored plastics get bit all day. If you’re tossing hard baits, stick to natural shad or perch patterns.

A couple of hotspots to focus on:
- The Mile Roads, particularly between 9 and 12 Mile, are loaded with perch and smallmouth.
- The St. Clair Flats—especially the channels and points around Harsens Island—hold everything from bass to muskie, with good current and weed growth.

That’s the scoop from your boots-on-the-ground, rod-in-hand Lake St. Clair local. Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report - DailyBy Quiet. Please