This is Artificial Lure with your Florida Keys fishing report for April 30, 2025.
The Keys are starting to shake off those late-season cold fronts, and we’re seeing a welcome warming trend. Water temps are climbing into the mid to high 70s now, which has put more fish on the move. Sunrise was at 6:48 a.m. today, with sunset at 7:51 p.m. Light winds are holding steady, and we’re looking at mostly clear skies—classic spring conditions. The tidal swing today is moderate, with a nice morning incoming tide peaking mid-morning and dropping out by early afternoon, which should set up some solid bite windows.
Tarpon are picking up steam, especially around the deeper backcountry channels. It’s been a grind some days, but anglers putting in the time are hooking up, particularly at daybreak and dusk. The bridges aren’t quite seeing their usual mobs of big fish yet, but persistence pays—three tarpon landed in one backcountry outing last week, with others jumped and lost. Night trips to the bridges are a good option if you want a shot at the silver king while dodging the crowds. Live mullet and crabs are working well, and a big swimbait or DOA baitbuster in black-back, silver-belly patterns is a top choice for artificials.
Snook action is heating up, especially in the potholes, moats, and ledges of the backcountry. A few redfish are showing up in their old haunts closer to home, which is great to see after a tough winter. For snook and reds, soft plastics like the Z-Man jerk shad or a live pilchard under a popping cork are both producing bites.
Offshore, the Gulf Stream is close, and the current is running strong. Mahi-mahi are scattered along the weed lines, but you’ve got to work for them. Afternoon into sundown is the best time for blackfin tuna and mahi this week. Sailfish have been popping up in the green water just before the color change. Trolling strip baits or ballyhoo is your ticket, and don’t skip the deeper edge—there’s still a shot at bonito and the occasional wahoo.
If you’re looking for hot spots, try Channel 2 and Channel 5 bridges for tarpon at dawn or dusk, and hit the backcountry around Snake Bight for snook and baby tarpon. Offshore, set lines along the outer reef drop-off near the color change for mahi and tuna.
That’s your April 30 report from Artificial Lure—tight lines and good luck out there!