Skills
Catch and Release in Tampa Bay. How to Do It Right
I keep what I eat and release everything else. That’s the ethic that keeps Tampa Bay fishing good for the next guy. But “catch and release” doesn’t mean “yank the hook and throw it back.” How you handle a fish determines whether it swims away healthy or becomes crab food five minutes after you release it.
Tampa Bay sees heavy fishing pressure year-round. Snook are catch-and-release only in certain months. Redfish have tight slot limits. The new 2026 spotted seatrout regulations split the state into nine management zones. Handling fish correctly isn’t just good ethics. with some species, it’s the law.
Why Most Released Fish Die (And How to Avoid It)
Studies from FWC and NOAA show that properly handled catch-and-release has survival rates above 90%. Improperly handled fish. yanked from deep water, dragged onto dry land, squeezed by the belly, kept out of water too long. die at rates approaching 50%.
The main killers:
- Air exposure. fish out of water for more than 30 seconds start accumulating tissue damage from collapsed gill filaments
- Dry handling. removing the protective slime coat opens fish up to infection
- Barotrauma. fish caught from deeper water (15+ feet) have expanded swim bladders that need to be vented or they can’t swim back down
- Predators. releasing a tired, disoriented fish near a dock or pier guarantees it gets eaten by a pelican or a bigger fish
The Right Way
Keep the Fish in Water
This is the single most important rule. Don’t lift a fish out of the water for a photo. Don’t lay it on the deck, the sand, or the rocks. If you want a picture, support the fish horizontally in the water and take it from there.
If you must lift the fish for a measurement or quick photo, keep it under 10 seconds total air exposure. That’s not a suggestion. it’s the difference between life and death for a snook or tarpon.
Wet Your Hands
Before touching any fish, wet your hands. Dry hands strip the protective slime coat that covers a fish’s scales. That slime is their first defense against bacteria, parasites, and infection. Once it’s gone, the fish is vulnerable for days.
Even better: use a rubberized landing net with no knots (like a Frabill or Measure Net). The rubber coating is much gentler on slime and scales than nylon mesh.
Use the Right Gear for Quick Fights
Long fights exhaust fish. Lactate builds up in their muscles. By the time you land a fish that’s been fighting for 5+ minutes, it may be too tired to recover, even if you release it perfectly.
| Species | Ideal Gear | Max fight time |
|---|---|---|
| Snook (slot) | 20–30 lb braid, medium rod | 2–3 min |
| Redfish (slot) | 15–20 lb braid, medium-light | 2–3 min |
| Trout | 10–15 lb braid, light | 1–2 min |
| Tarpon | 30–50 lb braid, heavy action | 10–20 min |
For tarpon, longer fights are unavoidable. they’re the strongest fish per pound in the bay. But you can shorten the fight by using appropriate tackle (don’t fish for tarpon with trout gear) and keeping steady pressure.
Remove Hooks Properly
- Use circle hooks when fishing with live or cut bait. Circle hooks almost always hook the corner of the mouth, making removal quick and damage-free. They’re required by FWC regulation when using natural bait for certain species in Florida.
- Barbless hooks are even better. Pinch the barb down with pliers before you start fishing. The hook comes out with zero tearing.
- If the fish is deeply hooked, cut the leader as close to the hook as possible and leave the hook in. Fish stomach acid dissolves most hooks within days. Digging for a swallowed hook kills more fish than leaving it in.
- Use hemostats or hook-out tools, not your fingers. Especially for toothy fish like Spanish mackerel.
Support Large Fish Horizontally
For snook over 28 inches, redfish over 30 inches, and any tarpon that isn’t a juvenile, you cannot hold them vertically by the mouth or the tail. Their organs aren’t anchored the same way as a freshwater bass. Vertical hanging dislocates vertebrae and damages internal organs.
The right way: Support the fish horizontally with one hand under the belly and one hand on the tail. For tarpon, you want the fish in the water at all times. never lift a tarpon for a photo if you can help it.
Species-Specific Notes for Tampa Bay
Snook
Snook are the most fragile inshore fish in Tampa Bay. They’re catch-and-release only during the closed season (December 1 through February 28 in the Tampa Bay region, per FWC regulations). During open season, the slot limit allows one fish per person, 28–33 inches.
Snook handling rules:
- Never hold a snook vertically by the jaw. Support the belly.
- No longer than 10 seconds out of water
- Revive the fish by moving it gently forward in the water until it swims away on its own
- If a snook floats belly-up when released, hold it upright in moving water and gently push water through its gills until it rights itself
Redfish
Redfish are tougher than snook but they have one specific vulnerability: their eyes are sensitive to light. Avoid shining bright lights directly in their eyes when fishing at night. Use red-filtered headlamps if you need light.
Redfish have a slot limit of one fish per person, 18–27 inches in most Tampa Bay waters. Fish over 27 inches must be released immediately.
Spotted Trout
The new FWC spotted seatrout regulations went into effect April 1, 2026, splitting Florida into nine management zones. Tampa Bay is its own zone. Check the current regulations for your exact area, as slot limits and daily bag limits vary by zone.
Trout have delicate mouths. A trout that’s been hooked deep, dragged across the deck, and tossed back has a poor survival rate. Use circle hooks with live shrimp and pinch your barbs.
Tarpon
Tarpon are a protected sportfish in Florida. You need a tarpon tag ($50 for residents) to remove one from the water. Catch-and-release only (no harvest) without a special permit.
Tarpon release rules:
- Never lift a tarpon out of the water by the jaw or gill plate
- Keep the fish in water for the entire release process
- Use a dehooking tool to remove the hook while the fish is still in the water
- If the fish is exhausted, tow it gently alongside the boat in forward motion until it recovers and swims away
- Avoid boat wakes and shallow water when releasing a tired tarpon
What to Do If a Fish Is Gut-Hooked
It happens. You’re fishing live shrimp under a popping cork, you set the hook, and the fish swallows it.
Don’t dig for the hook. Cut the leader as close to the hook as possible and let it go. Circle hooks and barbless hooks dramatically reduce gut-hooking. that’s why experienced Tampa Bay anglers use them almost exclusively when bait fishing.
Studies from FWC show that fish released with hooks left in have survival rates above 85% when the leader is cut clean and short.
The Revive Step (Most People Skip This)
After you remove the hook and release the fish, don’t just drop it and assume it swims away.
- Hold the fish in the water, facing into the current (if there is one)
- Gently move it forward, forcing water through its gills
- Wait for the fish to kick and swim away on its own
- A fish that floats or tilts to one side needs more recovery time
In summer, when water temperatures in Tampa Bay reach the mid-80s, fish tire much faster and need longer recovery. A fish released in 85-degree water without proper revival has a very low survival rate.
Gear to Carry
- Rubberized landing net. saves slime and reduces handling time
- Hemostats or long-nose pliers. for quick hook removal
- Hook cutters. for cutting deep-set hooks
- Barbless or circle hooks. prevents most hook damage before it starts
Bottom Line
Keep the fish in water. Wet your hands. Use circle hooks. Cut deep hooks. Revive before releasing. That’s the difference between a fish that swims away and one that feeds a crab.
Tampa Bay’s inshore fishery gets hit hard. Every fish that swims away healthy keeps it worth casting for the next guy.