Calendars

Tampa Bay Fishing by Month: A Year-Round Calendar for Anglers

By Kenny — Tampa Bay angler · Published May 9, 2026

People ask me all the time, “When’s the best time to fish Tampa Bay?” And honestly, the most accurate answer is: whenever you’re here. Tampa Bay genuinely fishes 12 months a year. There is no dead season. There is no “come back in spring.”

But that doesn’t mean every month fishes the same. Not even close.

The species rotate. Tactics flip. The flat that was on fire in October goes quiet by January. The bridge piling that produces nothing in July becomes a sheepshead factory in February. If you show up in May expecting a sheepshead bonanza, or in December looking for tarpon, you’re going to have a long, frustrating day on the water.

This is a calendar. A real one. Month by month, what’s biting, where to focus, what tactics work, and what to skip. I’ve fished this bay for years — from the Skyway down through Egmont Channel, the flats off Fort De Soto, the Anna Maria beach trough, Hillsborough Bay, Boca Ciega, Old Tampa Bay, the Apollo Beach outflow in winter, Weedon Island on a dropping tide. The bay changes character every few weeks, and the anglers who do best are the ones who change with it.

I’ll be honest about what I’m sure of and where I’d hedge. Anything regulatory — season dates, slot limits, bag limits — I’m flagging as [citation needed] because FWC rules shift and you should always verify with myfwc.com before you keep a fish. The fishing patterns, though? Those I’ll stand behind.

Let’s walk the year.

A quick water-temp primer

Before we get into months, understand this: in Tampa Bay, water temperature is the master variable. The calendar is just a proxy for what the water is doing. A warm January fishes like a cool March. A cold-front October can flip a flat off in 24 hours. Read the water, not just the date.

Rough zones I think in:

Tampa Bay water typically runs 58–62°F in January and 86–88°F in late July/August. The shoulder months (March, April, October, November) are when the bay is most alive across the widest variety of species. Lock that in and the calendar below will make a lot more sense.

January — sheepshead and slow flats

January is cold-front fishing. The pattern is: front blows through, north wind, water temp drops 5–8 degrees, fishing goes quiet for 24–48 hours, then it rebuilds as the water warms back up. Get good at reading the front cycle and January is productive. Ignore it and you’ll get skunked.

What’s biting:

January is not a month for big numbers across many species. It’s a month to specialize.

February — pompano fire, mackerel return

February still feels like winter, but the bay starts twitching. Days are getting longer, water creeps up a degree or two by month’s end.

What’s biting:

February rewards anglers who’ll move and check structure. It’s not a “park on a flat” month.

March — the spring switch flips

March is when Tampa Bay wakes up. Water hits 65–70°F. Almost everything starts moving.

What’s biting:

March is arguably the most underrated month of the year here.

April — tarpon at the door, cobia firing

April is when I start getting genuinely excited. The first tarpon roll on the beaches. The cobia bite hits its peak. Snook are everywhere.

What’s biting:

If you can only pick one spring month, April is hard to beat for variety.

May — TARPON

May is the month. If you live in Tampa Bay and you fish, May is sacred.

What’s biting:

This is the biggest month for charter bookings. Captains book up months in advance. If you’re planning a Tampa Bay tarpon trip, book your charter early — by February at the latest for a good captain on a good tide window in May.

June — tarpon stays hot, summer pattern arrives

June is still tarpon central. The migration is strung out — some fish leaving, new fish arriving, residents staying. The bay is full.

What’s biting:

The heat is real now. By 11 a.m. the inshore bite is mostly over. Adjust accordingly.

July — bridges at night, scallops in season

July is hot. Like, hot hot. Water temp pushes 86°F+. The middle of the day is dead inshore. But early, late, and at night, it’s still on.

What’s biting:

July is a 5 a.m. or 9 p.m. month. Pick your hours.

August — heat pattern, hurricane watch

August is similar to July, just hotter and more humid. The fishing is still there if you respect the heat.

What’s biting:

I’ll be honest: August is my least favorite month to fish here. The weather’s brutal, the variety is narrowest, and storms can blow up the schedule. But night snook on a quiet Skyway bridge is still one of my favorite things in the world.

September — bait moves, mullet run starts

Things start to shift in September. The first cool fronts (relatively speaking) arrive late in the month. Bait pods get organized. The mullet run is just starting.

What’s biting:

Water is still warm but trending down by month’s end. The energy is changing.

October — the best month

I’ll commit to it: October is the best overall month for inshore fishing in Tampa Bay. Many locals will say the same. The mullet run is in full swing, weather is finally tolerable, and the variety is absurd.

What’s biting:

Beautiful weather window. First crisp mornings of the year. If you can only fish Tampa Bay one month, make it October.

November — cooling water, transition

November is the bridge between the fall mullet madness and winter sheepshead season. Things are calming down and rearranging.

What’s biting:

November is a great DIY month. Weather’s pleasant, fish are predictable, pressure is down compared to peak season.

December — sheepshead and the front game

December is back to cold-front fishing, but with one big difference from January: the water hasn’t gotten as cold yet. The first half of December often fishes more like late November.

What’s biting:

Holiday trip planning: December is low pressure on the water (everyone’s busy with family). If you know the windows, you can have huge stretches of bay essentially to yourself.

How to use this calendar

So how do you actually plan?

If you’re booking a charter: Match the species to the month. Want tarpon? May or June, book by February. Want a mixed-bag inshore experience? October. Want sheepshead and pompano? February. Want one trip that has the best chance of variety? Late March or October.

If you’re DIY: Watch the weather more than the calendar. A warm spell in February can fish like March; a cold front in October can fish like December. Buy a Florida fishing license [citation needed — link to future article], have the right tackle staged for the season, and be ready to flex.

If you only have 2–3 days: Pick a primary species and a backup. Tarpon-or-snook in May. Sheepshead-or-trout in February. Snook-or-reds in October. Don’t try to chase six species in three days — you’ll just exhaust yourself driving the bay.

If you’re traveling in: Build a buffer day. Tampa Bay weather, especially in summer (storms) and winter (fronts), can shut you down for a half-day. A 4-day trip with one buffer day is way better than a 3-day trip with no slack.

For specific tactics, gear, and locations, I’m building out species deep-dives. The Complete Tampa Bay Tarpon Guide is up. Snook, redfish, trout, sheepshead, and pompano guides are coming.

FAQ

What’s the best month overall for Tampa Bay fishing?

October, in my opinion. Mullet run is at peak, weather’s perfect, and the variety is unmatched — snook, redfish, trout, residual tarpon, jacks, mackerel, all firing. May is the runner-up if tarpon is your priority. March is the dark-horse pick.

When is tarpon season in Tampa Bay?

April through July, with May and June being the absolute peak. First fish typically arrive in April, the migration peaks in May, stays strong through June, and tapers in July. Some residents and stragglers around in August. (See the tarpon guide for full detail.)

When is snook season in Tampa Bay?

Snook is open for harvest most of the year on the Gulf coast, but closed Dec 1 – Feb 28/29 and again May 1 – Aug 31 [citation needed — verify Gulf snook seasons at myfwc.com, as these have changed in recent years]. Catch-and-release is allowed year-round. Always verify slot, bag, and current closures with FWC before keeping a fish.

Is Tampa Bay fishing year-round?

Yes, genuinely. There is no dead month. The species and tactics shift, but you can catch fish in Tampa Bay every single month of the year. December and January are the slowest for variety but produce some of the best sheepshead and trout fishing of the year.

What month should I book a Tampa Bay charter?

Depends on the target. For tarpon: book May or June (reserve by February). For inshore variety: October (book by August). For winter sheepshead/pompano: February (book by December). For shoulder-season variety with good weather: late March or November.

What’s the best time of day to fish Tampa Bay?

In summer (June–September): dawn (5:30–9 a.m.) and dusk (7 p.m. on), or at night around bridges. In spring and fall: first light is best but you can fish all day. In winter: late morning into afternoon, after the sun has warmed the water on the flats. The general rule everywhere: dawn beats midday, and a moving tide beats slack water.


Tight lines. If a section here doesn’t match what you’ve seen on the water, tell me — this calendar gets updated based on real reports.

— Kenny