Regulations
Tampa Bay Fishing Regulations 2026: Licenses, Limits, and Seasons
Regulations change. This page reflects information available as of May 2026. Always verify current rules at myfwc.com before keeping any fish. An honest mistake still costs you a citation.
Florida fishing regs can be confusing, especially for Tampa Bay where some species have zone-specific rules that differ from the rest of the state. This page covers the species most Tampa Bay anglers actually target. It is not a substitute for the official FWC rules.
Fishing Licenses
Most anglers need a Florida saltwater fishing license. Here is the breakdown.
Source: FWC Saltwater Recreational Fishing License
Who needs one
Anyone 16 or older fishing in Florida saltwater who is not exempt (see below).
Cost
| License Type | Price |
|---|---|
| Florida resident annual | $17.00 |
| Non-resident annual | $47.00 |
| Non-resident 3-day | $17.00 |
| Non-resident 7-day | $30.00 |
Florida residents can get a free shoreline fishing license if they are fishing from land or a structure fixed to land (bridges, piers, docks you don’t own). You still need to get it. It just does not cost anything.
Who is exempt
- Anglers under 16
- Florida residents 65 and older
- Anglers fishing from a licensed pier
- Charter boat passengers (the captain’s license covers them)
- Active duty military personnel who are Florida residents
How to get a license
- Online: GoOutdoorsFlorida.com
- In person: Any county tax collector office
- Retail: Walmart sporting goods sections, Bass Pro, and many bait shops
Species Regulations
Snook
Source: FWC Snook Regulations
| Rule | Details |
|---|---|
| Slot limit | 28 to 33 inches total length |
| Bag limit | 1 per person per day |
| Harvest season | Open Sept 1 through Nov 30 (Gulf coast) |
| Closed season | Dec 1 through Feb 28 AND May 1 through Aug 31 |
| Snook permit required | Yes, $10 to harvest |
Snook are catch-and-release year-round during the closed months. The $10 snook permit is a separate purchase from your fishing license. You need both.
Circle hooks are required when fishing for snook with live or dead natural bait.
Redfish (Red Drum)
Source: FWC Red Drum Regulations
Tampa Bay falls within a specific zone that runs from Fred Howard Park (Pinellas County) to SR 64 (Manatee County). That zone has its own slot.
| Rule | Details |
|---|---|
| Slot limit | 18 to 27 inches total length |
| Bag limit | 1 per person per day |
| Vessel limit | 2 fish per vessel |
No closed season for redfish in Florida, but the slot is tight and the vessel cap is real. Two people on a boat can keep 2 fish total, not 2 each.
Spotted Seatrout
Source: FWC Spotted Seatrout Regulations
Seatrout also have region-specific rules for Tampa Bay.
| Rule | Details |
|---|---|
| Slot limit | 15 to 19 inches total length |
| Bag limit | 3 per person per day |
| Oversized fish | 1 over 19 inches per vessel (counts toward bag limit) |
So you could keep 2 slot fish and 1 gator trout, but only 1 gator per boat regardless of how many people are fishing.
Tarpon
Source: FWC Tarpon Regulations
| Rule | Details |
|---|---|
| Harvest | Prohibited unless you have a $51.50 tarpon tag |
| Size for harvest | Must be under 40 inches to remove from water |
| Tarpon over 40 inches | Must remain in the water at all times |
| Catch-and-release | Allowed year-round |
For almost everyone fishing Tampa Bay, tarpon is strictly catch-and-release. The tag exists mostly for record applications. Tarpon over 40 inches cannot be removed from the water, period. That means no holding them up for photos on the boat.
Circle hooks are required when fishing for tarpon with live or dead natural bait.
Sheepshead
Source: FWC Sheepshead Regulations
| Rule | Details |
|---|---|
| Minimum size | 12 inches total length |
| Bag limit | 8 per person per day |
| March and April | Verify current bag limits at FWC; spawning aggregation rules may apply |
Sheepshead stack up on structure in winter and spring. They are easy to keep in numbers, so check current FWC rules around spawning season before assuming 8 per person applies.
Flounder
Source: FWC Flounder Regulations
| Rule | Details |
|---|---|
| Minimum size | 12 inches total length |
| Bag limit | 10 per person per day |
No closed season statewide, but flounder numbers in Tampa Bay have dropped over the years. Check FWC for any emergency rules in effect before your trip.
Mangrove Snapper (Gray Snapper)
Source: FWC Snapper Regulations
| Rule | Details |
|---|---|
| Minimum size | 10 inches total length |
| Bag limit | 5 per person, within a 10-snapper aggregate |
The 10-snapper aggregate means your total snapper count across multiple species counts toward the cap. Read the FWC page for what species roll into that aggregate.
Spanish Mackerel
Source: FWC Spanish Mackerel Regulations
| Rule | Details |
|---|---|
| Minimum size | 12 inches fork length |
| Bag limit | 15 per person per day |
Spanish mack runs through Tampa Bay in fall and spring. Big bags are possible. Just measure fork length, not total length.
Cobia
Source: FWC Cobia Regulations
| Rule | Details |
|---|---|
| Minimum size | 33 inches fork length |
| Bag limit | 2 per person |
| Vessel limit | 6 fish per vessel |
Cobia follow rays and pass through Tampa Bay in spring. The vessel limit matters when a few fish show up together.
Pompano
Source: FWC Pompano Regulations
| Rule | Details |
|---|---|
| Minimum size | 11 inches fork length |
| Bag limit | 6 per person per day |
Pompano are available year-round in Tampa Bay, with better action in cooler months near passes and on sandy flats.
Red Grouper
Source: FWC Grouper Regulations
| Rule | Details |
|---|---|
| Minimum size | 20 inches total length |
| Bag limit | 4 per person (within a 4-grouper aggregate) |
| Federal closed season | Feb 1 through March 31 in federal waters (seaward of 20 fathoms) |
Red grouper fishing in deeper federal waters requires a State Reef Fish Survey registration. You must be enrolled before you fish for reef fish in state waters too. Registration is free at GoOutdoorsFlorida.com.
Descending devices are required on all vessels targeting reef fish. If a fish is showing signs of barotrauma, you must use one before releasing it.
Gag Grouper
Source: FWC Grouper Regulations
| Rule | Details |
|---|---|
| Minimum size | 24 inches total length |
| Bag limit | 2 per person |
| Closed season | June 26 through Aug 31 (verify current dates at FWC) |
Gag closures have shifted in recent years. Verify the exact dates before planning a summer trip offshore.
Important Gear Requirements
Circle hooks: Required when fishing for tarpon or snook with live or dead natural bait.
Descending devices: Required on all vessels targeting reef fish (grouper, snapper, etc.). A weighted hook, pressure chamber, or inverted hook rigged to send the fish back down counts. If you target reef fish, carry one.
State Reef Fish Survey: If you target reef fish in state or federal Gulf waters, you must be enrolled. It is free and takes two minutes at GoOutdoorsFlorida.com. FWC uses the data to track harvest. Non-compliance carries fines.
Quick Reference Table
| Species | Min. Size | Bag Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Snook | 28-33” TL (slot) | 1/person | Closed Dec 1-Feb 28 and May 1-Aug 31; $10 permit to harvest |
| Redfish | 18-27” TL (slot) | 1/person, 2/vessel | Tampa Bay zone rule |
| Spotted Seatrout | 15-19” TL (slot) | 3/person | 1 oversized (19”+) per vessel |
| Tarpon | Catch-and-release | N/A | Over 40” cannot leave water; $51.50 tag to harvest |
| Sheepshead | 12” TL | 8/person | Verify spring rules |
| Flounder | 12” TL | 10/person | Check for emergency rules |
| Mangrove Snapper | 10” TL | 5/person | Part of 10-snapper aggregate |
| Spanish Mackerel | 12” FL | 15/person | Fork length |
| Cobia | 33” FL | 2/person, 6/vessel | Fork length |
| Pompano | 11” FL | 6/person | Fork length |
| Red Grouper | 20” TL | 4/person (aggregate) | Federal closed Feb-Mar; reef fish survey required |
| Gag Grouper | 24” TL | 2/person | Closed late June through Aug (verify) |
Before You Go
New to Tampa Bay fishing? Check out the Tampa Bay Beginner’s Guide for gear recommendations, launch ramps, and where to start.
Regulations change without much warning. FWC can issue emergency rules at any time. This page is a starting point, not the final word. Always verify at myfwc.com before you put a fish in the cooler. A few seconds on your phone can save you a $500 fine.
Tight lines.
Kenny