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Coastal Fishing Reports

Coastal Mid-Atlantic Fishing Report, January 2 Update:

Happy New Year folks! Let’s make the 2025 fishing season another great one. Winter winds have made it difficult to get offshore at times this week, but there are still plenty of bluefin to chase when the weather allows. Several boats from Delaware, Ocean City, and Virginia Beach made it to the tuna grounds and found success catching “overs” and “unders”. Fish In OC had several reports from the Ocean City fleet with successful trips and it seems that if you have an opportunity to head offshore, you should take it. Chasin’ Tides Charters has been targeting tuna and tog on recent trips and earlier in the week his crew boxed a 66” bluefin and a limit of tautog up to nine and a half pounds. Foolish Pleasures also got in on the fun while trolling and caught one for the box along with three “overs” that were released.  

Trolling for Atlantic bluefin tuna Ocean City
The bite for bluefin has been hot along the coast and trolling has been very effective.

Captain Monty Hawkins of the Morning Star has also been busy chasing tuna but shifted back to his normal business matters of chasing down sea bass this week. Monty said he and his crew put out the trolling gear for tuna on the way to the sea bass grounds but did not hook up, though they did mark plenty of fish. Once they got to their destination, he only had to anchor once as the sea bass bite was hot. One of his regulars had a limit of sea bass in only 35 minutes. The rest of the anglers on board had a limit of sea bass in just a few hours work. The sea bass also seem to be biting well off Virginia Beach as we heard of a few good reports from there as well. Playin Hookey Charters was dialed in on them earlier in the week and boxed a boat limit of 90 bass with some trophy sized fish in the mix.

Important Announcement: NOAA Fisheries recently announced that the Atlantic bluefin tuna retention limit for recreational fishermen will revert to the default limit of 1 school, large school, or small medium bluefin tuna (27” to <73” curved fork length) per vessel per day/trip. This limit will take effect January 1, 2025, and extend through December 31, 2025, unless modified by later action. The recreational “trophy” bluefin tuna fishery has also re-opened in all sub quota regions starting January 1, 2025. Highly Migratory Species Angling and Charter/Headboat permitted vessels when fishing recreationally are allowed one trophy bluefin tuna measuring 73” curved fork length or greater per vessel per year provided “trophy” category subquota in the respective region is available at the time of harvest.

June 7, 2024
  Coastal Mid-Atlantic Fishing Report, June 28 Update: The offshore bite is finally picking up along our coast as many boats found a hot bite recently. Several reader reports of a serious uptick in the yellowfin tuna action came in this week. We… Read more...
May 3, 2024
Coastal Mid-Atlantic Fishing Report, May 31 Update: Summer is less than a month away which has just about all anglers excited. Anyone fishing around the beach towns this past weekend had a lot of boat traffic to deal with, which never makes the… Read more...
April 5, 2024
Coastal Fishing Report, April 26 Update: Things cooled off a bit this week with overnight lows in the 40s making for some chilly mornings on the water, but there’s been some red-hot news for anglers on the coast: although the black drum bite didn’t… Read more...