Tampa Bay Fishing Report 5 Oct - 11 Oct
October 09, 2025
Tampa
1 photo


Redfish

Spotted Seatrout

Sheepshead

Snapper (Mangrove)
Trip Summary
Trip Summary
Trip Summary
Fall patterns locked in across Tampa Bay this week. Cool mornings, light-moderate NE winds, and clear, moving water had bait packed along mangrove shorelines, flats potholes, and bridge shadow lines. The best windows were dawn through mid-morning on higher stages of the tide and the first push of the outgoing.
Snook chewed early on free-lined pilchards and shrimp worked along mangrove points, creek mouths, and seawall eddies from Weedon Island to Fort De Soto. Redfish cruised shallow grass and oyster edges—topwater at first light, then gold spoons and cut mullet once the sun got up. Trout were steady in 3–5 ft over broken grass/sand; popping corks with live shrimp or 3" paddletails kept rods bent. Mangrove snapper stacked on bridge fenders and markers; small pilchards on light leaders were instant. Early sheepshead activity ticked up on docks and rock piles with fiddler crabs or shrimp bits.
What Worked This Week
Baits/Lures: Live greenbacks, shrimp; 3–4" paddletails on 1/8–1/4 oz jigs; 1/2 oz gold spoons; bone or chrome walk-the-dog topwaters at gray light
Leaders: 25–30 lb fluoro for snook/reds near structure; 12–20 lb for trout/snapper over open grass
Cadence & Boat Control: Long up-current casts, let baits sweep naturally; light chum with whitebait to keep fish pinned; quiet approaches on the flats
Hot Zones
Weedon Island mangrove points and creek drains on the last of the incoming/first of the outgoing (snook/reds)
Fort De Soto and Bunces Pass flats—pothole hopping for snook/trout at dawn
Picnic Island and Apollo Beach oyster bars for upper-slot reds on wind-blown shorelines
Skyway Bridge fenders and nearby markers for snapper during peak flow
Looking Ahead
A touch more northeast breeze and slightly cooler mornings should tighten redfish schools and keep snook staged at creek mouths. Expect trout to push a bit deeper after bright, calm days. If water clears, downsize leaders and hooks; if it turns chalky after wind, bump spoon size/flash and slow your retrieve.