Key West Fishing Report — Bottom Fishing
January 12, 2026
Key West
5 photos
+2
Snapper (Mutton)
Trip Summary
Trip Summary
Key West Fishing Report: Yesterday we headed out for a productive bottom fishing trip near the reef with live Ballyhoo and plenty of action on rod and reel!
?️ Weather & Sea Conditions
• Air Temperature: Typical Key West winter warmth in the low-70s °F range.
• Water Temperature: Around 70–75°F — perfect for snapper, grouper and reef species.
• Wind: Light to moderate winds from the Northeast around ~7–13 mph — great for reef and nearshore fishing.
• Fishing Forecast: Current activity is average, so matching tides and baits continues to be important for consistent bites.
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? Trip Summary
We started the day by stopping to pick up fresh live Ballyhoo to target bottom species — always a productive bait choice for Key West reef and bottom fishing.
Once baited up, we headed out to the reef and anchored for bottom fishing.
? Catches & Action
• Snapper: We immediately landed three legal snapper right off the anchor — great start!
• Groupers: A few groupers came up, but they were undersized so we released them for future conservation.
• Barracuda: Opportunistic barracuda were in the mix — these hard-fighting predators love Ballyhoo!
• Lane Snapper: We also added some tasty lane snapper to the tally.
This kind of mixed-species bottom and reef fishing is classic Key West in January — cooler water temps but active reef bites when tides and calm conditions align.
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? Tide & Bite Insights
• Tides in the area were transitioning throughout the day — fishing around moving water and tide changes helped keep the bites consistent.
• Solunar activity was average — combining this with live Ballyhoo and anchored reef drift techniques helped produce steady bites.
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? What This Means for Anglers
If you’re planning a Key West fishing charter for bottom fishing, reef fishing, snapper & grouper trips, now is a great time to head out. Live Ballyhoo continues to be a top bait choice, especially when paired with calm seas and manageable tides. Conditions like yesterday allow for comfortable fishing and steady action, whether you’re chasing snapper, barracuda, or other reef species.