Winter Offshore fishing
February 11, 2026
Palmetto
1 photo
Sheepshead
Hogfish
Snapper (Mangrove)
Grunt
Trip Summary
Trip Summary
We’re in the final stretch of winter here along the Gulf Coast. As a charter captain, this is how I approach the transition season:
Watch the water temperature. Once it starts climbing into the mid-60s, inshore fishing will begin to improve.
Be patient with the inshore bite. Until that water warms up consistently, action can still be spotty.
Head offshore for steady action. Right now, offshore structure is where you’ll find the most consistent bite.
Offshore strategy
Focus on structure. Reefs, ledges, rock piles, and artificial structure will hold fish tight to the bottom.
Fish the bottom. Use a ball jig or weighted hook to keep your bait where the fish are holding.
Use natural bait. Live shrimp is always my first choice, but frozen shrimp will absolutely get the job done.
Stay vertical. Drop straight down and maintain contact with the bottom for the best results.
Fish moving water. Tidal flow is critical — no current usually means no bite. Plan your trip around tide changes and make sure there’s water moving across the structure. That current positions the fish and triggers them to feed.
Know the regulations — Gulf west coast Florida
Before you go, make sure you and your anglers are dialed in on Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) and federal rules that apply in Gulf state and federal waters:
Gag Grouper (recreational)
Currently closed. The recreational gag grouper season for Gulf state waters is not open right now.
Minimum size if/when it reopens: 24″ total length.
Daily bag limit when open: 2 per person within the aggregate grouper limit (but 0 for captain & crew on for-hire vessels).
Must be enrolled in the State Reef Fish Angler program to harvest reef fish from a private vessel.
Hogfish (recreational)
Minimum size: 14″ fork length.
Daily bag limit: 5 per person.
Season: Open year-round.
Flounder (recreational)
Minimum size: 14″ total length.
Daily bag limit: 5 per person.
Seasonal closure: Oct 15–Nov 30 each year.
Mangrove Snapper (Gray Snapper)
Minimum size: 10″ total length in Florida state waters.
Daily bag limit: 5 per person within the 10-fish snapper aggregate.
No closed season — harvest is allowed year-round.
In federal waters (beyond 9 nautical miles), size and bag limits may differ (e.g., 12″ and up to 10 per person within snapper aggregate).
Sheepshead (recreational)
Minimum size: 12″ total length.
Daily bag limit: 15 per person.
No closed season.
Late winter fishing is all about timing and adjustments. Fish deeper, fish slower, stay on structure, fish with tidal flow, and know the regulations — it keeps your charter legal, safe, and successful on the water.