Spring is when fishing goes from "maybe I'll get a bite" to "I can't keep them off my hook." As water temperatures climb from the 40s into the 60s, fish transition from sluggish winter mode into aggressive pre-spawn feeding — and it's the best time of year to catch big fish.
Three things happen in spring that create incredible fishing:
Forget the calendar — water temperature tells you exactly where fish are in their spring cycle. Buy a $10 digital thermometer and check it every trip. Here's your cheat sheet:
Pro Tip: The north and northwest shores of a lake warm first — they get the most direct sun. Start your spring trips there. You might find fish 5-10 degrees into the season ahead of the rest of the lake.
This is trophy season. Big females are staged on structure near spawning flats, gorging on crawfish and shad. The biggest bass of the year are caught during the pre-spawn.
Key baits:
Bass are on beds in 1-4 feet of water. In clear water, you can see them. Polarized sunglasses are essential. Bed fishing is controversial — some anglers love it, others think it's unsportsmanlike. If you do it, handle fish quickly and release them on the bed.
If you can see beds: Texas-rigged creature baits (white or green pumpkin), slowly dragged into the bed. The bass will pick it up to move it — that's your bite.
Fish are tired and not eating aggressively at first. But within a week, they recover and start hitting topwater. The post-spawn topwater bite (late May through June) is some of the most fun fishing of the year. Buzzbaits, Whopper Ploppers, and walking baits over shallow flats early in the morning.
Crappie spawn when water hits 56-64°F, usually a couple weeks before bass. They stack up in unbelievable numbers in shallow brush, stake beds, and fallen trees. Full crappie guide →
The spring crappie spawn is the easiest fishing of the entire year. Small jigs (1/16oz or 1/32oz) under a bobber, dropped right next to wood cover in 2-6 feet of water. Minnows work too. You can catch 50+ fish in a few hours when you find them.
If you fish stocked trout waters, spring is prime time. Most states stock heavily in March and April. Freshly stocked trout are easy to catch on PowerBait, small spinners (Rooster Tails, Panther Martins), and live worms.
Wild trout streams also fire up in spring as water temps enter the 45-60°F comfort zone. Nymphing and wet flies work well early; dry flies start producing as insect hatches ramp up in April and May.
See solunar periods, weather forecasts, and tide data to plan your spring fishing trips.
Check today's fishing conditions at your local spot →It depends on your region. In the South, spring fishing can start in February when water temps hit the upper 40s. In the North, it might not kick in until late March or April. Watch water temperature, not the calendar — once it consistently stays above 50°F, the spring pattern has begun.
For bass, jerkbaits and lipless crankbaits are the top producers early; swimbaits and spinnerbaits take over as water warms past 55°F. For panfish, small jigs and live minnows. For trout, PowerBait and small inline spinners. Full bait guide →
In early spring, afternoon is often better because the water has had all day to warm a few critical degrees. As spring progresses and water temps stabilize in the 60s, morning becomes the better window. More on timing →
FISH SMARTER ⚓
FIND YOUR SPOT →