Saltwater Fish

Snook Fishing: Complete US Guide

The snook is Florida's premier inshore gamefish, a sleek, powerful predator with a distinctive black lateral line and a golden hue. Snook haunt mangrove shorelines, dock lights, beach passes, and bridge shadows, striking with explosive violence and fighting with bulldogging power. This warm-water species is limited to southern Florida and parts of Texas, making it a bucket-list fish for visiting anglers. A big snook under the dock lights on a warm Florida night is pure magic.

Quick Facts

Average Weight

5–15 lb

US Record

44 lb 3 oz (IGFA all-tackle world record)

Best Season

May–September

Habitat

Mangrove shorelines, beaches, inlets, bridges, docks, and seawalls in southern and central Florida. Also found along the Texas Gulf Coast. Snook are temperature-sensitive and cannot survive sustained water below 60 degrees.

Difficulty

Intermediate

Best Bait

Live pilchards (scaled sardines), live shrimp, DOA Shrimp, Rapala X-Rap, topwater plugs (Zara Spook), white bucktail jigs, and fly patterns (Clouser Minnow, EP Baitfish).

Step-by-Step

How to Catch Snook

A practical guide for weekend anglers, from choosing your method to landing your catch.

  1. 1

    Fish the mangrove shorelines

    Snook ambush prey along mangrove roots, seawalls, and docks. Cast tight to structure with a live pilchard or soft plastic jig and let it sink. The strike usually comes within seconds. A quiet approach by kayak or trolling motor is key.

  2. 2

    Hit the beach passes

    During the summer spawn (May–August), snook stack up in beach passes and inlets along Florida's Gulf Coast. Fish the outgoing tide with live bait or swimbaits. This is the best shot at a trophy fish over 30 inches.

  3. 3

    Fish dock lights at night

    Lit docks attract baitfish, and snook set up in the shadows to ambush them. Casting a live shrimp or DOA shrimp into the shadow line is devastatingly effective. Night fishing during summer is prime time. Arrive quietly and fish from a distance.

  4. 4

    Use the right leader

    Snook have razor-sharp gill plates that cut standard line easily. Use 30–40 lb fluorocarbon leader on a spinning rod with 15–20 lb braided mainline. The fluorocarbon is invisible enough for finicky fish and tough enough to survive the gill plates.

  5. 5

    Log your tides on GilledIt

    Snook are extremely tide-dependent. Use GilledIt to record the tide stage, current speed, and time for every catch. You will quickly discover that certain spots only fire on specific tide phases.

Where to Fish

Best Spots for Snook

Top US venues and regions for this species.

Tampa Bay, FL
View guide
Everglades National Park, FL
View guide
Jupiter Inlet, FL
View guide
Boca Grande Pass, FL
View guide
Port Aransas, TX
View guide

When to Fish

Snook Fishing Season

Month-by-month guide showing the best times to target this species.

Jan

Fair

Feb

Fair

Mar

Good

Apr

Good

May

Peak

Jun

Peak

Jul

Peak

Aug

Peak

Sep

Peak

Oct

Good

Nov

Fair

Dec

Fair
Peak Good Fair Poor

Frequently Asked Questions About Snook Fishing

Snook are primarily found in Florida, from roughly Cape Canaveral on the Atlantic side and Cedar Key on the Gulf side, southward through the Keys. A small population also exists along the Texas coast near Port Aransas and the Lower Laguna Madre.

Florida snook season varies by coast. On the Gulf Coast, the season is typically open March 1 through April 30 and September 1 through November 30. Atlantic season is open February 1 through May 31 and September 1 through December 14. Always check FWC regulations for current dates.

Snook is outstanding table fare with firm, white, mild flesh often compared to grouper. However, Florida has strict regulations: one fish per day, within a slot size (28–33 inches on the Atlantic, 28–33 on the Gulf). A snook stamp ($10) is required in addition to a saltwater license.

Live pilchards (scaled sardines) are the top bait for snook. Cast-netting your own bait is part of the experience. Live shrimp are the second-best option. For artificial baits, the DOA Shrimp and white bucktail jigs are the most consistent producers.

Yes. In Florida, you need a valid saltwater fishing license plus a snook permit (stamp) which costs $10 for residents. This applies even for catch-and-release. The funds support snook conservation and research.

Snook are primarily low-light feeders. Dawn, dusk, and nighttime are the most productive periods. Night fishing around lit docks and bridges during summer is legendary. Midday fishing can work during overcast conditions or when fish are in passes with moving current.

Log your snook catches in GilledIt

Caught a snook? Log it in GilledIt, the free fishing app built for American anglers. Track your personal bests, see where other anglers are catching snook, and compete on weekly leaderboards.

Join thousands of anglers already logging their catches