This is Artificial Lure with your South Florida and Upper Keys fishing report.
Up here around Miami and down through the Upper Keys, we’ve got a classic winter pattern setting up: cooler mornings, light northeast breeze early, then picking up mid‑day with a little chop outside the reef. Skies are mostly clear with a passing cloud deck and just enough wind to keep things comfortable instead of glassy.
According to NOAA’s Miami Beach tide station, we’ve got a predawn **high tide around 1:20 a.m., low near 7:30 a.m., another high just after 1:30 p.m., and an evening low just before 8:00 p.m.** That gives you two solid moving‑water windows: the late‑morning rise and the early afternoon drop. Sunrise is right around **7:00 a.m.** and sunset about **5:45–6:00 p.m.** across Miami and the Upper Keys, so your best bite should bracket those tides around first light and late afternoon.
Nearshore off Miami and Key Biscayne, the reef line’s been giving up **yellowtail snapper, mutton snapper, and a few keeper mangroves**, with scattered **kingfish and bonito** on the edges. Local charter reports this week mention “limiting out on snapper with ease” and steady action on school‑size mahi and bonito on the deeper edge of the reef when the conditions line up. Down toward Cudjoe and Key West, guides are still seeing **solid mahi, bonita, and plenty of lobster** on the structure and patch reefs, which usually means the Keys reef bite overall is healthy.
Inshore around Biscayne Bay and the backcountry Keys, look for **sea trout, mangroves, jacks, and a few slot snook and reds** on the flats and channel edges, especially where that mid‑day incoming tide pushes over warm mud and mangrove points.
Lure and bait rundown:
- For the **reef snapper and muttons**:
- Best baits: **cut ballyhoo, squid strips, and fresh pilchards** on light fluorocarbon and small circle hooks.
- Add a little chum to get the yellowtails up behind the boat.
- For **kings, bonito, and mahi** on the edge:
- Best baits: **live pilchards, goggle‑eyes, and sardines** slow‑trolled or drifted.
- Best lures: **small feather jigs, trolling spoons, and dolphin‑colored skirted ballyhoo**.
- For **inshore trout, snook, and reds**:
- Best artificials: **3–4 inch paddle‑tail plastics in pearl or new penny on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads**, **gold spoons**, and **small topwaters** at first light.
- Live shrimp under a popping cork will bend rods all morning for trout, mangroves, and jacks.
Couple of local hot spots to circle on your chart:
- **Government Cut and the Miami Beach reef line**: work the **70–120 foot** depths with live baits and jigs for kings, snapper, and the occasional sailfish. The afternoon falling tide through the Cut can stack up bait and predators.
- **Hawk Channel and the patch reefs off Key Largo and Islamorada**: fish **15–35 feet** with chum, light tackle, and small baits for yellowtail, mangrove snapper, porgy, and hogfish. Calm mornings and that first incoming tide have been money.
If you’re staying bay‑side, the **flats and channels around Key Biscayne, Soldier Key, and Boca Chita Key** are great for trout, mangroves, and roaming jacks on soft plastics and shrimp.
Plan your trip around that late‑morning incoming and the afternoon falling tide, keep your leaders light and presentations natural, and you should put together a solid box of fish from Miami down through the Upper Keys.
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