6 DEC 2025 · Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Gulf of Mexico, Florida fishing report.
We’re in that early‑winter Gulf pattern now: cool mornings, mild afternoons, and a light north to northeast breeze behind a series of fronts, which has the water cooling and the fish chewing. According to the “Gulf of Mexico, Florida Fishing Report Today” podcast from Quiet Please, offshore and inshore action has both picked up with this stable, dry air mass.
Tides are running low in the mornings and filling through the afternoon on much of the central and northern Gulf coast. Tide‑Forecast’s Gulf Breeze and Panama City Beach tables show a negative low around first light and a solid evening high, with sunrise right around 6:30 a.m. and sunset before 5 p.m. That makes late‑morning through mid‑afternoon a prime window, especially as that incoming tide pushes bait onto the bars and into the passes.
Hubbard’s Marina over at John’s Pass reports offshore trips doing work on **mangrove snapper**, **lane snapper**, and **red grouper**, with the grouper bite best in that 80–140 foot range. They’re also seeing **mutton snapper**, **yellowtail**, big **triggerfish**, plus pelagics like **blackfin tuna**, **kingfish**, and an occasional **wahoo** farther out. Nearshore, the star of the show is **hogfish**, with fish coming as shallow as 25–30 feet and steady action in 40–70 feet mixed with lanes, mangroves, and a few grouper.
Inshore around Tampa Bay and down the central Gulf coast, Hubbard’s is calling it a strong **trout** bite on the grass flats and around oyster bars, with **redfish** schooled up shadowing the mullet and **snook** pushed back into creeks, rivers, and muddy back bays to soak up that warmer water. There are **bonnethead sharks** cruising the beaches, scattered **mackerel**, a few **pompano**, and some big **flounder** since the season reopened.
Best lures and baits right now:
- Offshore bottom: cut squid, sardines, and threadfin for snapper and grouper; live pinfish and grunts for the bigger red grouper. Glow or chartreuse **jig heads** with cut bait are putting fish in the box at night.
- Hogfish: fresh **shrimp**, small crabs, and fiddlers on light **knocker rigs** or jig heads; keep it subtle and on fluorocarbon.
- Inshore: soft‑plastic paddletails and shrimp imitations on 1/8–1/4 oz jig heads for trout and reds; topwaters at first light over potholes and mullet schools; live shrimp or pinfish under a popping cork around mangrove edges and oyster bars.
- Pelagics: slow‑trolled **live baits** or Yo‑Zuri‑style diving plugs along edges and over structure for kings, blackfin, and the odd wahoo.
Couple of hot spots to circle:
- **Egmont Key / Egmont Channel** area off the mouth of Tampa Bay: good tide flow, structure, and consistent reports of snapper, grouper, and pelagics working the rips and ledges.
- **John’s Pass / Madeira Beach nearshore reefs**: that 40–70 foot band Hubbard’s Marina is hitting for hogfish, lanes, and the occasional red grouper is as solid a bet as you’ll find right now.
Watch for patchy red tide in parts of the northwest Gulf coast; The Bradenton Times notes some bloom concentrations this week, so pay attention to any posted advisories and avoid discolored, funky‑smelling water.
Time it so you’re set up on structure as that low morning tide starts to creep in, then ride that incoming all the way through the afternoon. Dress for a chilly run out, bring the lighter tackle for inshore and a stout bottom rig for the deep stuff, and you’re in business.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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