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California Coast Fishing Report: Mackerel, Halibut, and Offshore Tuna Blitz

California Coast Fishing Report: Mackerel, Halibut, and Offshore Tuna Blitz

Published 6 months, 4 weeks ago
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You’re tuned in with Artificial Lure, and here’s your fresh-off-the-water California Pacific Coast fishing report for Sunday, October 5, 2025.

We’re waking up to a classic early fall scene: light Santa Ana winds have cooled, seas are glassy, and water temps along Newport Beach are holding in the mid-60s. Today’s tide for much of the coast is a morning low at 3:43 AM, rising to a chunky high at 10:05 AM just after sun-up (sunrise at 7:09 AM, sunset at 6:46 PM). We’ve got a waxing gibbous moon peeking up at 6:01 PM—perfect for that late-afternoon bite. Weather reports show high visibility and comfortable air temps, making conditions prime for both inshore and offshore action.

Inshore, Newport and Balboa Piers have been putting out steady numbers of California halibut working the sandy troughs, with Pacific bonito and mackerel bustling around the jetties. Surf anglers continue connecting with barred surfperch and the odd yellowfin croaker on foamy corners. The best action today is coming around that high-incoming tide at daylight and again toward dusk—if you’re hitting it early, focus on those structure edges and current seams while the fish are actively feeding.

Bait and lures are making all the difference. Sabiki rigs tipped with anchovy or strips of squid are loading up the mackerel, while 3–5 inch swimbaits—think white, sardine, or anchovy colors—on a ½ to ¾ ounce leadhead are tempting halibut and sand bass. The surf crowd is still digging Carolina rigs with sand crabs or Gulp! Sandworms. If you’re working kelp edges, slow-pitch jigs and squid strips are pulling in quality calico bass. After these clear mornings, fan-cast parallel to structure and stay mobile until you land on the “halibut lane.”

Now, offshore, charter and party boat counts from Fisherman’s Landing are buzzing: the Pacific Queen just landed 35 bluefin tuna (many in the 80-130 lb class!), 11 yellowfin, and a couple dorado in the past 72 hours. Constitution, Islander, and Fortune boats all reported yellowfin and bluefin on multi-day runs, with rockfish limits coming easy. The nearshore bite has rockfish, sheepshead, and a handful of calico and sand bass. On the long boats, it’s knife jigs, big sardines, and the heavy-metal lures—those Bomber Saltwater Grade Long Shot trolling hard baits are accounting for some of the bigger tuna; don’t be afraid to go bold on gear.

If you’re hunting stripers or black bass in the Delta or sloughs, guides from WesternBass recommend lightning-fast topwaters at first light—walking baits, prop baits, and frogs are all drawing big early pops, especially where grass meets the main channels. Midday, it’s time to slow down with drop-shot rigs, jerkbaits, and punching plastics into the thick stuff.

Hot spots today:
- Newport and Balboa Piers for fast mackerel and pier predators.
- The outer kelp lines off Laguna and Dana Point for bass and the stray yellowtail.
- For a shot at big bluefin, head outside the 60-mile bank or book a spot with one of the local multi-day charters out of San Diego—fish are holding deep early, then sliding up in the evening.
- In the Bay Area, Pacifica Pier offers a shot at surfperch, stripers, and even the occasional salmon as the tide pushes in strong.

Best baits: Fresh anchovy, live sardine, sand crabs, or squid strips.
Best artificial: Swimbaits in natural anchovy/sardine hues, metal jigs, slow-pitch jigs for offshore, and noise-making topwaters for the early-strike bass.

Thanks for tuning in to your daily dose of salty intel. Don’t forget to subscribe wherever you get your fishing reports and stay sharp out there. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intell
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