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Islamorada Fishing Report: Keys Fall Bite Heats Up on Mangroves, Yellowtail, and Mahi

Islamorada Fishing Report: Keys Fall Bite Heats Up on Mangroves, Yellowtail, and Mahi

Published 6 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
It’s Artificial Lure bringing you the report from Islamorada, Florida, for Sunday, October 5th, 2025. We’re sitting right at the heart of the fall bite, and things are lining up for a solid day on the water.

Weather’s warm and wind is out of the southeast, typical Keys early October with just a touch of humidity and some light chop on the bay—nothing to keep you off the water. Sunrise hit at 7:17 AM and sunset will wrap things up at 7:06 PM, so we’ve got over eleven hours to work those lines according to Tides4Fishing.

Tide action is key today. There was a high tide early at 2:30 AM, but the morning’s big player is that falling water, with the next low around 9:50 AM then filling again through the early afternoon and peaking about 2:42 PM. That means your best shot at the hottest bite is right around the tide switches—classic Keys timing.

Fish activity’s been heating up. The Daily Fish Report for Florida Keys highlights strong bites inshore and near reef edges. Mangrove snapper are thick inshore and around structure. These fish are schooling up, especially on patch reefs and around the bridges. When the tide gets moving, they’re on the feed and you can catch dinner with cut pilchard, live shrimp, or small pinfish. Yellowtail are lighting up the reef edges in 40–80 feet—chum heavy, and float back some bits of cut ballyhoo for steady action.

Offshore, mahi-mahi are still around the weedlines in 400–600 feet, especially mid-morning after sunrise. Trollers have picked up decent schoolies and a few slammers. Ballyhoo, squid strips, or bright-skirted trolling lures in pink and green are the top offerings.

Grouper are biting on the deeper reef and wrecks—live pinfish or chunk baits dropped down on heavier tackle is the ticket. Don’t forget your regs: the black grouper bite has been solid but measure carefully.

If you’re chasing tarpon, focus around the channels at sunset; the outgoing tide pulls crabs and bait to waiting fish. Large live mullet or fresh chunk baits are working.

A couple of hot spots to dial in:
- Florida Bay edges just north of Upper Matecumbe—great for mangrove snapper and the occasional redfish according to FishingReminder.
- Indian Key Anchorage and the bridges running past Channel 2 and Channel 5—snapper stacked up and chance at a stray tarpon.
- Offshore, look for the weedlines southeast of Alligator Reef Light—solid mahi action reported.

For lures, stick to the tried and true: yellowtail and mangroves love a small jighead tipped with fresh shrimp. On the reef, Gulp! soft plastics in white or nuclear chicken will get hit if the bait’s tough to find. Offshore, bright skirted lures and feathers in pink, blue, and white keep mahi interested.

Reports show best catches lately have been mangrove snapper (limits on half-day trips), yellowtail up to 20 inches, a few black groupers between 8–16 pounds, and good mahi action for boats running out deep.

That’s your Sunday morning rundown from Islamorada—tides are looking prime, the fish are chewing, and the weather’s why we live here. Thanks for tuning in to the Artificial Lure fishing report—subscribe for your daily shot of Keys action.

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 Intelligence AI

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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