NJ Saltwater Fishing

The Complete NJ Fishing Guide

Everything you need to know about saltwater fishing in New Jersey — species seasons, the best coastal zones, reading tides and conditions, and what actually triggers a good bite.

In This Guide

NJ Species Guide

New Jersey has one of the most diverse saltwater fisheries on the East Coast. From winter flounder in the cold back bays of February to offshore wahoo in August canyon runs, there is something to target in NJ waters almost every month of the year. Here is what to know about each major species.

Striped Bass
April – June · September – November
The signature NJ species. Stripers migrate through NJ twice yearly — north in spring and south in fall. Spring fishing peaks when water reaches 52–58°F. The fall run from September through November is the most consistent, with large fish chasing bunker schools along the beaches and through the inlets. Best on the incoming tide at dawn and dusk. Target rock piles, inlet rips, jetties and beach troughs.
Fluke (Summer Flounder)
May – September
NJ's most popular inshore target. Fluke arrive inshore when water warms to 58°F and are best from June through August. Drift fishing with bucktails and Gulp in channels, near structure, and along drop-offs produces consistent results. The best fluke fishing happens on a moving tide — incoming or outgoing — with a drift speed of about 0.5–1.5 mph. Deeper channels hold fish in warm summer water.
Bluefish
May – October
The most aggressive fish in NJ waters. Blues arrive in May and stay through October, often appearing in the same areas as stripers. Known for blitzing bait on the surface — look for diving birds and churned water. When a bluefish blitz is happening, almost any lure will work. Use wire leaders to prevent bite-offs. Pre-front conditions with falling pressure often trigger the most savage bluefish blitzes of the season.
Tautog (Blackfish)
April – May · October – December
NJ's premier wreck and structure fish. Tautog are caught in spring and fall when water temperatures are in the 52–62°F range. They are structure-oriented fish that rarely stray far from hard bottom, wrecks, and rock piles. Green crabs, Asian crabs, and clams are the best baits. Patience is required — present the bait slowly and tight to the structure. Anchor precisely on the wreck for best results.
Black Sea Bass
May – December
Sea bass are caught over nearly the same structure as tautog but have a longer season. They respond well to squid, clams and cut bait fished on the bottom. In warmer months, sea bass move to deeper offshore structure. They are excellent table fare and have a relatively liberal bag limit compared to other NJ species. Found near any hard bottom, artificial reef, or wreck from Raritan Bay to Cape May.
Weakfish
May – June · September – October
Once one of NJ's most abundant species, weakfish populations have declined significantly. They remain a target in the back bays and tidal creeks of central and south Jersey. Weakfish are pressure-sensitive — fishing improves dramatically with stable or rising barometric pressure after a front passes. Night fishing on an incoming tide with bucktails or soft plastics in back bay channels produces the most consistent action.
Mahi-Mahi (Dolphinfish)
June – September
Mahi arrive off the NJ coast when offshore water temperatures reach 70°F or above. They are associated with floating weedlines, debris, and the warm blue offshore water beyond the shelf edge. Mahi are sight-fishing targets — you look for the floating structure they associate with. Schools can number in the dozens and will free-bite aggressively. A 60–90 mile offshore run is typically required to reach prime mahi water.
Tuna (Inshore Bluefin)
September – November
School bluefin tuna push close to shore in fall, sometimes within 15–20 miles of the NJ coast. They are visible on the surface when feeding — high-speed trolling to find the breaking schools is the primary technique. Water temperature breaks between 60–68°F concentrate inshore bluefin. The fall inshore bluefin season is unpredictable but when the fish show, it produces some of the most exciting fishing in the Northeast.
Flounder (Winter Flounder)
February – April
Winter flounder are the only species that fish best when everything else is dead. They peak in the back bays and tidal creeks of NJ when water temps are 44–54°F — February through early April. Bloodworms and sandworms on small hooks fished slowly on mud bottom produce the most fish. The Barnegat Bay system and the back bays behind Long Beach Island have historically been among the best winter flounder areas in NJ.
Cobia
July – August
Cobia are an inshore summer visitor to NJ waters that push north from the Chesapeake when water temperatures hit 68–70°F. They are a sight-fishing species — spotted on the surface near cownose rays, in inlet mouths, and along nearshore structure. Calm conditions are essential for spotting fish. Cape May and Atlantic City waters see the most consistent NJ cobia action. They are notoriously tackle-busting fighters when hooked.

Seasonal Fishing Calendar

New Jersey saltwater fishing follows a predictable seasonal pattern driven by water temperature. Here is what each season offers and what to target:

SeasonWater TempBest SpeciesKey Patterns
February – March36–46°FWinter FlounderSlow bottom fishing in back bays with bloodworms. Most other species inactive.
April – May46–58°FStriped Bass, Tautog, Sea BassSpring striper migration. Tautog peak on wrecks. Fluke begin arriving late May.
June – July58–70°FFluke, Bluefish, Sea Bass, WeakfishPeak inshore season. Mahi offshore. Cobia start pushing north. Best all-around fishing.
August70–76°FFluke, Offshore Tuna, Wahoo, MahiDog days — offshore fishing peaks. Inshore fluke in deeper channels to escape warm surface temps.
September – October60–70°FStriped Bass, Bluefish, False Albacore, TunaThe fall run — best two months of the year. Stripers follow bunker south. Albies arrive in September.
November – December46–58°FStriped Bass, Tautog, Sea BassLate fall striper action. Tautog close out the season on wrecks through December.

NJ Coastal Zones Breakdown

New Jersey's coast spans over 130 miles from Sandy Hook to Cape May, with dramatically different fishing characteristics in each region. Understanding each zone's tidal patterns, bottom structure, and species concentrations is key to planning a productive trip.

Northern NJ — Raritan Bay to Sandy Hook
The gateway to NJ fishing. Sandy Hook Bay and Raritan Bay are critical striper migration corridors in spring and fall. The Sandy Hook inlet and the rips off the Hook itself are legendary striper spots. Keyport and the Arthur Kill produce good winter flounder in season. The bottom is primarily sand and clay with some hard structure near the rock jetties. Tidal flow is strong in the narrows near the bay entrance — work the tide changes carefully.
Central NJ — Manasquan to Barnegat
The heart of NJ boat fishing. Manasquan Inlet is one of the most productive inlets on the coast — stripers, bluefish and weakfish pile up here on the right tides. The Manasquan River back bay produces excellent weakfish and fluke. Point Pleasant Canal connects Barnegat Bay to the Manasquan River and has strong tidal flow that concentrates fish. Offshore from here at 2–8 miles lies the Farms, a series of natural and artificial reef structures that produce excellent sea bass and tautog fishing year-round.
Barnegat Bay
New Jersey's largest back bay system stretches 40 miles from Point Pleasant to Little Egg Harbor. Barnegat Bay is the best winter flounder water in central NJ, and it produces excellent weakfish in the channels. Barnegat Inlet — known as "Old Barney" — is notorious for rough conditions on outgoing tides in northeast winds. The inlet should be treated with respect in anything above 15 mph from the northeast. Inside the bay, fluke fishing in the Barnegat Channel is productive from June through August.
Southern NJ — Atlantic City to Cape May
South Jersey offers some of the best overall saltwater fishing in the state. Atlantic City Canyon — essentially a series of bottom features and temperature breaks — is closer to shore from Atlantic City than the named canyons are from central NJ. Cape May Inlet and the Cape May Canal provide excellent striper and bluefish fishing in season. The Cape May rips on an outgoing tide are among the most productive striper spots in NJ. The Delaware Bay side of Cape May offers unique access to drum, weakfish and sea bass that don't appear commonly further north.
Delaware Bay
The Delaware Bay is a distinct fishery from the open ocean side of Cape May. It is home to red and black drum in summer, weakfish in the channels, and significant concentrations of horseshoe crabs that attract massive numbers of migratory birds and the baitfish that follow them. The bay has extensive shoal areas and strong tidal currents. It is primarily a boat fishery, though some shore access is available near Cape May Point and along the bayshore road.

Reading Tides for Fishing

Tidal movement is the single most important factor in saltwater fishing success in New Jersey. Fish are creatures of habit who use tidal flow to ambush prey, orient themselves, and time their feeding windows. Understanding how to use tide data is essential for consistent results.

The Tide Change Rule

The most productive fishing windows in NJ are the two hours before and two hours after a tide change — particularly the change from outgoing to incoming. As the tide turns, currents slow and then reverse. Baitfish become confused and disoriented. Gamefish — particularly stripers, weakfish and fluke — move into position to ambush them. This four-hour window around the tide turn accounts for the majority of fish caught in NJ inshore waters.

Pro Tip — Barnegat Inlet

Barnegat Inlet produces best on the incoming tide, especially the first two hours of flood. The strong current flow through the inlet creates a rip on the south side that concentrates stripers and bluefish. Fish the north jetty on the outgoing tide and the south rip on the incoming for the most consistent action. Avoid the inlet entirely in northeast winds above 15 mph on an outgoing tide — it becomes extremely dangerous.

Tide Height vs. Tide Speed

The height of a tide (measured in feet above mean low water) matters less than the speed of the current it creates. Spring tides — the tides around new and full moons — create the strongest current flows because the moon's gravitational pull is greatest. Neap tides, around the quarter moons, have weaker flow. Most experienced NJ fishermen plan their best trips around the full and new moon spring tides for maximum current activity, while avoiding very slow neap tide conditions for species like weakfish that rely on current to feed actively.

Back Bay vs. Ocean Tides

A critical detail for NJ anglers: back bay tides lag significantly behind ocean tides. In Barnegat Bay, the tide may run 2–3 hours behind the ocean tide at Barnegat Inlet. The further back in the bay you fish, the more the tide lags. Shore Report uses NOAA tide data specific to each zone — the tides shown for Barnegat Inlet are different from the tides shown for Tuckerton because the water takes time to move through the bay system.

Conditions That Produce the Best Bite

Beyond tides, several environmental factors consistently produce or kill the fishing bite in NJ waters. Shore Report scores and displays all of these factors, but here is the reasoning behind each one:

Barometric Pressure

Falling barometric pressure — typically 12–24 hours before a weather front — often triggers the most aggressive feeding of the entire season. Fish sense the pressure drop and feed heavily before the storm. The day before a nor'easter can produce spectacular striper blitzes. Conversely, rapidly rising pressure immediately after a front passes tends to produce poor fishing for 24–48 hours as fish recover and reorient. Stable pressure produces the most consistent, predictable fishing.

Wind Direction and Speed

Southwest and south winds are generally favorable for NJ inshore fishing — they push warm water toward shore and create the gentle chop that gives fish feeding cover. Northeast winds are the enemy of NJ fishing. A northeast wind opposing an outgoing tide creates dangerous sea conditions at every NJ inlet, and the turbid water it pushes into the nearshore zone shuts down sight-feeding species like cobia and false albacore. For surf fishing, an onshore wind of 10–15 mph is actually ideal — it creates the churning wash in the trough that stripers use to ambush sand eels and sand crabs.

Water Temperature

Each NJ species has a specific temperature range where it feeds actively. The most important temperature threshold is 58°F — below this, cold-blooded fish have slower metabolisms and reduced feeding activity. As water temperatures approach each species' optimal range, bite intensity increases dramatically. Shore Report displays the current sea surface temperature and tells you which species are currently in their optimal range based on that reading.

Moon Phase

The full and new moon phases produce the strongest spring tides and corresponding feeding activity. Many experienced NJ anglers plan their most important trips around the full moon in October for the fall striper run — this combination of strong tidal flow, cooling water temperatures, and migrating bunker schools produces some of the best striper fishing of the year. The dark new moon phases are favored for night fishing — stripers feed more aggressively in low-light conditions.

Offshore Canyon Fishing in NJ

The submarine canyons off the NJ coast represent some of the most spectacular fishing in the western Atlantic. The Hudson Canyon — the largest — is a geological feature that cuts deep into the continental shelf, concentrating currents and creating upwellings that support enormous concentrations of baitfish and the gamefish that follow them. Here is what to know before attempting a canyon run:

The Canyon Run — Distance and Safety

The offshore canyons are not for inexperienced captains or unprepared boats. The Hudson Canyon is approximately 110 miles from Manasquan Inlet — a 3–4 hour run in favorable conditions. The Baltimore Canyon is slightly shorter from southern NJ ports at roughly 90 miles. These are long, exposed offshore runs where conditions can change rapidly. A calm morning can become dangerous by afternoon as sea breezes build. The cardinal rules of canyon fishing in NJ: check the 48-hour extended marine forecast, file a float plan, monitor VHF weather radio continuously, and turn around if conditions deteriorate faster than expected. Never attempt a canyon run with any forecast showing wind over 15 mph or seas over 4 feet.

Reading the Offshore Temperature Break

The key to productive canyon fishing is finding the temperature break — the line where warm Gulf Stream water meets cooler shelf water. This break can be visible as a color change in the water from blue-green to deep blue, or as a line of floating weedline debris. Sea surface temperature satellite charts, available through NOAA CoastWatch, are the primary tool for locating the break before departure. The warm side of the break holds mahi, yellowfin tuna, and wahoo. Swordfish are found deeper on the canyon walls at night on deep-drop rigs.

Canyon Season

The NJ canyon season runs roughly from July through October. Peak yellowfin tuna action is typically August through September when water temperatures at the canyon edge reach 68°F or above. Mahi are most abundant July through August when warm water pushes closest to the shelf edge. Wahoo fishing peaks in late August and September on high-speed trolling presentations. Swordfish are taken year-round by dedicated deep-drop boats but the most consistent night-time surface action is September through November.

NJ Fishing Regulations

New Jersey saltwater fishing regulations are set jointly by the NJ Division of Fish & Wildlife and NOAA Fisheries. Regulations change annually based on stock assessments and can change mid-season with emergency actions. Always verify current regulations before fishing. Key regulations for major NJ species are summarized below — these are subject to change and should not be used as the sole reference for legal fishing.

SpeciesMinimum SizeBag LimitSeason Notes
Striped Bass28" or 35"+ slot1 per dayVerify current slot and size regulations — these change frequently
Fluke (Summer Flounder)17"8 per daySeason typically May 15 – October
BluefishNo minimum3 per dayYear-round
Tautog16"3 per dayClosed periods in spring and fall — check current regs
Black Sea Bass13"10 per daySeason dates and limits vary — confirm before fishing
Weakfish13"2 per dayCheck current emergency measures — stock is depleted
Winter Flounder12"10 per daySeason approximately Feb 1 – Apr 30
Important

Always verify current regulations with the NJ Division of Fish & Wildlife before heading out. Regulations change annually and emergency measures can take effect mid-season.

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