Keys & Miami Fishing Report: Mahi, Snapper, Tarpon Action
30 August 2025

Keys & Miami Fishing Report: Mahi, Snapper, Tarpon Action

Florida Keys, Miami Daily Fishing Report

About
Good morning anglers, this is Artificial Lure with your Florida Keys and Miami fishing report for Saturday, August 30, 2025.

Sun popped up at 7:07 a.m. and she’ll dip below the horizon tonight around 7:47 p.m., giving us just under thirteen hours of daylight—plenty of time to chase those bites. The moon’s on the rise at 1:35 p.m.; worth keeping in mind for those late afternoon runs.

The tides aren’t running hard today—low tidal coefficients mean gentler movement. Your highs at Key West hit at 2:28 a.m. (1.86 ft) and again at 3:36 p.m. (1.09 ft), while lows were at 9:41 a.m. (0.5 ft) and roll back in at 7:43 p.m. (0.91 ft). That means the water’s not flushing as aggressively, so fish aren’t being pushed deep or scattered as much. With sluggish tides, focus efforts around structures and deeper channels—fish stay put when the current’s slow according to Tides4Fishing and Tide-Forecast.com.

Weather’s classic late August Keys—humid early, highs pushing mid 80s, but a breeze out of the southeast will keep bugs down. With no major storms around, visibility’s up and water clarity will be solid for sight casting. Look for brief morning cloud cover; afternoon heat could test your patience, so hydrate and wear that sun shield.

Recent catches have been solid. Offshore, summer dolphin (mahi-mahi) action continues, especially out past the humps—most boats trolling feathers, rigged ballyhoo and pink or chartreuse skirted jigs have been picking up schoolies, with some gaffers in the mix. Blackfin tuna are trickling through, best around first light with live pilchards or small vertical jigs.

On the reefs and wrecks, yellowtail snapper reports are dependable—chum hard, downsize your fluoro leaders, and tip small hooks with cut shrimp or silversides. Mangrove snapper are thick along the inshore patch reefs at sunrise and dusk, taking fresh bait or soft plastics bounced near the bottom.

Backcountry is alive with tarpon rolling at sunrise and sunset near channels and bridges—try live crabs or mullet, or toss swimbaits in glow or bone colors when the current slackens. Snook and sea trout are still active around grass beds and mangrove points in Biscayne Bay and Card Sound; D.O.A. shrimp and root-beer paddle tails are best for artificials, while live shrimp under a popping cork gets quick eats.

Hot spots today:
- Seven Mile Bridge edges are producing solid tarpon and mangrove action during slack tide.
- Tennessee Reef is kicking up yellowtail and some mutton snapper on weighted cut bait rigs.
- Out of Miami, Featherbed Basin and Safety Valve channels are reliable for snook, trout, and mixed bag with both live and artificial bait.

Best baits:
- Offshore: Rigged ballyhoo or squid strips for dolphin, live pilchards and small jigs for blackfin.
- Reef: Cut shrimp, fresh ballyhoo, and silversides for the snapper family.
- Inshore: Live shrimp, finger mullet, or root-beer paddle tails and D.O.A. shad tails for snook and trout.

Best lures:
- Chartreuse bucktails, pilchard-pattern swimbaits, glow or bone-colored jigs for bridges and backcountry.
- Pink, blue or chartreuse trolling skirts offshore; vertical jigs for deeper tuna.

Keep those lines wet and eyes out for the midday bite when the water warms and the tidal push picks up just slightly. The bite’s best at low light and peak tide movement, so time your sets right.

Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe for daily local fishing intel. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn