Early Fall Bite Lights Up Lake Guntersville
10 September 2025

Early Fall Bite Lights Up Lake Guntersville

Lake Guntersville, Alabama Fishing Report - Daily

About
Good morning from the banks of Lake Guntersville—this is Artificial Lure with your fresh September 10th fishing report, packed with detail for those heading out today.

Let’s start with the weather: it’s shaping up to be a classic early fall day on the lake. Right now, mild temperatures sit around the upper 60s early with a high pushing near 80°F by afternoon. Winds are out of the northwest, light enough to keep it glassy in the morning but with just enough ripple for good oxygenation. Skies are mostly clear, giving us that first hint of crispness in the air, but still plenty of warmth in the sun. Sunrise hit at 6:27 AM and sunset’s expected at 7:01 PM—so there’s a full day to chase that bite.

Lake Guntersville doesn’t have ocean tides, but solunar tables are giving us clear major and minor feeding windows: expect the bite to light up strongest from about 1:15 PM to 3:15 PM this afternoon, with a minor surge right around 8 AM. That lines up sweetly with the morning topwater bite and the post-lunch flurry when fish move up to prowl.

Bass Fishing Daily out of Guntersville reports a stellar week for **largemouth action**. Bigger fish are showing up on deeper grass lines and hard spots—18- to 21-inch fish are not uncommon right now, and there've been multiple reports of fish north of 5 pounds for those covering water. The top patterns this week: moving baits early, then shifting to slower presentations as the sun gets high.

Best baits so far:

- **Chrome or bone-colored Zara Spooks and Pop-Rs** at first light over submerged grass beds.
- **White or chartreuse buzzbaits** worked around the edges of hydrilla—expect explosive bites.
- **Black-and-blue jigs** with a Rage Craw trailer pitched into holes in the grass once the sun climbs.
- On mid-depth ledges and creek channels, anglers are scoring with **shad-patterned crankbaits** and **Carolina-rigged plastics**.
- Local guides still swear by a **green pumpkin shaky head** fished slow around stumps separating the creek mouths.

Crappie are just starting to transition out of their summer haunts, stacking up along deeper bridge pilings and brush. Most are holding at 10 to 14 feet, and minnows are taking the lion’s share, though a pink or chartreuse jig will nab the more aggressive slabs.

Catfish are biting steady at night and around dawn near river channel drop-offs. Cut shad or livers are producing channel cats and some convincing flatheads. A few monster blues have been wrestled up near the Goat Island causeway.

For those looking for hotspots, two standouts are:

- **The milfoil flats out from Brown’s Creek**—the shad are loaded in here, and big bass are not far behind.
- **The creek channel swings near the BB Comer Bridge**, especially mid-morning and again mid-afternoon as schools of baitfish push shallow.

Boat traffic’s still fairly light, but word is out, so expect some company during the main windows. The water clarity is good, a touch stained in the feeder creeks after last week’s rain but clean overall.

Quick tip: slow down mid-day. The bass are fattening up for fall, but you’ll get more bites by working slower and targeting edges where grass meets deeper water.

Thanks for tuning in to your Lake Guntersville fishing report! Don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates and tips—no matter if you’re weekend casting or tournament bound, we’ll keep you in the loop.

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