Guntersville Winter Bass Bonanza: Cracking 30-Pound Limits on Lipless Cranks, ChatterBaits, and Swimbaits
09 January 2026

Guntersville Winter Bass Bonanza: Cracking 30-Pound Limits on Lipless Cranks, ChatterBaits, and Swimbaits

Lake Guntersville, Alabama Fishing Report Today

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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Guntersville fishing report.

We’re in a classic North Alabama winter pattern. According to the National Weather Service out of Huntsville, expect a cool, mostly clear day, light north to northwest breeze, highs in the upper 40s to low 50s, with overnight lows around freezing. SolunarForecast reports sunrise at about 6:07 and sunset around 7:30, with the better feeding windows late morning through early afternoon and again toward dusk. Guntersville’s not tidal, so you’re watching current from TVA generation more than any saltwater-style tide swings.

Water temps are sitting in the high 40s to low 50s on most of the main lake. That’s got the shad grouped up, and when the power’s pushing at the dam the bass are right behind them. Major League Fishing and BFL reports from recent winter events say 25–30 pound bags are still very much in play here, with several five‑fish limits over 23–29 pounds and co‑anglers weighing 8‑ to 10‑pound bass. Austin Shields recently cracked 29‑3 on a combo of forward‑facing sonar fish and a late‑day ChatterBait kicker on a causeway, and earlier events have seen 30‑plus limits pulled from the ledges.

Fish activity today should be “average plus” but very window‑oriented. When that current kicks or the sun pops out, you can go from nothing to three or four good ones in a hurry. Expect a lot of suspended fish early, then dropping tighter to the bottom as the day wears on.

Best baits right now are textbook Guntersville winter tools:
- For numbers and good keepers, throw a red or craw lipless crankbait over grass, or a shallow crank on outside grass edges.
- For bigger bites, a ½–¾ oz green pumpkin ChatterBait with a matching trailer over healthy hydrilla is hard to beat; recent big bags and an 8‑plus kicker have come exactly that way.
- Offshore, follow the Bass Pro Tour guys: swimbaits on jigheads, big spoons, deep‑diving crankbaits in shad or citrus shad, and a plum‑colored big worm or Carolina rig on hard spots and shell beds.
- When they won’t chase, slow down with a wacky‑rigged green pumpkin Trick Worm or Senko around bream beds and shallow grass, or a Neko rig / drop shot on those 15–25‑foot ledges.

Live bait guys can do well with large shiners or small gizzard shad on downlines below the dam or along deep channel swings, but most of the big‑bag stories here are artificial‑only.

Couple of hot spots if you’re putting in today:
- The causeways and bridges around Goose Pond and South Sauty have been sneaking out some giants on ChatterBaits and lipless cranks when the wind stacks bait.
- The river ledges and shell beds from Honeycomb down toward the dam have kicked out multiple tournament‑winning bags on swimbaits, spoons, and deep cranks once you find a school.

If you’re bank‑fishing, hit the marinas and riprap around town – places like Little Mountain Marina and other harbor mouths pull baitfish in and will give you steady action on small swimbaits, lipless cranks, and shaky heads.

That’s the word from Lake Guntersville. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe. 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