Lake Mead Fall Fishing Forecast: Stripers, Bass, and Boiling Baitfish
15 October 2025

Lake Mead Fall Fishing Forecast: Stripers, Bass, and Boiling Baitfish

Lake Mead, Nevada Fishing Report - Daily

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This is Artificial Lure with your October 15th, 2025, Lake Mead fishing report. Cooling fall air is rolling across southern Nevada, and the lake’s low water, clear visibility, and sparse boat traffic have set up prime conditions for anglers willing to adapt.

Sunrise this morning was at 6:46 a.m. with sunset coming at 6:07 p.m., giving you just over eleven hours to chase that next big one. No tidal influence here, but wind is a daily wild card in October—gusts to 20 mph are predicted by midday, so hit main lake points early and plan to tuck into coves if things get choppy. Mornings have started in the low 60s, climbing into the high 70s by late afternoon. Skies are mostly clear but watch for stronger breezes and a building chop before noon.

Recent catches reported by local YouTube channels like Busy Dad Fishing show stripers making strong fall pushes, with plenty of 1- to 3-pounders being caught, mostly from boats chasing schools busting shad across open water. Bank anglers are still nabbing the occasional “dink” (those undersized stripers and bass), but numbers shoot up if you move around and watch for boiling baitfish.

Insane Striped Bass Action on Lake Mead is no exaggeration right now—boils have been popping up around Government Wash, Boulder Basin, and Hemenway Harbor, especially in the first two hours after sunrise. Look for birds working the surface—that’s your best tell of schooling activity.

Soft plastic swimbaits in natural shad patterns, 4 to 5 inches, rigged on a 3/8-ounce jig head, have been deadly when cast into boils and burned just under the surface. Kastmasters, white bucktail jigs, and topwater walkers like Zara Spooks are classics for stripers—keep one rigged at all times. If the action dies down, drop a live shad, anchovy chunk, or a piece of cut sardine 15–25 feet deep near drop-offs. Stripers aren’t fussy right now—find the bait and they’ll be there.

Largemouth and smallmouth bass are pushing shallow too. They’re hugging rocky points and riprap, especially as sunlight hits the water and bait moves in. Early in the day, topwater poppers and walking baits can trigger those reaction bites. Midday, switch to drop shotting 4-inch worms in brown or purple, or throw a green pumpkin jig down to 15 feet if you’re fishing structure. Bank anglers have had luck with Ned rigs bounced slowly along the transitions.

As for amounts, while this fall hasn’t produced monsters like in spring, boat anglers have been putting together stringers of 10–25 stripers a session, with a handful of bass mixed in near rocky ledges. Willow Beach Marina guides report occasional trophy stripers from the deepwater south end, but most catches remain school-sized. For multispecies action, Boulder Beach has been steady, and the mouth of Las Vegas Bay is waking up as temps drop.

Top hot spots this week are:
- Hemenway Harbor: Early morning striper boils and consistent action on both bait and artificials.
- Government Wash: Active schools in the main channel at sunrise, good for both boaters and aggressive shoreline anglers.
- Echo Bay: Consistent bass along rock and brush, especially with finesse plastics after sun-up.

Remember, Nevada fishing licenses are required, and the rules are enforced—check the Nevada Department of Wildlife for limits and slot sizes. Winds can come up fast, so have a safety plan and wear your life jacket, especially in the open basins.

That’s your Lake Mead update—thanks for tuning in! Don’t forget to subscribe for the latest reports and on-the-water tips. 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