Lake Mead Fishing Report: Fall Feeding Frenzy for Bass and Stripers
12 October 2025

Lake Mead Fishing Report: Fall Feeding Frenzy for Bass and Stripers

Lake Mead, Nevada Fishing Report - Daily

About
Good morning anglers, this is Artificial Lure coming at you with your Lake Mead fishing report for Sunday, October 12th, 2025.

We're looking at a beautiful fall day out here on the Big Muddy. Sunrise hit us around 6:45 this morning, and we'll have light until about 6:30 tonight, giving you plenty of time to get on the water. Now, Lake Mead doesn't deal with ocean tides like some coastal fisheries, but we do see daily water level fluctuations from dam operations that can affect fish positioning along the shorelines.

Temperature-wise, we're sitting pretty with mid-70s expected today, dropping into the low 60s tonight. Light winds out of the southwest should keep conditions calm, especially in the protected coves. Water temps are hovering in that sweet 68 to 72-degree range, which has the bass and stripers active and feeding.

Speaking of fish activity, the striped bass bite has been solid this past week. Anglers have been pulling stripers in the 3 to 8-pound range consistently, with some bigger fish pushing double digits coming from deeper structure. The largemouth and smallmouth bass are transitioning into their fall feeding pattern, staging along rocky points and submerged humps in 15 to 25 feet of water.

For lures, you'll want to throw reaction baits early. Chatterbaits in white or shad patterns are producing well, especially around the grasslines in the shallower bays. Swimbaits in the 4 to 6-inch range are crushing it for both bass and stripers. If you're targeting stripers specifically, tie on a jigging spoon or a deep-diving crankbait and work the ledges. For smallmouth, a drop shot with a green pumpkin or smoke-colored worm is money right now.

Live bait anglers are doing well with anchovies and shad for stripers. For bass, live crawdads are always a good bet this time of year, and nightcrawlers will get you bites from just about anything swimming.

Hot spots to check out: Boulder Basin has been producing consistently, especially around the rocky points near Callville Bay. Work the drop-offs from 20 to 35 feet. Also, don't sleep on the Overton Arm – the striper bite up there has been lights out lately, particularly early morning and late afternoon around the submerged islands.

The catfish bite is also heating up for those looking to change it up. They're staging in the muddy flats and channels, hitting cut bait and chicken liver.

Remember, water levels are down, so watch your navigation and be mindful of hazards that might not have been there on your last trip. Keep an eye on your electronics and don't be afraid to adjust your presentation if the bite slows down.

That's your Lake Mead fishing report for October 12th. Get out there and bend some rods! Thanks for tuning in, and make sure to subscribe so you never miss a report.

This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai.

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

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI