
19 October 2025
Lake Mead Fishing Report: Stripers, Bass, and Fall Bite Forecast for Sunday, October 19, 2025
Lake Mead, Nevada Fishing Report - Daily
About
Good morning folks, this is Artificial Lure coming to you with your fresh-off-the-water Lake Mead angling update for Sunday, October 19, 2025. If you’re thinking about getting on the lake today, here’s what’s been biting and what you need to know.
First off, **sunrise popped at 6:53 AM** this morning and you’ve got until about 6:03 PM for sunset—plenty of daylight to wet a line. The weather is classic fall Nevada—cooler in the early hours with temps warming into the mid-70s by mid-afternoon, skies mostly clear, just a hint of breeze coming out of the northeast. That air is crisp, so bring a jacket if you’re launching early.
Lake Mead water is holding steady but running a bit low, typical for October with the Colorado River situation, so pay attention to those shallower areas and any new hazards popping up near your usual haunts. According to Snoflo, the Virgin River’s discharge, which feeds into Mead, remains high for the time of year, putting some color in the water and making those mudlines at inflows a solid bet for active fish.
For bite windows, today's moon phase is a **waning gibbous**—still giving you good night glow, but the key times are that **major window from 2:43 to 4:43 AM**, a **minor from 10:42 to 12:42 PM**, and another **major from 3:13 to 5:13 PM**. If you can schedule your casts, those later periods have produced best lately.
As for **fish activity**, there’s been solid reports of striped bass schooling up, especially in deeper water near Boulder Basin and the Las Vegas Bay area. Anglers are landing schoolies between 1 and 3 pounds with an occasional 5 to 7 pounder showing up for those putting in the time and chasing birds. Largemouth and smallmouth bass have been picking up on rocky points around Government Wash and Callville Bay—look for them moving shallow as the water cools.
Best lures this week have been tried-and-true: **topwater Spooks** and **walking baits early**, then switch to **chrome or white jigging spoons** once the sun gets up. Stripers have been locked on shad, so anything shad-imitating works. In coves with less activity, slow-rolling a white or chartreuse swim jig near submerged brush is turning both bucketmouth and smallies. For those preferring bait, **cut anchovies** and **threadfin shad** chunks fished on a slip-sinker rig are always a staple for stripers, especially if you’re anchored up off deeper ledges.
Recent catches have been solid: one party I ran into out near the Hemenway launch went home with 25 stripers by noon, nothing under 16 inches. Bass anglers report 8-12 keeper largemouth and a handful of chunky smallmouth per trip, mostly on drop shots and Ned rigs worked slow along the rocks.
If you’re after a couple of **hotspots**, don’t miss the area around the mouth of Las Vegas Wash—it’s prime right now for both stripers and catfish, especially with the cooler overnight temps pushing baitfish toward warmer outflows. Boulder Beach is another solid land-based option, especially for families or bank anglers, with a mix of stripers, catfish, and the occasional bonus crappie or bluegill.
No tidal report here, as Lake Mead is landlocked, but keep in mind that fluctuating water from upstream can change the bite day-to-day—watch those inflows, especially after any rare rain events.
That’s the word from the marina and the ramps this morning. Big thanks for tuning in to the Lake Mead fishing report—it’s Artificial Lure reminding you, whether you’re tossing crankbaits or soaking bait, now is the time to get out there and hook into some fall action. Make sure to subscribe for your next update and daily tips.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
First off, **sunrise popped at 6:53 AM** this morning and you’ve got until about 6:03 PM for sunset—plenty of daylight to wet a line. The weather is classic fall Nevada—cooler in the early hours with temps warming into the mid-70s by mid-afternoon, skies mostly clear, just a hint of breeze coming out of the northeast. That air is crisp, so bring a jacket if you’re launching early.
Lake Mead water is holding steady but running a bit low, typical for October with the Colorado River situation, so pay attention to those shallower areas and any new hazards popping up near your usual haunts. According to Snoflo, the Virgin River’s discharge, which feeds into Mead, remains high for the time of year, putting some color in the water and making those mudlines at inflows a solid bet for active fish.
For bite windows, today's moon phase is a **waning gibbous**—still giving you good night glow, but the key times are that **major window from 2:43 to 4:43 AM**, a **minor from 10:42 to 12:42 PM**, and another **major from 3:13 to 5:13 PM**. If you can schedule your casts, those later periods have produced best lately.
As for **fish activity**, there’s been solid reports of striped bass schooling up, especially in deeper water near Boulder Basin and the Las Vegas Bay area. Anglers are landing schoolies between 1 and 3 pounds with an occasional 5 to 7 pounder showing up for those putting in the time and chasing birds. Largemouth and smallmouth bass have been picking up on rocky points around Government Wash and Callville Bay—look for them moving shallow as the water cools.
Best lures this week have been tried-and-true: **topwater Spooks** and **walking baits early**, then switch to **chrome or white jigging spoons** once the sun gets up. Stripers have been locked on shad, so anything shad-imitating works. In coves with less activity, slow-rolling a white or chartreuse swim jig near submerged brush is turning both bucketmouth and smallies. For those preferring bait, **cut anchovies** and **threadfin shad** chunks fished on a slip-sinker rig are always a staple for stripers, especially if you’re anchored up off deeper ledges.
Recent catches have been solid: one party I ran into out near the Hemenway launch went home with 25 stripers by noon, nothing under 16 inches. Bass anglers report 8-12 keeper largemouth and a handful of chunky smallmouth per trip, mostly on drop shots and Ned rigs worked slow along the rocks.
If you’re after a couple of **hotspots**, don’t miss the area around the mouth of Las Vegas Wash—it’s prime right now for both stripers and catfish, especially with the cooler overnight temps pushing baitfish toward warmer outflows. Boulder Beach is another solid land-based option, especially for families or bank anglers, with a mix of stripers, catfish, and the occasional bonus crappie or bluegill.
No tidal report here, as Lake Mead is landlocked, but keep in mind that fluctuating water from upstream can change the bite day-to-day—watch those inflows, especially after any rare rain events.
That’s the word from the marina and the ramps this morning. Big thanks for tuning in to the Lake Mead fishing report—it’s Artificial Lure reminding you, whether you’re tossing crankbaits or soaking bait, now is the time to get out there and hook into some fall action. Make sure to subscribe for your next update and daily tips.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI