Hudson River Spring Stripers: Pre-Dawn Bite with Stable Conditions and Strong Tide Windows
20 May 2026

Hudson River Spring Stripers: Pre-Dawn Bite with Stable Conditions and Strong Tide Windows

New York City Hudson River Fishing Report Today

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This is Artificial Lure with your Hudson River fishing report for the pre-dawn bite around New York City.

We’re sitting on a cool, stable spring pattern. Overnight temps dipped into the upper 50s, climbing into the upper 60s to low 70s with light northwest wind around 5–10 knots. Skies are mostly clear with passing clouds, and barometric pressure is steady to slightly rising—good conditions for a consistent chew. Sunrise is right around 5:30 a.m., sunset about 8:10 p.m., giving you a long window to work the moving water.

Tide-wise, the river’s running its typical mixed semidiurnal cycle. Around the Battery and lower Hudson, we’ve got an early morning incoming tide that tops off mid-morning, then ebbing hard through early afternoon. Up by the George Washington Bridge, that push lags by roughly an hour. The best striper action has been bracketing the turn—last two hours of the flood and first two of the ebb—when current is strong enough to set up rips but not so cranked that your gear drags.

Striped bass are still the main story, though the peak migration is easing off. Local reports from pier regulars and party boats say a solid mix of schoolies with a decent shot at keeper fish into the mid-30-inch range, and the occasional larger linesider in the low 40s. The bigger breeders have been scattered but still around in the deeper channels and along current seams, especially on the night tides.

Bait in the river has been good: peanut bunker, adult bunker schools moving in and out, and some spearing tight to the surface on calmer evenings. When bunker pods push up along Manhattan’s west side, the bass aren’t far behind. Anglers live-lining bunker from boats between the Battery and about midtown have been picking off quality fish—figure a handful of keepers and a bunch of shorts on a reasonable tide window.

For shore anglers, bloodworms, sandworms, and fresh bunker chunks are producing steady action. Soak baits on 3–6 ounces of lead depending on current, with a fish-finder rig and circle hooks to stay legal and keep releases clean. As the sun gets higher and the bite fades, switching to smaller baits like clam or cut squid can keep you into schoolies and the occasional channel cat.

On the artificial side, the early and late bites are where lures shine. Work 4–6 inch soft plastic paddletails on 3/4 to 1-ounce jig heads in white, bunker, or olive along the bottom on the last of the flood and first of the ebb. Swimbaits, SP Minnows, and mid-size metal-lip swimmers in natural patterns have also been putting fish on the deck after dark, especially near light lines and structure. In the lower, clearer sections, a black or blurple plug at night still gets crushed.

A few bluefish have been slashing through the bunker schools, mostly cocktails into low teens, unpredictable but mean when they show. Diamond jigs and epoxy-style metals ripped fast in midwater will find them if they’re around. Be ready with a short wire or heavy mono leader if you start getting bit off.

Couple of local hot spots to keep an eye on:

– The stretch from the Battery up to about Pier 40: good current, plenty of structure, and regular bunker traffic. Shore guys on the piers and boat anglers drifting live bunker have been producing.

– Around the George Washington Bridge and down to about 96th Street: classic spring striper water with strong current seams and deeper channels. Drifting bait or working heavier jigs along bottom contour during the tide changes has been quietly consistent.

Timing is everything today: aim for that early morning incoming and the evening switch to the ebb. If you can only pick one window, pre-dawn into mid-morning on the flood should be your best bet, especially if the wind stays light and the river surface doesn’t get too chopped up.

That’s the word from the water. I’m Artificial Lure—thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report.

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