LBI Fishing Report 10/15/25

The multi-day nor’easter hammered the coastline and pushed in some serious flooding and powerful swell. LBI is still drying out and the ocean is slowly settling. Today was a beautiful day and felt really great after the relentless stretch of foul weather. We are also turning the mid-October corner and getting into a more chilly fall feel.

Long Beach Island’s surf temps have slipped below 70º where they were hanging for weeks. Today the LBI surf was 64-65º. The water also cleaned up a lot from yesterday’s chocolate milk stain, but surprisingly clean except for lots of debris at the highest tide line and wash overs. Residual swell energy remains in the water the next few days and expect possibly rebuilds a bit from a Canadian Maritime low spinning up some easterly ground swell over the weekend.

Fishing Report Details

The fishable days have been few and far between, but those anglers fishing the breaks in weather are capitalizing. It’s a great time to work the surf and jetties.

Today store staffer Max and Swagmattic (yes he still fishes) hit the north end for some tog. They reported back that the bite was on, “We had a pretty savage bite going between 4-6pm. We each caught about 20 tog and a handful of keepers on green crabs. Bruce from Illinois was fishing near us a got a big one… 22″ 5#+!” That’s a monster for land based tog fishing standards!!! Now that the bay water temps have dropped to the golden 60º mark it seems the tog turned on. They should be crushing crabs for the next several weeks.

With the cooler bay temps expect striped bass fishing to spark up on the Island’s many bayside areas as well as the main channels, sod banks and bridges.

On the sandy surf side, there’s small blues, kingfish (both northern and southern) and even still a few surprise pompano (expect them to exit soon if not already). No direct LBI surf side striped bass reports yet but they will be soon. The mullet run is in the final innings (possibly over) but on the bright side there is some bunker schools near. These bait balls have been missing the past couple season. We received two fresh bunker deliveries in the past week. That’s more than we had all of August and September. Fresh bunker has been tough for us the past year or so. Maybe that changes this fall.

October 11th was Merchantville Fishing Club’s 8th Annual LBI Surf Fishing Tournament. The weather was tough but fish were caught, mostly kingfish (northern and southern) and blues. The final standing are below. Congrats to Ocean City Fishing Club on the win!

When there was a couple windows to fish the ocean both inshore and offshore caught. The sea bass should be stacking on structure in 70-90′ range. The yellowfin chunking bite was rocking. Let’s hope it rolls into late fall.

Young Of The Year Striped Bass Data

Today, Maryland DNR released the 2025 Young-of-Year striped bass survey results and while there’s a slight improvement, the news remains concerning. The juvenile index came in at 4.0, up from the last few years but still well below the long-term average of 11. This makes seven consecutive years of poor recruitment in the Chesapeake Bay, which is the main nursery for the Atlantic striped bass stock. More details

VIMS also released information today. They published, “Preliminary results from this year’s Juvenile Striped Bass Seine Survey suggest an average year class was produced in Virginia tributaries in 2025, with a recorded mean value of 5.12 fish per seine haul. The 2025 value represents an improvement over the previous two years of below-average recruitment. The historic average of 7.77 fish per seine haul.” More details

Notice To Mariners: Active Dredging In Local Bay!

The $6.2 million project will restore channels to a safe navigable depth. Over the next couple of months dredge operations will be working around the clock, 24-7. Work will be at the following eight channels; Holiday Harbor, Skippers Cove, Waretown Creek, South Harbor, Double Creek Mainland, Double Creek, High Bar Harbor, Barnegat Light Stake.

Be aware and alert for the pipeline, buoys, dredge and other marine construction equipment during the project. Boaters should proceed through dredging zones with caution and at no wake speed. Use VHF Channel 4 to contact the contractor for meeting/passing arrangements.

For more details

Author: FishHead.Greg

A Long Beach Island native with life long experience fishing and navigating the local waters, Greg is a distinguished Master Captain (the highest qualified operator license), holding a US Coast Guard Masters 50T Near Coastal License with Towing Endorsement. Raised in and now managing his family's bait and tackle business, Fishermans Headquarters (Since 1962, The Saltwater Fishing Bait & Tackle Experts) Greg is daily immersed in fishing. He is the Chief Contributor of FishingLBI.com (Long Beach Island's best fishing report blog) as well as the Admin for the shop's social media pages (on Instagram and Facebook). Be sure to follow!