🐟 Blue Catfish Weight Calculator
Estimate blue catfish weight from length & girth — imperial & metric results with gear recommendations
| Fork Length (in) | Fork Length (cm) | Est. Girth (in) | Est. Weight (lb) | Est. Weight (kg) | Size Category |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12 in | 30.5 cm | 7 in | 0.7 lb | 0.3 kg | Juvenile |
| 16 in | 40.6 cm | 9 in | 1.6 lb | 0.7 kg | Juvenile |
| 20 in | 50.8 cm | 12 in | 3.6 lb | 1.6 kg | Small |
| 24 in | 61.0 cm | 14 in | 5.9 lb | 2.7 kg | Small |
| 28 in | 71.1 cm | 16 in | 8.9 lb | 4.1 kg | Medium |
| 30 in | 76.2 cm | 17 in | 10.8 lb | 4.9 kg | Medium |
| 34 in | 86.4 cm | 19 in | 15.3 lb | 6.9 kg | Medium |
| 38 in | 96.5 cm | 21 in | 21.0 lb | 9.5 kg | Large |
| 40 in | 101.6 cm | 22 in | 24.2 lb | 11.0 kg | Large |
| 44 in | 111.8 cm | 24 in | 31.7 lb | 14.4 kg | Large |
| 48 in | 121.9 cm | 26 in | 40.6 lb | 18.4 kg | Trophy |
| 52 in | 132.1 cm | 28 in | 50.9 lb | 23.1 kg | Trophy |
| 56 in | 142.2 cm | 30 in | 63.0 lb | 28.6 kg | Trophy |
| 60 in | 152.4 cm | 32 in | 76.8 lb | 34.8 kg | Elite Trophy |
| Fish Weight | Rod Power | Recommended Line | Hook Size | Leader Strength | Sinker Weight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Under 5 lb | Medium | 10–15 lb mono | 2/0–4/0 | 15 lb | 1–2 oz |
| 5–15 lb | Med-Heavy | 15–20 lb mono | 4/0–6/0 | 20–30 lb | 2–4 oz |
| 15–30 lb | Heavy | 20–40 lb mono/braid | 6/0–8/0 | 40–60 lb | 3–6 oz |
| 30–60 lb | X-Heavy | 40–65 lb braid | 8/0–10/0 | 65–80 lb | 4–8 oz |
| 60–100 lb | X-Heavy+ | 65–100 lb braid | 10/0–12/0 | 80–100 lb | 6–12 oz |
| 100 lb+ | Catfish Spec | 100+ lb braid | 12/0–16/0 | 150 lb+ | 8–16 oz |
| Species | Avg Adult Weight | Trophy Weight | World Record | Formula Divisor |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blue Catfish | 10–25 lb | 40+ lb | 143 lb | 800 |
| Channel Catfish | 2–10 lb | 20+ lb | 58 lb | 900 |
| Flathead Catfish | 5–20 lb | 30+ lb | 123 lb | 800 |
| White Catfish | 1–4 lb | 8+ lb | 19.3 lb | 900 |
| Bullhead Catfish | 0.5–2 lb | 4+ lb | 6.8 lb | 1200 |
| Condition Factor | Fish Description | When to Use | Weight Adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.85 | Post-spawn / Stressed | Late spring/summer | −15% vs average |
| 0.90 | Lean / Winter fish | Cold water seasons | −10% vs average |
| 1.00 | Average condition | Most of the year | Baseline weight |
| 1.10 | Well-fed / Fall fish | Pre-winter feeding | +10% vs average |
| 1.15 | Pre-spawn / Excellent | Early spring | +15% vs average |
Measure girth at the widest point of the body (just behind the pectoral fins). Use a flexible tape measure or a piece of string. Girth is squared in the formula, so even a 1-inch error can change the estimated weight by 10–15%.
The Wege-Anderson formula (Weight = Length × Girth² / 800) is the most widely accepted standard for catfish. The divisor of 800 is specific to blue catfish and flatheads. Channel catfish use 900. Always measure fork length (tip of mouth to fork of tail) for consistency.
Catfishes can reach truly impressive sizes. Some species can pass 2.5 metres in length and weigh more than 100 kilos although fishes longer than 2 metres stay quite rare. In North America the Blue Catfish is among the biggest, because it reaches up to 65 inches long and can weigh 143 pounds.
Such fishes can live up to 20 years. Rather, typical adult channel catfish has Weight between 2 and 4 pounds, with length of at least 12 inches. The world record for channel catfish was 58 pounds, caught in the back of South Carolina in 1964.
How Big Can Catfish Get?
A few truly massive catfishes show up here. One guessed one of them at around 150 to 160 kg, what matches about 330 to 352 pounds. Fishermen in the north of Thailand once cauhgt a 646-pound Mekong catfish.
Some fishermen in Paris found a land catfish weighing around 100 pounds, right in the heart of the city.
Guessing the Weight of catfish without use of a scale can cause trouble. A common method is made up of length times girth times girth, divided by 800. For instance, for fish long 49 inches with 32-inch girth, the math gives around 62.72 pounds.
Another mode for catfishes and bass is the cube of the length divided buy 1600. For a 30-inch fish with 12-inch girth, it results about 5.4 pounds. Also charts help in the guessing of Weight.
According to one of them, a 36-inch Blue Catfish mostly weighs around 23.2 pounds. A 32-inch copy should have around 20.5 pounds and could be almost 9.6 years old.
Anglers commonly wonder, whether folks simply guess about 40- or 50-pound catches. The most reliable way is to use exactly checked digital scales. One angler weighed a flathead catfish at 43 inches and 38.5 pounds, while another found 46 inches and 40 pounds.
One commonly weighs fish in a net without the string and later takes off for the final Weight.
In some rivers the channel catfish usually tops at only 2.5 pounds, probably because of the kind of bait. In the tidal Potomac and James happens a broader range of 7 to almost 20 pounds. Two to four pound channel catfishes work well for food.
On a fly rod you can find 5-pound catfishes, and the biggest caught like this by one angler reached 8 pounds. Other did well with a 7-pound, three-ounce catfish on fly. Rods of 5 to 7Weight operate well for catfishes up to around 10 pounds in calm waters.
