Fishing Tide Calculator – Find Your Best Bite Window

🌊 Fishing Tide Calculator

Find your best bite windows based on tide phase, species, and location type

Quick Presets
⚙️ Calculator Inputs
🎣 Your Tide Fishing Analysis
📊 Tidal Cycle Key Facts
12h 25m
Semidiurnal Cycle
±2 hrs
Peak Bite Window
40 ft
Max Spring Tidal Range
0.5–1.5
Ideal Current (mph)
29.5d
Lunar Cycle
1–3 ft
Neap Tide Range
4
Tides Per Day
50 min
Daily Tide Shift
📅 Tide Phase Fishing Activity Guide
Tide Phase Activity Level Best For Technique Bite Score (1-10)
Early Incoming (first 1–2 hrs)Very HighFlats, Estuaries, SurfLive bait, topwater9
Mid Incoming (2–4 hrs)HighAll water typesLures, jigs8
High Slack (0–45 min)ModerateReefs, structuresSlow jigs, finesse5
Early Outgoing (first 1–2 hrs)Very HighInlets, channels, mangrovesSwimbaits, plugs9
Mid Outgoing (2–4 hrs)HighPoints, drop-offsJigs, cut bait7
Low Slack (0–45 min)LowDeep structure onlyBottom rigs3
🐟 Species Tidal Preference Reference
Species Best Tide Phase Preferred Current Typical Weight (lb / kg) Recommended Gear
Striped BassIncoming / OutgoingModerate–Strong5–50 lb / 2.3–22.7 kg15–30 lb line, medium-heavy rod
RedfishOutgoingModerate3–20 lb / 1.4–9 kg12–20 lb line, medium rod
BonefishIncoming (flats flooding)Slow–Moderate2–12 lb / 0.9–5.4 kg8 wt fly, 10–12 lb tippet
SnookOutgoing (around structures)Moderate3–30 lb / 1.4–13.6 kg15–20 lb line, medium-heavy
FlounderOutgoingSlow–Moderate1–8 lb / 0.45–3.6 kg8–15 lb line, light rod
Sea TroutIncoming / High SlackSlow1–6 lb / 0.45–2.7 kg8–12 lb line, light-medium
SalmonIncoming (tidal rivers)Moderate–Strong5–40 lb / 2.3–18 kg15–25 lb line, medium-heavy
BluefishIncoming / OutgoingStrong2–15 lb / 0.9–6.8 kg10–20 lb line, medium rod
🎯 Current Speed vs Technique Matching
Current Speed (mph / km/h) Water Condition Best Technique Sinker / Jig Weight Line Recommendation
< 0.5 mph / 0.8 km/hSlack / MinimalFinesse, drop-shot1/8–1/4 oz (3.5–7 g)6–10 lb mono / fluoro
0.5–1.0 mph / 0.8–1.6 km/hGentle FlowTopwater, swimbaits1/4–1/2 oz (7–14 g)10–15 lb braid/mono
1.0–2.0 mph / 1.6–3.2 km/hIdeal MovingJigs, live bait1/2–1 oz (14–28 g)15–20 lb braid
2.0–3.0 mph / 3.2–4.8 km/hStrong CurrentBottom rigs, heavy jigs1–3 oz (28–85 g)20–30 lb braid
> 3.0 mph / 4.8 km/hVery StrongAnchor & bottom only3–8 oz (85–227 g)30+ lb braid
💡 Tide Fishing Tips
⏱️ The 2-Hour Rule: The most productive bite windows are typically the 1 hour before and 1 hour after any tide change (incoming or outgoing). Plan to be on the water and fishing actively during these windows for maximum success.
🌕 Spring vs. Neap Tides: Spring tides (occurring during full and new moons) produce the strongest current flows and most dramatic water movement—often triggering the most aggressive feeding behavior. Neap tides (quarter moon) produce gentler flows better suited for finesse fishing and species like sea trout.

Mova water is the place where it really happens the main activity during fishing. Here the reason: the tidal flow the baitfish and food move together, and that action attracts the big predators searching food. What about weak tide?

Then everything becomes calm. Fishes feed quietly, naturally, but you observe only visible slowdown away from the main activity.

How Tides Affect Fishing

The lunar and solar pulls on our oceans, with their weight, is what in the start forms the tides. When everything lines up well, their combined forces raise the water higher at the coast, that is the high tide. Every day you have four such tidal changes, with almost six hours between every shift of high to low.

Many fishers insist on fishing during the two hours before the high tide and the two hours after it. That time commonly results in good catch. Or, you can limit yourself to one hour window in front and after every tidal change, that also works well.

Some days the best moment falls fairly between high and low tide. Actually, the place matters more then everything else here.

When the tide arrives, fishes invade the feeding areas, and later they pull back when it drops. Strong tides bring more food from the depth and attract more little fishes to feed. Big difference between high and low tide causes more strong motion in the water, so that day with strong tidal change commonly gives better results than day with weak flow.

In swampy and soggy areas, the low tide pushes the baitfish directly to the waiting predators. The high tide leads the little fishes back to the shallow nests. During the spring, strong Fishing Tide can really strip a lot.

The shallows warm more quickly, and when the warm water starts to move, it is like turning the key for the bite. The fall tides reverse this situation.

The ideal times are the early morning and the dusk, first. Cloudy sky comes second, later the sunny day. Fishes simply do not like to feel stripped.

The phase of the moon also matters. Tidal charts and solar-lunar charts combine everything. Sunrise, sunset, moonrise, moon phase, high and low tides (so that you plan the fishing).

Low tide strips rocks and allows fishers to reach deeper water. Problem is, that crabs work during low tide and can remove your hook without you even noticing. On the other hand, some places really shine when the water sinks for certain species.

Keeping notes about your catches, tides and weather helps to strip patterns soon. Strong winds from the sea during some days can change the usual tidal flow and raise both the high and lowspots more than usual.

Fishing Tide Calculator – Find Your Best Bite Window

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