California has more fishable water than most anglers realize. With 840 miles of coastline, the Sierra Nevada mountain range, the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, and thousands of lakes from the Mexican border to the Oregon line, this state covers virtually every type of fishing that exists in North America. You can catch striped bass in the Delta in the morning and drive to the Sierra foothills to chase wild trout by afternoon. The Pacific coast delivers world-class rock fishing, halibut, yellowtail, and trophy salmon runs. Add in legendary bass lakes like Clear Lake and the California Delta, and you've got a fishing state that rivals any in the country despite its reputation for everything else.
Fishing License in California
You need a valid sport fishing license to fish in California if you're 16 or older. Licenses are issued by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW). Buy online at wildlife.ca.gov, at sporting goods stores, or at most bait shops.
| License Type | Cost | Valid For |
|---|---|---|
| Resident Annual | $56.27 | Calendar year |
| Non-Resident Annual | $148.49 | Calendar year |
| 1-Day License | $18.13 | 1 day |
| 2-Day License | $29.42 | 2 consecutive days |
| 10-Day Non-Resident | $56.27 | 10 days |
| Youth (Under 16) | Free | N/A |
| Ocean Enhancement Stamp | $5.74 | Calendar year |
| Steelhead Report Card | $8.38 | Calendar year |
Age exemptions: Anglers under 16 do not need a fishing license in California. There are no blanket senior exemptions, but reduced-fee licenses are available for low-income seniors and disabled veterans.
Special permits: A Steelhead Report Card is required if targeting steelhead trout. An Ocean Enhancement Stamp is needed for ocean fishing south of Point Arguello. Second rod stamps allow using two rods in inland waters. Abalone cards are required for abalone diving in season.
Buy your license or check current fees on the California Department of Fish and Wildlife website.
Top 10 Fishing Spots in California
From the Pacific Ocean to the High Sierra, California's fishing diversity is unmatched. These ten spots represent the best the state has to offer across all water types.
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Download Free GuidePopular Fish Species in California
California supports an incredible range of species from cold mountain trout to tropical ocean gamefish. Regulations are complex and vary by water body.
| Species | Season | Size Limit | Bag Limit | Best Technique |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Largemouth Bass | Year-round | 12" (most waters) | 5/day | Senkos, swimbaits, jigs |
| Rainbow Trout | Varies by water | None (most put-and-take) | 5/day | PowerBait, spinners, flies |
| Striped Bass | Year-round | 18" | 2/day | Swimbaits, live bait, trolling |
| Chinook Salmon | Jul - Dec (varies) | 24" | 2/day | Trolling, back-bouncing roe |
| Steelhead | Nov - Mar | 16" (hatchery only) | 2/day | Fly fishing, drift fishing |
| Yellowtail | Year-round | 24" | 10/day | Iron jigs, live bait, surface irons |
| California Halibut | May - Oct | 22" | 5/day | Live bait, drift fishing |
| Brown Trout | Varies by water | Varies | 5/day (combined) | Streamers, Rapalas, crawfish |
Seasonal Fishing Calendar
California's size and climate diversity mean something is always biting somewhere in the state. Plan by region and species for best results.
| Species | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Largemouth Bass | Good | Peak | Peak | Peak | Peak | Good | Good | - | Good | Good | - | - |
| Rainbow Trout | - | - | Good | Peak | Peak | Peak | Good | Good | Good | Peak | Good | - |
| Striped Bass | - | - | Good | Peak | Peak | Good | - | - | Good | Peak | Peak | Good |
| Chinook Salmon | - | - | - | - | - | Good | Peak | Peak | Peak | Good | - | - |
| Steelhead | Peak | Peak | Good | - | - | - | - | - | Good | Good | Peak | Peak |
| Yellowtail | - | - | - | Good | Peak | Peak | Peak | Peak | Good | Good | - | - |
Fishing Regulations in California
California has some of the most complex fishing regulations in the country. The CDFW regulation booklet is thick - and you need to read the section for each specific water you plan to fish.
- General trout season: Most inland trout waters have a general season from the last Saturday in April through November 15. Year-round waters exist but have different rules.
- Barbless hooks: Required in many trout and steelhead waters. Check before you go.
- Wild steelhead: Must be released in most rivers. Only hatchery steelhead (adipose fin clipped) can be kept.
- Marine Protected Areas: California has an extensive network of MPAs along the coast where fishing is restricted or prohibited. Know the boundaries.
- Live bait restrictions: Many trout waters prohibit live bait or restrict it to certain species. Live minnow use is banned in most mountain waters.
- Report cards: Steelhead Report Cards are required and must be returned to CDFW by January 31 each year, even if you didn't fish.
Always carry your current regulations booklet. Download the official PDF from the View official California fishing regulations.
Tips for Fishing in California
Fish the Delta tides for stripers
The Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta is a tidal fishery, and the tides dictate everything. Outgoing tides pull baitfish out of the sloughs and past waiting stripers. The last two hours of outgoing tide and first hour of incoming is when the bite fires. Run a tide chart alongside your fishing plan and you'll catch three times more fish.
Hit the Eastern Sierra early in the season
The Eastern Sierra trout opener in late April is a California tradition. Lakes like Crowley, Convict, and the Owens River are freshly stocked and eager fish are everywhere. Get there on opening weekend if you can handle the crowds, or wait one week for solitude with nearly the same catch rates. Pack layers - April mornings at 7,000 feet are cold.
Target bass at Clear Lake in February-March
While most of California's bass waters are cold and slow in winter, Clear Lake's geothermal springs keep water temperatures warmer. Bass start their pre-spawn movement in February here, weeks ahead of other lakes. Fish the warming north shore flats with jerkbaits and lipless crankbaits. You can have 20-fish days before anyone else in the state is catching bass.
Don't miss the fall yellowtail bite in SoCal
September and October bring the best yellowtail fishing of the year to Southern California's kelp beds and islands. Warm water pushes forage fish close to shore, and yellowtail follow in aggressive packs. Surface iron is the classic technique - casting heavy metal jigs and winding fast. Half-day boats out of San Diego and Long Beach run daily during the fall run.
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