Florida Porch

Florida fishing

Before the first cast, know the water and the rule.

Florida fishing can be simple once the right question is in front of you: where are you fishing, what are you trying to catch, and are you keeping it?

First answer

Do not fish from memory in Florida.

Last summer's rule may not fit this fish, coast, bridge, lake, or date. Start with FWC, then narrow it to the exact fish and place.

License

Start with the person holding the rod

Fishing can mean more than keeping a fish. Casting, catch-and-release, or helping someone fish can still raise a license question. Check FWC before you assume an exemption covers you.

FWC license check

Water

Saltwater and freshwater are different lanes

A beach, bridge, canal, lake, river, pier, or boat trip can point you toward different rules. If you might fish both saltwater and freshwater, sort that out before you buy.

FWC license FAQs

Species

The fish decides the rule you need

Each species can have its own size, bag, season, gear, and region rule. Look up the fish you plan to keep before it is in the cooler.

Saltwater regulations

Place

The launch, pier, park, or waterbody still matters

A legal fish is only part of the plan. Check access, ramp status, local rules, marine weather, and fish advisories for the exact place you are going.

Boat ramps and access

For shore fishing

A free shoreline license is not a magic blanket.

Florida's resident shoreline-only license is narrow. Visitors, boat-access shore spots, shellfish, special gear, and some targets may need a different license or permit.

For boat trips

Offshore adds weather, water, and gear checks.

Reef fish, private boats, shark rules, state or federal waters, ramp access, and the marine forecast can all matter before you leave the dock.

For dinner

Keeping fish is a second decision.

Once you plan to keep or eat a catch, check the species rule, measure it correctly, know the bag limit, and look for any fish consumption advisory.

Small but important

The cooler is where small mistakes get expensive.

Catch-and-release can still count as fishing. If you cast a line, start by checking whether you need a license.

The species matters more than the story you tell yourself about the spot. If a saltwater species shows up where you did not expect it, check the saltwater rule.

Some targets need extra checks. Snook, lobster, tarpon, blue crab traps, stone crab traps, shore-based shark fishing, and some reef fish each have their own FWC page.

Weather, a ramp closure, red tide, or a local park rule can change the plan. Pick a better spot before the day gets harder.

Official checks

Sources used for this page

Last checked June 29, 2026. Use FWC, Go Outdoors Florida, NWS, DOH, and the local access page that fits your trip before you buy, launch, keep, or eat a fish.

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