DiscoverGulf of Mexico, Texas Fishing Report TodayLate October Texas Gulf Bite - Bulls, Trout, and Offshore Monsters
Late October Texas Gulf Bite - Bulls, Trout, and Offshore Monsters

Late October Texas Gulf Bite - Bulls, Trout, and Offshore Monsters

Update: 2025-10-29
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Artificial Lure here with your October 29th, 2025 Texas Gulf Coast fishing update. If you’re headed out today from Galveston down to Port Aransas, you’re looking at classic late-October conditions—cooler water, bait on the move, and a solid fall bite all across the Gulf.

Sunrise hit at about 7:33 this morning, with sunset coming up at 6:35 tonight according to Lone Star Outdoor News. Tides are moderate, sloping down through the day—Galveston Bay sees a high just before sunrise and a low moving in later tonight. That means your best windows for action are around first light and late afternoon, as the water moves[2][7][1].

Weather-wise, you’ll feel a chill on the early drift, but expect it to warm quickly. A gentle north wind after the last front has left the bays calm and glassy early, with a light chop expected offshore by mid-morning. Birds are busting over mullet schools, so keep your eyes peeled for surface activity, especially near the mouths of bayous and along the beachfront[6].

Fish are cooperating with the season. Inshore, the headline is bull reds—they’re thick along the surf and jetties. East Beach and the Galveston jetties are prime right now. Anglers fishing chunks of fresh mullet in the first gut are reporting big numbers, with lots of oversize fish released along with some solid slot reds[6]. Speckled trout are working shell and drains at daybreak. Early risers around Offatts Bayou and the Campbell Bayou mouth saw steady trout action tossing glow/chartreuse soft plastics and live shrimp under popping corks, especially if you slid over to leeward points once the sun warmed up[6][3].

Flounder are in pre-run mode—stacked at marsh drains, ferry landings, and along the ICW edges. Live mud minnows on a Carolina rig or slow-rolled soft plastics are getting curb-checked by flatties, especially on a falling tide. Don’t be afraid to poke around smaller bayous like Greens or Beacon for less pressured fish[6].

Deep sea? It’s been a fire run this week out of Port Aransas. Boats bottom dropping with cut bait are hauling in red snapper, lane snapper, steady black drum, and some quality grouper. King mackerel are flashing through the bluewater and responding to trolled ribbonfish and live cigar minnows—try your luck along weedlines or near the rigs. Tuna are mostly further out, with a smattering of blackfin showing up on chunked sardines, and the rumor mill’s swirling about a few late-season wahoo hitting high-speed trolled lures in the outer breaks[5].

Top baits and lures:
- Bull reds: Fresh mullet, cut menhaden, or blue crab on the bottom.
- Trout: Glow or chartreuse paddle tails, live shrimp under corks, topwaters just before sunup.
- Flounder: Live mud minnows, gulp swimming mullet, white curly tails on a jighead.
- Spanish mackerel in the surf: Silver spoons and small swimbaits[6].
- Snapper and grouper offshore: Cut squid, sardine, or fresh tuna chunks.
- Kings and wahoo: Trolled ribbonfish, deep-diving plugs, or live blue runners[5].

Hot spots you should try: East Beach jetties for bull reds at sunrise, and the West Bay shell for specks on a moving tide. If you’re after flounder, target the Texas City Dike or the drains at Offatts after the morning rush. For a mixed surf bag, hit Bermuda Beach just after first light when the water turns green[6].

That’s your boots-on-the-ground Texas coastal report—bull reds tugging drag, trout slicking up the drains, flounder lining out for their fall migration, and offshore boats loaded with a box full of snapper. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for the latest Texas Gulf fishing scoop.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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Late October Texas Gulf Bite - Bulls, Trout, and Offshore Monsters

Late October Texas Gulf Bite - Bulls, Trout, and Offshore Monsters

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