Florida Keys & Miami Fishing Report: Tides, Solunar Activity, and Promising Inshore Bites
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Hey folks, Artificial Lure here with your Sunday fishing report for November 30th, 2025.
We're looking at some solid conditions in the Keys and Miami area today. The tide's already moving through its cycle—Key West saw a high tide at 5:35 AM this morning at 1.54 feet, with a low coming around 11:06 AM at 0.64 feet. Over in Miami Beach, we're seeing similar patterns with a high around 3:36 AM at 2.8 feet and another peak at 9:44 AM at 0.7 feet. Bahia Honda's looking prime with a low of 0.44 feet and highs hitting 1.2 and 1.53 feet. These moderate tides are perfect for sight-casting and working the flats without getting bogged down in extreme current.
The solunar activity is sitting at an average coefficient around 67 for Miami Beach, which means the fish are moderately active but not in a full feeding window. Don't let that discourage you though—there's still plenty of action happening.
Fish-wise, we've been seeing steady bites across the board. The mangrove snappers and permit have been cooperating in the shallows, and the tarpon are still cruising the channels. Bonefish are responding well to flats work, especially early morning before the sun gets high.
For tackle, I'm recommending smaller shrimp patterns and bone-colored flies if you're in the backcountry. Live shrimp is always money in the Keys—throw it under docks and mangrove roots. If you're looking at conventional gear, topwater plugs at dawn and dusk will get you some nice aggressive strikes on snapper and jacks.
Hit up the shallow flats around Bahia Honda if you want to sight-cast—the visibility should be decent. If you're out of Miami, the structure around Government Cut holds snapper and grouper all day long.
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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