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Lake Comparison · 2026

Lake Mead vs Lake Powell vs Lake Havasu: Which Should You Fish in 2026?

Three reservoirs, three personalities. Striper vs smallmouth vs largemouth — and which one fishes best at the worst time of year.

By Editorial TeamPublished April 5, 2026Updated May 14, 202611 min read
Lake Mead, Arizona — wide-angle desert reservoir comparison shot.
Lake Mead, Arizona — wide-angle desert reservoir comparison shot.

Three reservoirs along the Lower Colorado, all within a four-hour drive of Las Vegas, all with reputations as great bass fisheries. But they fish differently — sometimes radically — and the right lake to drive to depends on the species you're after, the time of year, and what kind of trip you're looking for. This is the editorial team's side-by-side comparison of Lake Mead, Lake Powell and Lake Havasu, written for anglers planning their 2026 calendar.

The short answer

  • Lake Mead — best for mixed-species days (largemouth, smallmouth, stripers all in the same trip), best for striper boil action, easiest access from Las Vegas.
  • Lake Powell — best scenery in the country, best smallmouth fishing of the three, best for multi-day trips with houseboats.
  • Lake Havasu — most underrated, biggest largemouth potential, hottest summer fishing of the three (in both senses).
Side-by-side
FeatureLake MeadNV/AZLake PowellUT/AZLake HavasuAZ/CA
Surface area (full pool)247 sq mi254 sq mi30 sq mi
Shoreline (full pool)759 mi1,960 mi450 mi
Length112 mi186 mi30 mi
Primary speciesStriper, LMB, SMB, catfishSMB, LMB, striper, walleyeLMB, SMB, striper
Best speciesStriped bassSmallmouth bassLargemouth bass
Drive time from Las Vegas30–45 min4 hr 30 min2 hr 45 min
Crowd levelHigh (esp. weekends)MediumMedium
Scenic valueHighHighestMedium

Lake Mead in depth

America's largest reservoir by volume, the closest serious bass fishery to Las Vegas, and the most consistent producer of mixed bag days in the Southwest. Mead's defining feature is variety — three bass species, big catfish, seasonal walleye — and you can cover all of them in a single 8-hour trip if the conditions cooperate.

What Mead does best

  • Striper boils. Mead is the boil capital of the inland West. Summer mornings out of Hemenway are a postcard.
  • Mixed-species days. Catch a striper, a largemouth and a smallmouth in the same trip — easily.
  • Weekday access. 35 minutes from the Vegas Strip. You can fly in, fish the morning, fly out the same evening.
  • Year-round fishing. Even January produces fish.

What Mead doesn't do as well

  • Trophy largemouth. 5-pounders are realistic; 8-pounders are rare. For DD-class fish, drive to Havasu.
  • Solitude. Weekend launches at Hemenway are crowded. Plan to be on the water by 5:30 a.m. or wait until after 10.

Full guide: Lake Mead Bass Fishing.

Lake Powell in depth

Lake Powell is what would happen if you took Lake Mead, doubled its shoreline, dropped it into a Mars rover photo, and added the best smallmouth bass fishing in the Southwest. It is also the longest drive of the three from Las Vegas — most anglers visit for multi-day trips, often with a houseboat as a base.

What Powell does best

  • Smallmouth bass. Genuinely outstanding. Powell smallmouth grow big, fish hard, and stack on the rocky points and submerged structure that defines this lake.
  • Scenery. Indefensibly good. Even non-anglers understand why people drive eight hours each way.
  • Houseboat trips. The lake's scale and the quality of the houseboat operations make multi-day trips uniquely workable.
  • Walleye. Powell holds a real walleye population that fishes well on jigs and rip-rapped points.

What Powell doesn't do as well

  • Day trips from Vegas. 4–5 hours each way. Not a day trip.
  • Striper boils. Powell does have stripers, but the boil culture and consistency of Mead aren't replicated.
  • Beginner-friendly navigation. The lake is enormous and full of canyon arms that look identical. Bring charts.

Lake Havasu in depth

Havasu is the smallest and warmest of the three. It's also the most underrated. The lake holds genuinely big largemouth, a quality smallmouth fishery, and a striper population that gets overlooked because of Mead's reputation. It's a 2 hr 45 min drive from Las Vegas — comfortably a long day trip or a one-night weekend.

What Havasu does best

  • Big largemouth. Havasu is the trophy bass destination of the three. The London Bridge stretch and the backwaters above it have produced legitimate double-digit fish.
  • Vegetation. Havasu has aquatic grass and reed structure that Mead and Powell mostly don't. If you love flipping and pitching cover, this is the lake.
  • Year-round access. Havasu rarely freezes; the launch ramps stay open.

What Havasu doesn't do as well

  • Striper boils. Stripers are present but don't define the fishery the way they do Mead.
  • Summer comfort. Havasu is the hottest of the three. July and August surface temps push 90°F. Plan your day around the heat.

Which one should you fish in 2026?

If you have one weekend

Mead. Closest to Vegas, easiest to scout, best variety. A weekend at Hemenway will produce a real fishing trip for a first-timer.

If you have a long weekend (3 days)

Havasu. Far enough to feel like a trip, close enough to maximise water time. The trophy largemouth potential is a great reason to make the drive.

If you have a full week

Powell. The lake rewards the time investment. Rent a houseboat, run far from the launch, and you'll see structure most anglers never get to.

If you only love smallmouth

Powell. Easily the best smallmouth fishing of the three.

If you only love stripers

Mead. The boil culture is unique to this lake.

If you only love largemouth

Havasu. Vegetation, structure, and a real shot at a 9-pound fish.

Trip-planning notes

  • Licensing. Each lake straddles a state border (Mead: NV/AZ; Powell: UT/AZ; Havasu: AZ/CA). Reciprocal arrangements vary. Always confirm current rules with the relevant state agencies before launching.
  • Mussel inspections. All three lakes require quagga/zebra mussel inspection on launch. Allow time.
  • Heat planning. All three are desert reservoirs. Bring more water than you think; sunscreen up; plan an afternoon shade break.
  • Electronics. All three lakes are fish finder fisheries. The recommendations in our 2026 fish finder review apply identically to all three lakes.

Frequently asked questions

Which lake has the best fishing in 2026?

Depends on the species. For striper boils and mixed-bag variety, Mead. For trophy largemouth, Havasu. For smallmouth and scenery, Powell. None of the three is "better" in the abstract — they fish differently.

Can I fish all three on a single multi-day trip?

Geographically possible (Mead → Havasu → Powell is a long but workable circuit), but practically a stretch. The driving time eats the fishing time. Pick one and fish it well, or pick two and accept that you'll fish each one less.

Which is the best beginner lake?

Mead. Closest to Vegas, easiest navigation, most consistent action across species, lots of operator and guide knowledge if you need help. Havasu is a strong second.

Are these lakes affected by drought conditions in 2026?

Yes — all three Lower Colorado reservoirs sit below their historical full-pool elevations. The fishing remains good (lower water concentrates fish on deeper structure), but launch ramp accessibility, marina operations and shoreline access shift. Always check current conditions before driving.

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