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Species Guide · Largemouth

Largemouth Bass on Lake Mead: Tactics for 2026

Largemouth bass fishing on Lake Mead — where they live, what they eat, and the seasonal patterns that work in 2026.

Lake Mead's largemouth fishery gets less press than its stripers, but the fishery is genuinely excellent — clear water, varied structure, and a population that produces 4-pound fish routinely and 6-pound fish on memorable days. The biggest fish come from the Overton Arm and the back ends of coves, particularly through the spring spawn window.

Where Mead largemouth live

  • Long rocky points dropping into 20–35 ft.
  • Submerged roadbeds — Mead flooded existing infrastructure when it filled, and old roads are magnetic structure.
  • Offshore brushpiles in 20–40 ft — the offshore largemouth program.
  • Back ends of coves and side canyons, especially around emerging vegetation in spring.

Seasonal pattern

Pre-spawn (February–March)

Largemouth stage on the points adjacent to spawning flats. A jerkbait worked over 12–18 ft is the staple presentation. Crawfish patterns on football jigs work the rocks.

Spawn (March–May)

Sight-fishing season starts in the warmer northern coves (Overton) in March and works its way south through the colder basins by May. Soft jerkbaits, lizards on a 3/16-oz weight, and tube jigs all work for bedding fish.

Post-spawn (May–June)

Recovery period. The fish move slightly off the beds and stage on the first drop. A weightless Senko, a wacky-rigged worm, and shallow crankbaits earn their keep.

Summer (June–September)

The deeper structure program. Football jigs in 18–35 ft on rockpiles and roadbeds. Drop-shot with a 4-inch finesse worm on the channel ledges.

Fall (October–November)

Feeding pattern. Crankbaits, vibrating jigs, and bigger swimbaits. Largemouth will follow shad onto the points all the way through November.

Winter (December–February)

Slow but steady. Drop-shot in 25–40 ft is the most consistent program. Slow-rolled blade baits work on the deeper structure.

Tackle

  • 7'0" medium-heavy casting rod with 14-lb fluorocarbon for general worm/jig work.
  • 7'0" medium-heavy spinning rod with 10-lb braid + 8-lb fluoro leader for finesse.
  • 7'6" heavy casting rod with 17-lb fluoro for larger jigs and Carolina rigs.

Frequently asked questions

What's the best month for largemouth on Lake Mead?

April. The water has warmed enough for the spawn to be in full swing across most of the lake, the weather is mild, and quality fish move shallow.

Can I sight-fish for largemouth on Mead?

Yes — Mead's clear water makes spring sight-fishing genuinely productive, particularly in the Overton Arm. Polarized sunglasses are mandatory.

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