Artificial Lure here with your Lake Lanier fishing report for Monday, November 3, 2025.
The fall bite is on, and Lake Lanier has been serving up some classic north Georgia action. Weather this morning started off cool and damp, with temps in the upper 50s and light southeast winds at 4 to 6 knots, according to PredictWind. Cloud cover has been steady, and that’ll keep the fish a little more willing to roam out from cover today. Expect the high to rise to around 65°F before tapering off this evening—solid jacket weather for your morning run.
Sunrise hit just after 7:55 AM and sunset will roll in about 6:45 PM, giving you plenty of daylight to chase the bite. The moon is on a first-quarter phase, and FishingReminder shows the major bite windows from 5:43 to 7:43 AM, and then again from 6:02 to 8:02 PM. Midday minor activity runs from about 1:08 to 3:08 PM. Visibility is moderate, so expect that stained-water fall look in the back of the creeks.
Bass anglers have been cleaning up since the start of November. YouTuber DJtheBassmaster just put up a vid showing 90+ fish in two days last week, with steady action on a combination of fluke-style soft plastics and small swimbaits. The key was matching bait balls—find the shad, you'll find spotted bass schooled up right with them, and the occasional striper mixed in.
Downsizing is your friend with the water temp dropping—think 3- to 4-inch white or pearl fluke baits, chrome or shad-patterned jerkbaits, and quarter-ounce underspins. A 3/8 oz jig in green pumpkin is also a Lanier staple this time of year, pitched around brush piles and rocky points at 15 to 25 feet. Drop shotting a small finesse minnow can't be beat on tough post-front days, either.
Stripers are starting to move up the lake following bait. Early in the morning and toward sundown, they’re blowing up on flat points and creek mouths. Your best bet is to cast white bucktail jigs or toss swimbaits through surface-feeding schools. Live blueback herring are still the go-to live bait and can be slow-trolled on planner boards or free-lined.
Crappie have started to move a little deeper, and some nice stringers are being pulled from docks in 18-22 feet using small jigs tipped with minnows. The backs of Flat Creek and Balus Creek have been producing especially well.
As far as hot spots go, look to the mouth of Flat Creek for mixed bags of spots, stripers, and the occasional largemouth. The humps off Three Sisters Islands continue to hold bait and active fish, especially in the early hours. Also, the points near Port Royale Marina are popular for a reason—shad move in thick and so do the fish.
If you’re new to Lanier, a reminder: Lake Lanier doesn’t see much in the way of tides since it’s a reservoir, so you’ll want to plan around the bite windows and weather more than water fluctuations.
Overall, expect moderate action that can really pop off whenever you locate bait balls. Pattern the shad and stay moving until you see active birds or sonar marks, then make the switch to finesse plastics or jigging spoons if things slow down.
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