Good morning anglers, it’s Artificial Lure bringing you your Lake Okeechobee fishing report for October 20th, 2025. The water’s waking up with the first cool breaths of fall here in southern Florida. We’re seeing prime conditions this week, courtesy of a cold front pushing down. Overnight lows dipped into the upper 60s, while daytime highs are hanging in the upper 70s to low 80s. Humidity’s been mild, and light northeast winds are rippling the surface just enough to get those bass active.
Sunrise hit at 7:23 AM, and we’re looking at sunset around 6:56 PM. It’s a long day to work the water and chase those big Okeechobee largemouth. The sky’s partly cloudy, with good visibility and only a chance of patchy fog at dawn. Water clarity’s better on the east side, but watch for minor staining further north.
Tidal movement isn’t a big factor here since Okeechobee’s not tidal, but the lake level’s hovering right near 15.8 feet, following recent rains. That means plenty of submerged cover—the hydrilla, sawgrass beds, and peppergrass are prime holding spots.
Bass bite’s been firing as we transition into cooler mornings. Local guides are reporting catches up to 8 pounds, with several boats pulling in dozen-plus fish before lunch. Numbers are solid for smaller schoolies, and some impressive ones are coming out of the deeper weed lines. Most productive yesterday were white and chartreuse spinnerbaits, soft plastic swimbaits rigged weedless, and old-school black/blue jigs pitched to thick mats. Slow-rolling a gold-colored lipless crankbait along the outside grass edge pulled in some surprise slabs too.
Live wild shiners are still the local favorite—if you get your hands on them, drift along the outside edges near Uncle Joe’s Cut and Observation Shoal. Early-morning topwater action’s been strong with frogs and walk-the-dog style poppers, especially near Harney Pond and Eagle Bay. For crappie, anglers dropping minnows and beetle spins around Rim Canal and the Tin House Cove area have found cooperative slabs, with good buckets filled before 10 AM.
This weekend, the bluegill and shellcracker bite has slacked a little, but patient folks with red worms and crickets fishing near the rim picked up enough for a solid fish fry. Catfish are showing near the mouths of canals—using cut bait after sunset pays off. A handful of reports have come in about pickerel chewing up silver spoons in open water, just off the south ends of the shoals.
If you’re looking for a hot spot, two of the best bets right now are Pelican Bay and the Monkey Box—both are seeing heavy largemouth traffic. These areas are holding textbook structure: thick grass, mod water movement, and plenty of baitfish. Observation Shoal’s worth a look too, especially at daybreak with soft plastics or buzzbaits.
Lake Okeechobee’s classic autumn patterns are lining up—early morning and late afternoon are your best windows, try fishing slow and methodical in heavier cover once that sun gets high. If tournament anglers are listening, current best weights are coming with the slower presentations and persistent casting.
To recap, the bite is hot as the weather cools, best lure choices are spinnerbaits (white/chartreuse), weedless swimbaits, soft plastics in June bug and watermelon red, topwaters at sunrise, and of course wild shiners can’t be beat. For panfish, stick to live bait on light tackle near the canal mouths and shady banks.
Thanks for tuning in to your Okeechobee report—tight lines to all who hit the water today! Don’t forget to subscribe for tomorrow’s update and keep your tackle sharp. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
Great deals on fishing gear
https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI