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Fishing Tips: Barometric Pressure Tracking

Understanding and tracking barometric pressure is a critical factor for successful fishing. Barometric pressure is essentially the weight of the air pressing down on the Earth, and changes in this pressure directly influence fish behavior.

The Barometer and Fish Behavior

A barometer measures atmospheric pressure. For fishermen, the crucial element is not the current reading, but the change in the reading. Fish, like most animals, have air or gas-filled internal organs (swim bladder) that are sensitive to changes in external pressure.


High Pressure (Sunny and Stable Weather)

When pressure is high (above 30.50 inHg and rising), the air is heavy. This pushes down on the water, causing the fish's swim bladder to contract. Fish must move deeper to equalize the pressure, or they become less active and less willing to feed.

Pressure Status

Fish Behavior

Recommended Action

Rising High

Inactive, seek deeper water

Use slower presentations, fish deep structures

Stable High

Low activity, lethargic

Focus on structure, use smaller baits

Low Pressure (Stormy and Unstable Weather)


When pressure is low (below 29.50 inHg and falling), the air is light. This causes the fish's swim bladder to expand, making them feel uncomfortable. The period just before a storm hits, when the pressure is dropping quickly, is often the best time to fish. The period after the storm, when pressure is low and stable, can be poor.

Pressure Status

Fish Behavior

Recommended Action

Falling Low (Pre-Front)

Very active, aggressive feeding

Fast presentations, topwater or shallow baits

Stable Low (Post-Front)

Inactive, seek cover

Fish heavy cover, use scent/attractants

The "Sweet Spot"

The absolute best time to fish is often when the barometric pressure is steady or slowly rising after a period of low pressure. Fish are adjusting to the new, stable conditions and begin to feed actively as the weather stabilizes. This usually happens in the hours immediately following a passing storm front.


Tracking and Application

Modern weather apps and specialized fishing apps often provide current barometric pressure readings and trends.

  1. Monitor the Trend: Pay more attention to the direction of the pressure (rising, falling, or stable) than the exact number.
  2. Plan Around the Shift: Schedule your prime fishing hours for the 12-24 hour window just before a major pressure shift (pre-front) or immediately after a storm (post-front stabilization).
  3. Adjust Depth and Retrieve:
    • High Pressure: Fish deep, slow, and methodical.
    • Low Pressure (Active): Fish shallow, fast, and aggressive.
    • Low Pressure (Inactive): Fish heavy cover, very slow.


Remember that barometric pressure is just one variable. Water temperature, oxygen levels, and time of day are also important factors that influence a fish's willingness to bite. 

Essential Fishing Knots and Rigs


Outdoorsmen