Early Wet Season Bite: Sailfish, Roosters, and Tuna Along Costa Rica's Pacific Coast
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Pacific Costa Rica fishing report.
Out here from Guanacaste down past Quepos and on to Golfito, we’re sitting on a classic early wet‑season pattern: warm water, light variable winds inshore early, and those afternoon thunderstorms building over the mountains. Offshore seas are running moderate, generally 2–5 feet most days with a bit more bump in the afternoons when the breeze picks up.
Along most of the Pacific coast, sunrise is right around 5:20 a.m. and sunset near 6:00 p.m. First light is when you want to be either making your run offshore or sliding onto those inshore reefs and river mouths. Tides are big this time of year; expect one strong high and one strong low, with the best inshore bite often kicking around the last couple hours of the incoming and the first of the outgoing, especially near estuaries like the Río Grande de Tárcoles, the Sierpe, and the Tempisque systems.
Offshore, the bluewater bite has been good out of Los Sueños, Quepos, and Herradura. Boats have been reporting consistent **sailfish** releases, scattered **blue marlin**, plus solid numbers of **yellowfin tuna** mixed with spinner dolphins and decent **mahi‑mahi** around logs and trash lines. Recently, local captains have been boating tuna in the 40–80 pound range, with a few larger models in the spread. Sailfish numbers aren’t peak season thick, but a boat working hard can still see several shots in a day, and marlin are popping up enough to keep everyone honest.
Best offshore offerings right now:
- For sails and marlin: medium ballyhoo on **pink-and-white** or **blue-and-white** skirts, Iland‑style lures, and darker plugs when the clouds stack up.
- For tuna: **live sardines**, **chunked bonito**, and poppers or stickbaits in **blue, bone, and dorado patterns**. When the sun is high and they’re deeper, switching to vertical jigs in 80–200 grams can turn the marks you see on sonar into bent rods.
Inshore has been the star of the show on many days. On rocky points, islands, and reef edges, anglers are seeing solid **roosterfish**, **cubera snapper**, **amberjack**, and a mix of smaller snappers and groupers. Roosters in the 20–40 pound class are not unusual when the current is right and there’s bait around. Big cuberas are still lurking tight to structure; plenty of stories of “the one that smoked me into the rocks.”
Top inshore baits and lures:
- **Live baits**: goggle‑eyes, blue runners, and sardines slow‑trolled for roosters and cubera.
- **Lures**: stickbaits and poppers in **bone, mullet, and sardine colors**, plus heavy bucktail jigs tipped with a strip of bait worked along the bottom. Early and late in the day, surface plugs ripped over shallow reefs can bring explosive strikes from roosters and jacks.
A couple local hot spots to keep on your radar:
- **Gulf of Papagayo & Bat Islands (Islas Murciélago)** in the north: Great mix of roosters, big jacks, amberjack, and seasonal wahoo around the deeper points and humps. Work the current lines and any bait you see pushed up on the edges of structure. Get there early before the wind gets teeth.
- **Quepos & Manuel Antonio area**: Offshore, the drop‑off outside Quepos is still producing tuna, sails, and the occasional marlin. Inshore, the points and islands just south of Quepos—like around Isla Mogote and the rocky stretches toward Dominical—are ideal for roosters and snapper when the tide is moving.
Farther south toward **Drake Bay and the Osa Peninsula**, the inshore fishery remains world‑class. River mouths dumping color lines into green ocean water are prime spots to cast medium diving plugs and jigs for snook, snapper, and jacks. When the afternoon storms roll in, be mindful of debris washing out—great for mahi offshore, but tricky for navigation.
Overall fish activity has been best at first light and again late afternoon as the heat backs off and the currents shift. Midday can still produce, especially offshore for tuna, but downsizing leaders and baits and working deeper often becomes necessary when the sun is straight overhead.
That’s the word from the Pacific side of Costa Rica. Line up your tides, hit those dawn hours, bring a mix of live bait
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