Mozambique Coast Early Winter: Tuna, Couta, and Kingfish on the Rise
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Mozambique coast fishing report.
Along the main stretch from Maputo Bay up through Inhambane and Vilankulo, we’ve had a classic early‑winter pattern: cooler, stable air, light to moderate south‑easterlies in the morning, switching more easterly and picking up after lunch. Skies have been mostly clear with a bit of coastal haze. Seas have run a bit lumpy in the afternoon wind, but mornings have been decent for small craft.
Tides along this coast today have been on a **mid‑range cycle**, with a decent pre‑dawn low sliding into a rising tide through the morning, then a late‑afternoon high pushing good water up onto the reefs and sandbanks. That incoming tide has been the switch for most of the better bites. Sunrise came just after 5:30 local, with sunset just before 17:00, giving a tight, productive low‑light window at both ends of the day.
Offshore, the bluewater guys out of **Vilankulo** and **Inhambane** have reported **yellowfin tuna** in fair numbers, with a few dorado and the odd wahoo still hanging on the cleaner current edges. The tuna have been smashing small feathers and cedar‑plug style lures trolled at medium speed, especially in darker colours early, then switching to green/black and pink/white once the sun got higher. Live‑baited mozzies and small mackerel slow‑trolled around bait balls have also turned fish.
On the reefs inside 40 metres, **king mackerel (couta)** have been steady rather than wild, but the better fish have come right on the turn of the tide. Dead‑drifting or slow‑trolling halfbeaks and walla‑walla, rigged with short wire and kept close to the surface, has outfished most metal. A few amberjack and jobfish have come to jigs dropped tight on structure; 80–120 g knife jigs in blue or glow have been the ticket.
Inshore, along the beaches near **Ponta do Ouro**, **Costa do Sol**, and the sandbanks around **Maxixe**, the **spinning crowd** has found action with kingfish, queenfish, and some solid springer. Early‑morning working birds have given away shoals of bait, and predators have been right underneath. Small to medium spoons, bucktail jigs, and white soft plastics have been producing, especially when burned fast on the surface. A few big GTs have been reported from the rocks and ledges on heavy tackle, mostly taken on big stickbaits and poppers in natural baitfish colours.
For the bait anglers, the surf has turned up **grunter, stumpnose, and smaller kob** on the inside gutters. Fresh prawns, chokka strips, and sardine fillets have outfished frozen stuff. Light traces with just enough lead to hold bottom have made the difference in the softer sand pockets. Night sessions into the first part of the flood have been worth the effort for those kob.
If you’re planning a mission, two hotspots to keep on your radar:
- **Barra and Tofo area** near Inhambane: productive reefs in easy range, with mixed bags of couta, tuna, and reef fish. Work the morning push and be off the water before the afternoon chop if you’re in a smaller boat.
- **Bazaruto / Two Mile Reef off Vilankulo**: when the current lines up, it’s a playground. Troll the drop‑offs at first light, then move inshore to spin the sandbanks for kingfish once the sun climbs.
Best overall choices right now: small to mid‑size trolling lures for tuna and dorado, properly presented dead baits for couta, and white or pearl soft plastics plus metal spoons for the inshore gamefish. Keep your wire short and discreet, and match your lure size to the small bait that’s been thick along the coast.
That’s your Mozambique coast fishing update from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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