St. Johns River Bass Fishing Guides
Florida's longest river — a 310-mile system of bass, bream, and famous wintertime speck runs through grass, hyacinth, and spring-fed creeks.
About the water
Bass fishing St. Johns River
The St. Johns River is Florida's longest river and one of its most diverse fisheries. Largemouth bass relate to grass edges, hyacinth mats, and spring-fed creek mouths up and down the system, while the river's legendary crappie (speck) runs draw anglers from across the Southeast every winter.
From November through March, drift-and-troll speck trips fill coolers; come spring, the bass fishing peaks as fish push shallow to spawn along the grass. Guides working out of DeLand, Astor, and Welaka read the river's flow and the moon to put you on the right bite.
Add in bluegill and shellcracker on the bream beds and the St. Johns is a true year-round, something-always-biting destination — perfect for families and serious anglers alike.
2 verified guides
St. Johns River guides taking bookings
Transparent all-in pricing, license- and insurance-checked captains, and proof-of-trip reviews.
Capt. Shay Broussard
St. Johns River, FL
River largemouth and famous wintertime specks.
Capt. Cole Whitfield
DeLand, FL
Grass-line bass and spring-creek bream.
Target species
What's biting on St. Johns River
Largemouth Bass
FreshwaterFlorida's headline freshwater target — the state-record fishery for trophy largemouth, from a kid's first bass to a personal-best double-digit.
Largemouth Bass trips →
Crappie
FreshwaterAlso called specks — cool-month panfish that school up thick around brush, grass, and river bends, filling coolers on drift-and-troll trips.
Crappie trips →
Bluegill
FreshwaterFamily-friendly bream action with simple tackle and steady bites — perfect for kids and a relaxing half-day on the bed.
Bluegill trips →
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