Lake Conroe Fishing: Guides, Conditions, Spots & Insider Tips

Lake Conroe Field Planner 2026

Find Fish Faster Without Guessing the Zone, Depth or Conditions

Lake Conroe changes from timbered upper-river water to bridge transitions, developed docks and deep lower-reservoir open water. A productive pattern at one end of the lake can fail completely at the other.

Use this guide to select the right guide, ramp, fishing zone, depth and presentation; understand current lake conditions; follow the 16-inch bass rule; and apply real local tactics without depending on vague “fish are biting” reports.

Current July Snapshot Guide Permit Checks Real Local Patterns Eight Launch Options Bass, Cats, Crappie & Hybrids
Pool reference 201.00 feet
Route decision Bait + structure + depth
Field rule Scan first, fish second
Current condition snapshot

Lake Conroe Conditions: July 14, 2026

Lake elevation: 200.90 feet at midnight on July 14, approximately 0.10 feet below the 201-foot conservation pool. Water Data for Texas listed the reservoir at approximately 98.6% full.

Recent fishing pattern: public local reports from early July described water temperatures reaching the mid-80s, catfish producing the most dependable action and largemouth bass and hybrid striped bass using deeper open-water areas, artificial structures and lighted dock zones.

Important: this is a dated snapshot, not a guarantee. Wind, thunderstorms, releases, runoff and a few hot days can change productive depth quickly.

July 14 level 200.90 ft 0.10 foot below conservation pool
Percent full 98.6% Provisional reservoir data
Summer water Mid-80s Recent local report range
Best recent theme Fish deeper Catfish, hybrids and bass

TPWD report status: statewide weekly fishing reports are currently on hold while TPWD improves its reporting process. Use live elevation, weather history, current local observations and what your sonar or eyes show after launching.

Practical July starting plan: fish docks or points at first light, scan open-water bait during the morning, then move to deeper brush, channel edges, artificial structures or shaded dock ends as surface temperature and boat traffic increase.

Choose your trip

What Kind of Lake Conroe Fishing Trip Are You Planning?

First-Time Guided Trip

Verify guide credentials, boat capacity, included equipment, target species and written weather terms before paying.

Check guide requirements

Bring My Own Boat

Select a ramp by lake zone, current level, boat size, launch surface, fee and navigation risk.

Compare boat ramps

Find Productive Water

Choose upper timber, bridge riprap, lower docks, deep points or open-water bait based on species and season.

Choose a fishing zone

Adjust to Conditions

Use lake level, clarity, recent rain, wind, shade, temperature and bait location instead of copying one report.

Read condition changes
Complete user-intent guide

Everything You Need for Lake Conroe Fishing

Understand the reservoir

Lake Conroe Fishing Profile

Lake feature Verified detail Fishing meaning
Location West Fork of the San Jacinto River in Montgomery and Walker Counties Upper and lower lake conditions can differ substantially.
Surface area 20,118 acres A report from one creek or marina should not be treated as lake-wide information.
Impounded 1973 Original channel edges, timber and developed shoreline all create usable cover.
Conservation pool 201 feet above mean sea level Compare every live level reading with 201 feet.
Typical fluctuation Approximately 1–3 feet Small changes can alter shallow cover, dock depth and ramp usability.
Normal clarity Slight to moderate algal staining Natural colors, vibration and shad profiles often work, but clarity varies by zone.
Aquatic vegetation Generally low density Docks, timber, channel edges, riprap and artificial structures become especially important.
Upper reservoir National-forest shoreline, river channel and standing timber High structure value with greater navigation risk.
Lower reservoir Open water, bulkheads, marinas and boat docks Shade, dock depth, points and open-water bait become major patterns.

TPWD’s latest full survey identified largemouth bass as the most pursued fishery, catfish as the second most pursued group and a growing crappie fishery. Hybrid striped bass provide an additional open-water opportunity supported by stocking.

Correct planning order

Build Your Lake Conroe Trip Step by Step

1

Choose one main species

Bass, catfish, crappie and hybrids require different depths, tackle and zones. A focused trip normally finds fish faster than a trip trying to target everything.

2

Choose guide, personal boat or shore

Use a guide for instruction or efficient location. Use your boat when you understand navigation and launching. Use shore access only after confirming public entry and parking.

3

Choose a lake zone

Upper timber, bridge structure, lower docks and deep open water are different fisheries. Match the zone to the species and current condition.

4

Check lake elevation and trend

Compare the live number with 201 feet, then determine whether the lake is stable, rising or falling. Trend often matters more than a single reading.

5

Review the previous three days of weather

Wind, rain and temperature history explain fish position better than today’s high temperature alone.

6

Confirm the ramp and route

Check ramp status, fee, payment method, gate hours, parking and whether your boat can use it at the current level.

7

Buy the correct Texas license

Most anglers age 17 and older need freshwater privileges. Save proof offline before reaching the marina.

8

Prepare three depth ranges

Start with the reported pattern, but carry a shallower option and a deeper option. Change quickly when bait, clarity or fish marks do not match expectations.

Avoid weak guide bookings

How to Verify and Book a Lake Conroe Fishing Guide

A legitimate paid guide should be able to explain two separate requirements: the applicable TPWD freshwater fishing guide license and the SJRA commercial permit or license for operating a business on Lake Conroe.

TPWD lists the Freshwater Fishing Guide License at $132. SJRA requires commercial businesses to hold proper authorization and submit commercial documentation that includes general liability insurance information and vessel registration details where applicable.

  • Guide’s full name and business name
  • Current TPWD freshwater guide credential
  • Current SJRA commercial authorization
  • General liability insurance confirmation
  • Boat registration and legal passenger capacity
  • Life jackets in every required size
  • Target species and normal fishing method
  • Exact marina, ramp and meeting instructions
  • Trip duration measured dock-to-dock
  • Rods, reels, bait and tackle inclusion
  • Fuel, ramp and parking fee inclusion
  • Fish-cleaning and bagging terms
  • Deposit and customer-cancellation terms
  • Captain weather-cancellation terms
  • Children, senior and mobility accommodations
  • Remaining payment and gratuity method
Bass guide

Ask whether the trip is instructional

Some customers want the guide to locate and rig everything. Others want to learn electronics, dock angles, seasonal movement and lure selection. Confirm the format.

Catfish guide

Ask whether the trip uses baited holes or drifting

The boat position, pace and experience differ. Also confirm whether bait and fish cleaning are included.

Crappie guide

Ask whether the boat uses live minnows, jigs or both

Beginners may prefer live-bait instruction, while experienced anglers may want jigging and electronics practice.

Hybrid guide

Ask about live bait, trolling and vertical jigging

Confirm whether the operator supplies live shad and whether the trip depends on open-water sonar searching.

Do not book from a catch photo alone. Refusal to discuss credentials, no written weather terms, guaranteed limits, unclear meeting points and payment to an unrelated name are warning signs.

Real trip value

Calculate the Complete Guided-Trip Cost

Base guide fee Boat or per-person quote
Licenses Each nonexempt angler
Access costs Ramp, parking and fuel
Fish care Cleaning, ice and cooler
Gratuity Confirm before departure

Best comparison: divide the complete expected total by the number of anglers and dock-to-dock hours. A cheaper headline price may provide less fishing time or exclude bait, cleaning and ramp fees.

Productive patterns, not secret spots

Best Lake Conroe Fishing Zones

Upper reservoir

West Fork Channel and Timber

Targets: bass, catfish and seasonal crappie.

Work channel edges, isolated timber, current breaks and depth transitions. Use snag-resistant presentations and idle in unfamiliar water.

Middle reservoir

FM 1375 and FM 1097 Bridges

Targets: bass, crappie, catfish, white bass and hybrids.

Check riprap, piling shade, current seams and the first channel drop. Keep clear of marked navigation lanes.

Lower reservoir

Docks, Bulkheads and Open Water

Targets: bass, bluegill, crappie, catfish and hybrids.

Fish shade, deeper dock ends, walkways, points, submerged structure and open-water shad schools.

Artificial habitat

Public Reef Structures

Lake Conroe has mapped habitat structures. Approach with sonar, determine the highest part of the structure and present the bait above it rather than burying hooks in the cover.

Dam-area deep water

Hybrids, White Bass and Catfish

Search bait before dropping lines. Remain outside marked restricted areas and do not assume every deep sonar mark is a feeding fish.

Caney Creek arm

Native Vegetation Projects

Vegetation coverage changes. Search for isolated healthy plants and nearby depth instead of relying on an old vegetation map.

Lighted dock edges

Summer Bass and Hybrids

At night or low light, work the outside edge of the light cone where predators can ambush shad. Remain in legal public water and do not tie to private docks.

Real practical field tips

Lake Conroe Insider Tips and Tricks

Use the Three-Cast Dock Test

Make one cast to the darkest corner, one beside the deepest outside post and one beneath or parallel to the walkway. No bite or bait activity after several similar docks means change the dock type or depth.

Fish Shade, Not the Dock Address

The productive side changes as the sun moves. Follow the darkest usable shade instead of repeatedly casting to the same side of every dock.

Keep the Boat on the Deep Side

When fishing docks, riprap or points, hold the boat over deeper water and cast shallow. This keeps the boat from passing directly over fish before the lure reaches them.

Scan First, Fish Second

For hybrids, crappie and deep summer bass, spend a few minutes finding bait and fish marks before lowering a line. Fishing an empty structure wastes more time than scanning.

Keep Crappie Baits Above Brush

Crappie usually rise to feed more readily than they dive into branches. Determine the top of the brush and hold the minnow or jig slightly above it.

Use a Jig Countdown

Drop the jig beside the boat and count until it reaches the known depth. Repeat the same count after every cast to keep the lure above brush instead of hanging inside it.

Move Deeper as Summer Morning Advances

A useful early-summer crappie pattern is to begin around brush in approximately 12–14 feet, then check 16–20-foot brush as light and surface temperature increase.

Use Light Line for Crappie Control

Six- to eight-pound line helps a small jig fall naturally and provides better depth control. Retie after contacting rough brush or dock hardware.

Do Not Overfeed a Catfish Hole

Where lawful, some local anglers attract catfish with cattle cubes. Use modest quantities, allow time for fish to arrive and fish two locations in rotation rather than dumping excessive bait into one area.

Find Channel-Edge Stumps in Summer

During hot weather, channel catfish can relate to stumps near a river-channel edge in approximately 20–25 feet. Position precisely and keep bait close to bottom.

Fish the Edge of Green Lights

Predators frequently patrol the transition between bright water and darkness. Cast through the outside edge instead of dropping directly into the brightest center.

Follow Shad, Not Yesterday’s Coordinates

Hybrid and white bass can move substantial distances. When bait disappears from sonar, leave the waypoint and search again.

Check Both Bridge Sides

Fish may hold on the current break, downstream eddy, piling shade or windblown riprap. Make a controlled pass on both sides before deciding the bridge is unproductive.

Use the First Drop After a Cold Front

When a shallow bass bite disappears, move to the nearest break, outside dock post or channel edge rather than abandoning the creek completely.

Wake a Spinnerbait Over Fall Riprap

During early-fall shad movement, a compact spinnerbait retrieved quickly near the surface can trigger reaction bites along riprap at dawn or under cloud cover.

Measure Bass Before the Long Photo Session

Lake Conroe’s largemouth minimum is 16 inches. Measure immediately, then photograph and release or retain legally without prolonged deck exposure.

Use Sonar’s Empty Zone

In hot weather, a depth layer with no bait or fish marks can indicate unsuitable water. Keep presentations above the deepest active life rather than fishing below it.

Repeat Conditions, Not Just Locations

After a bite, note depth, shade, wind, structure and bait. Find another place with the same combination instead of repeatedly returning to one exact object.

Insider does not mean illegal: never enter private docks, block marina traffic, use restricted areas, cross private land, move live bait illegally or ignore size and bag limits.

Simple fishing-day schedule

A Practical Dawn-to-Evening Lake Conroe Plan

First light

Start Shallow or Near Active Bait

Try topwater, moving baits, dock shade, windblown points or visible schooling activity before sunlight intensifies.

Mid-morning

Move to Transitional Depth

Check outside dock posts, bridge drops, brush edges, creek-channel transitions and points near deeper water.

Afternoon

Prioritize Shade and Deep Structure

Fish the darkest docks, deeper brush, channel edges or open-water bait while taking heat and hydration breaks.

Evening

Follow Bait Back Toward Feeding Areas

Recheck windblown banks, points, bridge riprap and lighted dock edges as light falls and surface activity increases.

Efficiency rule: do not spend the entire day fishing one depth. Lake Conroe’s summer fish often move vertically or use shade as light changes.

Turn conditions into decisions

How Lake Level, Rain, Wind and Temperature Change the Bite

Condition Likely effect Practical adjustment
Stable near 201 feet Normal shoreline and access relationship Use seasonal patterns but remember upper timber may remain barely submerged.
Falling water Fish leave the shallowest cover Move to outside dock posts, first drops and channel-related cover.
Rising water New cover, stronger inflow, floating debris Fish protected flooded cover but navigate slowly.
Heavy watershed rain Upper reservoir becomes stained or muddy Find a clearer-water edge, protected creek or middle/lower-lake alternative.
Strong wind Bait moves and exposed water becomes dangerous Fish a safe windblown bank without making an unsafe crossing.
Sharp cold front Reduced shallow activity Slow down on the first deeper break or stable cover.
Mid-80s summer water Fish use shade, depth and oxygenated water Fish early, scan deeper structure and minimize fish-handling time.
Storm release or high current Debris, current and restricted operations Check SJRA conditions and postpone when navigation is questionable.

Condition audit: check the current level, 24-hour change, rainfall, release information, hourly wind and lightning risk. A single weather-app icon does not show the entire trip risk.

Choose access by zone and boat

Lake Conroe Boat Ramps, Fees and Suitability

Access point Ramp type Fee information Best practical use Contact
Stubblefield Lake Dirt ramp for small boats No boat-launch fee; campground or picnic fee may apply Small craft and upper-lake access when conditions suit the ramp 936-344-6205
Cagle Recreation Area Two-lane concrete; all boat types $5 day-use fee listed by USFS Upper/middle-lake access with developed facilities 936-344-6205
Stow-A-Way Marina Three-lane concrete; all boat types Fee required North and middle-lake access with marina support 936-856-4531
Scott’s Ridge Two-lane concrete; all boat types Fee required; confirm current amount Western middle-lake access near FM 1097 936-344-6205
FM 830 Ramp Two concrete ramps; all boat types No fee listed Budget-friendly north/east access Maintained by TPWD
April Plaza Marina Three-lane concrete; all boat types Fee required Lower-lake docks, points and open water 936-588-1144
Pier 105 Three-lane concrete; all boat types Fee required Convenient southern access from Texas 105 Confirm with current operator
Lakeview Marina Two two-lane concrete ramps Fee required Lower reservoir and developed shoreline 936-588-3190

Call before driving when conditions are unusual: ask whether the ramp is open, current fee, payment method, gate hours, parking status and whether the ramp has enough depth for your boat and trailer.

Ramp-selection trick: the closest ramp is not always fastest. Launching closer to your planned zone can save fuel and protect you from an exposed open-water run in wind.

Bank access is limited

Lake Conroe Shore and Bank Fishing

Much of the lower shoreline is privately developed. A visible bank, bridge, marina or dock does not automatically provide legal public fishing access.

Forest Service recreation areas

Best Public Starting Point

Upper-lake recreation sites may offer legal shore access, but day-use fees, site closures and operating rules can apply.

Marinas

Ask Before Fishing

Marinas may restrict fishing to paying customers, designated areas or certain hours. Never assume dock access is public.

Bridges

Parking and Pedestrian Safety Matter

Road shoulders and bridge approaches may prohibit parking or expose anglers to traffic. Use only legal, clearly safe access.

Family pond alternative

Carl Barton Jr. Park

Families seeking simple bank fishing may consider the municipal park pond rather than difficult reservoir shoreline access. Confirm current park and stocking information.

  • Confirm public ownership or obtain permission.
  • Check parking and admission fees.
  • Confirm opening and closing hours.
  • Do not block boat-launch lanes.
  • Keep children away from steep or slippery banks.
  • Carry shade, water and insect protection.
  • Remove discarded line and hooks.
  • Do not bring glass containers onto SJRA land.
Most pursued Lake Conroe fish

Largemouth Bass Fishing

Situation Starting location Presentation Insider adjustment
Early spring warming Protected docks, pockets and secondary points Soft plastics, jigs, spinnerbaits and shad imitators Look for the warmest protected water with nearby depth.
Post-front spring First drop outside shallow cover Slow jig, Texas rig or suspending bait Do not leave the creek; back out one depth zone.
Summer dawn Shade, points and active shad Topwater, spinnerbait or shallow crankbait Leave when surface activity stops rather than forcing the pattern.
Summer daytime Deep docks, points, brush and channel edges Jig, worm, Carolina rig or deep crankbait Target the deepest shade and outside structure.
Fall shad movement Riprap, creek mouths and windblown banks Spinnerbait, crankbait and topwater Match lure profile to visible shad size.
Cold water Steep breaks, channel docks and deeper cover Jig, slow plastic or suspending jerkbait Pause longer and fish the high-percentage target repeatedly.

Lake Conroe largemouth bass rule: minimum length is 16 inches. The daily bag for all black bass species is five in any combination.

Dependable year-round fishery

Blue, Channel and Flathead Catfish

Channel catfish

Numbers and Consistency

Fish creek channels, baited areas, flats beside deeper water and wind-driven feeding zones.

Useful baits: prepared bait, worms and fresh cut bait.

Blue catfish

Open-Water and Trophy Fish

Use sonar to locate shad, channel ledges and deep flats. Drift or anchor according to wind and fish movement.

Useful bait: fresh cut shad or another legal natural bait.

Flathead catfish

Timber and Heavy Cover

Focus on river-channel timber, bends and heavy structure with tackle strong enough to turn the fish.

Blue and channel catfish: no minimum length; daily bag is 25 combined. No more than five retained fish may be 20 inches or longer, and no more than one of those may be 30 inches or longer.

Flathead catfish: 18-inch minimum and daily bag of five.

Brush, docks and vertical control

Lake Conroe Crappie Fishing

Late winter

Staging Routes

Search channel-related brush and deeper cover near protected spawning areas.

Spring

Shallow Cover With Nearby Depth

Use minnows or small jigs while testing several depths rather than assuming every fish has reached the bank.

Early summer

Brush-Pile Depth Progression

Begin near 12–14-foot brush early, then check 16–20-foot brush as light increases.

Fall

Cooling-Water Return

Follow bait into creek routes, bridge areas, docks and brush as surface temperatures decline.

Snag-reduction setup: use a slip float or controlled jig countdown and keep the bait just above the highest branch. When the depth changes, reset immediately.

Crappie rule: black and white crappie must be at least 10 inches. The daily bag is 25 in any combination.

Open-water opportunity

Hybrid Striped Bass and White Bass

Sunshine bass are hybrid striped bass. Their fishery is maintained through stocking, so bait location and sonar searching are more useful than repeatedly fishing one permanent spot.

Pattern What to look for Best response
Suspended bait Dense shad schools over channels and deep points Vertical jig, troll or use live shad at the fish’s exact depth.
Surface feeding Birds, breaking shad and sudden splashing Approach quietly and cast beyond the school.
Lighted docks Bait gathering around green or white light Fish the outside dark-to-light transition without entering private property.
Deep summer fish Fish marks above the deepest active bait layer Control lure depth rather than simply dropping to bottom.
Bridge or channel movement Current, constrictions and bait concentration Fish safely outside navigation lanes and scan both sides.

Hybrid and striped bass: 18-inch minimum and daily bag of five in any combination.

White bass: 10-inch minimum and daily bag of 25.

Beginner and family option

Bluegill and Sunfish

TPWD has documented unusually large Lake Conroe bluegill. They can provide a simpler trip for children and new anglers when legal shore or dock access is available.

  • Use a small hook instead of a large bass hook.
  • Fish worms or crickets close to bottom on riprap.
  • Add enough weight to pass small shallow bait-stealers.
  • Check deeper dock posts and shaded edges.
  • Use a float when depth and snags allow.
  • Keep children in fitted life jackets near steep banks.

TPWD lists no statewide minimum length or daily bag for common sunfish such as bluegill, but selective and reasonable harvest protects quality fishing.

Fishery investment

Lake Conroe Stocking and Trophy Potential

2026 stocking 206,659 Sunshine bass fingerlings
2026 stocking 113,746 Lone Star bass fingerlings
Lake record bass 15.93 lb Standing largemouth record
Record length 27 inches Recorded lake-record largemouth

Sunshine bass are hybrid striped bass. Lone Star bass are second-generation offspring from pure Florida-strain ShareLunker largemouth bass lines selected for trophy growth potential.

What stocking does not mean: newly stocked fingerlings do not create an immediate trophy bite. Stocking supports future population quality and recruitment over multiple seasons.

Season-by-season decisions

Lake Conroe Fishing Calendar

Period Main opportunities Best practical starting pattern
January–February Deep bass, catfish, crappie and hybrids Channel-related cover, deep brush, bait schools and slower presentations.
March–April Shallow bass movement and crappie staging or spawning Protected pockets, docks and cover with immediate deeper access.
May–June Post-spawn bass, brush crappie, bluegill and active catfish Fish early shallow, then move to shade, brush and channel edges.
July–August Catfish, deep bass, hybrids and shaded dock patterns Fish dawn and night, scan deeper structure and avoid empty hot shallow water.
September–October Shad-driven bass, larger blue catfish and improving crappie Riprap, creek mouths, channel ledges and bait movement.
November–December Hybrid schools, crappie, catfish and deeper bass Locate shad with sonar, then match lure depth precisely.
Rules valid through August 31, 2026

Lake Conroe Bag and Length Limits

Species Minimum length Daily bag Special note
Largemouth bass 16 inches 5 black bass combined Lake Conroe-specific minimum.
Smallmouth bass 14 inches 5 black bass combined All black bass count toward the same combined bag.
Spotted, Alabama and Guadalupe bass No minimum listed 5 black bass combined Correct identification matters.
Blue and channel catfish No minimum 25 combined Maximum five at 20 inches or longer; only one of those may be 30 inches or longer.
Flathead catfish 18 inches 5 Measure before retaining.
Black and white crappie 10 inches 25 combined Includes hybrids and subspecies.
White bass 10 inches 25 Do not confuse with juvenile hybrids.
Striped and hybrid striped bass 18 inches 5 combined Sunshine bass are hybrid striped bass.
Sunfish No minimum listed No daily bag listed Use responsible harvest.
Common carp No minimum No limit listed Do not confuse with grass carp.
Grass carp Not applicable Do not retain Immediately release unharmed.
Alligator gar Any size 1 Harvest reporting and temporary spawning-closure rules can apply.

September 1 rollover: Texas regulations normally change with the new license year. Recheck the live Lake Conroe page before fishing on or after September 1, 2026.

Choose before checkout

Texas Fishing License for Lake Conroe

Package Price Best fit
Resident Freshwater Package $30 Texas resident fishing Lake Conroe and other public freshwater.
Senior Resident Freshwater $12 Eligible Texas resident age 65+ born on or after January 1, 1931.
Nonresident Freshwater $58 Visitor making multiple freshwater trips.
Resident One-Day All-Water $11 One selected resident fishing day.
Nonresident One-Day All-Water $16 One short visitor trip.
Resident All-Water $40 Resident who also fishes Texas saltwater.
Nonresident All-Water $68 Visitor wanting freshwater and saltwater coverage.

Common License Exemptions

  • Texas residents and nonresidents under age 17
  • Texas residents born before January 1, 1931
  • Qualifying Louisiana residents age 65+ with a valid Louisiana recreational license
  • Qualifying Oklahoma residents age 65+
  • Certain supervised disability fishing situations under exact TPWD rules
  • Public-water fishing on Texas Free Fishing Day

Do not use the state-park exemption at Lake Conroe automatically. Ordinary Lake Conroe ramps, marinas and recreation sites are not all Texas State Parks.

Before eating the catch

Lake Conroe Fish-Consumption Check

During the July 14, 2026 audit, Lake Conroe was not listed by name in TPWD’s current fish-consumption advisory table. Advisories can change, and general health guidance still matters.

  • Recheck the current advisory before keeping fish for meals.
  • Eat a variety of species rather than one large predator repeatedly.
  • Smaller legal fish generally contain less accumulated contamination than older trophy fish.
  • Remove skin, fat and dark tissue where appropriate.
  • Allow fat to drain during cooking.
  • Do not use cooking liquid from potentially contaminated fish.
  • Pregnant people, nursing parents and children should follow stricter guidance.

Conservation choice: photograph and release unusually large bass and catfish. Keep smaller legal fish when suitable for the table and permitted by current rules.

SJRA recreation rules

Lake Conroe Local Rules Beyond Fish Limits

Activity Practical rule
Fishing Fish only in nonrestricted areas and follow all TPWD regulations.
Buoys and signs Follow restricted, hazardous, swimming, fishing and speed-control markers.
Commercial guiding Commercial operations require current SJRA authorization.
Glass containers Glass containers are not allowed on SJRA Authority land.
Camping Camp only in designated areas and follow local stay limits.
Fires Use approved rings, grills or contained devices and follow fire bans.
Pets Keep pets leashed in designated camping and picnic areas and under direct control elsewhere.
Private structures Do not climb on, tie to, damage or enter private docks and slips without permission.
Do not let the bite override safety

Lake Conroe Navigation, Weather and Heat Safety

  • Check current lake level and storm dashboard.
  • Review hourly wind, lightning and rainfall.
  • File a float plan with launch and return time.
  • Carry a fitted life jacket for every passenger.
  • Use the engine-cutoff device where required.
  • Follow the boat’s capacity plate.
  • Carry a charged phone in a waterproof case.
  • Test navigation lights before low-light travel.
  • Idle around unfamiliar upper-lake timber.
  • Watch for storm debris and floating logs.
  • Stay outside dam and operational restrictions.
  • Carry more drinking water than expected.
  • Use shade, sunscreen and cooling breaks.
  • Never operate while impaired.
  • Return early when storms begin building.
  • Keep children seated during high-speed travel.

Upper-lake navigation: slightly submerged timber can remain near the river channel at conservation pool. Another boat’s route does not prove your path is clear.

Summer heat: confusion, headache, nausea, loss of coordination and stopping sweating are emergency warning signs. End the trip and seek appropriate medical help.

Departure checklist

What to Bring for Lake Conroe Fishing

Documents and navigation

  • Texas fishing-license proof
  • Government-issued photo ID
  • Saved ramp directions and contact number
  • Offline chart or current mapping
  • Guide confirmation and weather policy
  • Emergency and return-time contact

Fishing equipment

  • Rigid measuring board
  • Hook remover and pliers
  • Landing net suitable for target species
  • Shallow, intermediate and deep presentations
  • Extra leader, hooks and terminal tackle
  • Ice and legal fish-storage bags

Heat and storm protection

  • Drinking water and electrolytes
  • Sun-protective clothing
  • Hat and polarized glasses
  • Sunscreen and lip protection
  • Rain gear
  • Waterproof phone case and battery pack

Boat safety

  • Proper life jackets
  • Throwable flotation device where required
  • First-aid kit
  • Fire extinguisher where required
  • Navigation lights
  • Anchor and adequate rope
Fast troubleshooting

Common Lake Conroe Problems and What to Do

Problem Best response Do not assume
No current TPWD report Use live level, recent weather, current local reports and on-water evidence. No report means no usable fishing information.
Upper lake is muddy Find a clearer-water edge or move toward protected middle/lower water. The whole reservoir has equal clarity.
Reported dock pattern fails Change shade, depth, dock type or zone. Every dock provides the same habitat.
Fish show on sonar but do not bite Change lure depth, speed, angle or find active bait. Every mark is the target species or feeding.
Guide cancels for weather Use the written refund, credit or reschedule terms. Every guide has the same policy.
Free ramp is crowded Use a suitable paid ramp closer to the fishing zone. The lowest fee gives the best overall value.
Bass is under 16 inches Release it immediately. The statewide 14-inch largemouth rule applies.
Grass carp is caught Return it to the water unharmed. It can be retained like common carp.
License will not load Use saved proof, app purchase history or TPWD account support. Buying a duplicate is the quickest solution.
Storm raises water quickly Check releases, ramp status, debris and possible restrictions. Rising water always improves fishing safely.
Only changing or transactional tools

Live Lake Conroe Reports, Maps, Guide Search and License Purchase

The permanent guidance is included above. Leave this article only when you need live data, an interactive map, a current operator search or an official transaction.

Live water level

Current Lake Conroe Elevation

Check percent full, current water level, 24-hour change and conservation-pool difference.

Open live reservoir level

Storm operations

SJRA Lake Conditions

Use during heavy rain for lake conditions, rainfall and storm-event dashboard access.

Open SJRA conditions

Current regulation

Lake Conroe Limits

Use for final verification and the regulation-year change beginning September 1.

Open current Lake Conroe rules

Habitat coordinates

Fish Habitat Viewer

Open interactive habitat locations and downloadable GPS data.

Open habitat viewer

Current local report

Recent Lake Conroe Reports

Use as a fresh local observation, then verify conditions independently.

Open recent local reports

Guide directory

Lake Conroe Guide Options

Use the credential and booking checklist above before contacting any operator.

View guide options

Official payment

Buy a Texas Fishing License

Use after selecting the correct freshwater, all-water or one-day package.

Open official TPWD sales

Useful contacts: TPWD general help: 512-389-4800 or 800-792-1112. TPWD fisheries district office: 979-272-1430. SJRA Lake Conroe Division: 936-588-3111. Sam Houston National Forest: 936-344-6205.

Frequently asked questions

Lake Conroe Fishing FAQs

What are the current Lake Conroe conditions?

At midnight on July 14, 2026, the lake was reported at 200.90 feet, approximately 0.10 feet below the 201-foot conservation pool and 98.6% full. Recent reports described mid-80s water and deeper summer patterns.

What is the Lake Conroe largemouth bass limit?

Largemouth bass must measure at least 16 inches. The daily bag for all black bass species is five in any combination.

What is the crappie limit?

Black and white crappie must be at least 10 inches, and the daily bag is 25 combined.

Does a fishing guide’s license cover customers?

No. Customers age 17 and older normally need their own Texas freshwater fishing privileges unless an official exemption applies.

How do I know whether a guide is legitimate?

Ask for current TPWD freshwater fishing guide credentials and SJRA commercial authorization. Also confirm insurance, vessel capacity and written deposit and weather terms.

Where should a first-time boater fish?

Visible bridge riprap, lower-lake docks, points or mapped public habitat structures are easier starting areas than unfamiliar upper-reservoir timber.

Is there a free boat ramp?

TPWD lists the FM 830 Ramp as a no-fee facility. Stubblefield has no boat-launch fee but is a dirt ramp intended for small boats, and other day-use fees may apply.

When is the best time to fish Lake Conroe?

Spring and fall offer strong shallow-water opportunities. Summer can be productive early, at night and around deeper structure. Winter favors slower presentations, crappie, catfish and open-water hybrid patterns.

What should I do if I catch grass carp?

Immediately return the grass carp to Lake Conroe unharmed.

Are green fishing lights legal to fish?

You may fish from legal public water where other rules allow, but you cannot enter private property, tie to private docks, interfere with marina traffic or damage another person’s light or structure.

Why should I scan before fishing deep structure?

Crappie, hybrids and summer bass may leave an otherwise good structure when bait or oxygen conditions change. Sonar helps prevent spending time on empty cover.

Is upper Lake Conroe safe for new boaters?

The upper reservoir contains standing timber, including submerged hazards near the river channel. New boaters should idle, use current mapping or hire a knowledgeable guide.

The Strongest Lake Conroe Plan Is Built From Evidence

Use this decision stack: target species + lake zone + current level + recent weather + bait location + structure + legal access + Texas license + Lake Conroe limits + safe navigation.

Do not spend the day chasing an old waypoint. When shade, bait, clarity, depth or current changes, change the pattern. Lake Conroe rewards anglers who repeat productive conditions rather than repeatedly fishing one famous spot.

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