Pick the Right Catfish Window Before You Pick the Bait
Cooper Lake is officially Jim Chapman Lake, a large stained-water Texas reservoir with abundant blue catfish, extensive standing timber, creek channels, fluctuating water levels and a productive tailrace below Cooper Dam.
This guide helps you choose the best season, time of day, bank or boat access, bait, rig and depth—then shows exactly when to move instead of waiting all day in unproductive water.
What Is the Best Time to Fish Cooper Lake for Catfish?
For a larger blue catfish: plan late fall through early spring. Concentrate on shad, creek-channel edges, deep flats beside channels and stable-weather windows.
For easier mixed action: fish March through June around timber, creek arms, warming flats and inflowing water. Blue and channel catfish can move shallower during stable warming trends.
For summer: fish the first two hours after daylight, the last two hours before dark or legal nighttime periods. Move from shallow feeding water toward a channel edge as the sun rises.
For flatheads: focus on late spring through early fall around standing timber, channel wood and safe tailrace current with legal live bait.
Official fishery status: TPWD identifies blue catfish as the most abundant catfish in Jim Chapman Lake and describes the blue-cat fishery as excellent. The latest reservoir survey also reports abundant blue catfish but a lower-density channel-catfish population.
Cooper Lake Means Jim Chapman Lake in Northeast Texas
Jim Chapman Lake
The reservoir is still commonly called Cooper Lake. It is in Delta and Hopkins counties on the Middle and South Forks of the Sulphur River.
19,305 acres
The lake is large enough for major wind exposure, offshore forage movement, long creek arms and multiple catfish depth zones.
About 55 feet
Catfish can move between shallow timber, mid-depth flats, creek channels and dam-area water as seasons and forage change.
Standing timber, rock and flooded plants
Water-level fluctuation changes available cover. Low water can expose hazards, close ramps and pull fish toward remaining channels.
Location warning: do not confuse Texas Cooper Lake with Santee Cooper in South Carolina or another Cooper Lake in a different state.
Which Cooper Lake Catfish Trip Should You Choose?
Largest Blue Cat
Choose cooler water, fresh shad, channel-adjacent flats and a slow controlled presentation.
Build trophy planEasy Family Trip
Use a state park pier or shoreline, prepared bait, simple slip-sinker rigs and daylight access.
Build family planFlathead in Timber
Use legal live bait, heavy line and a clean landing lane beside—not inside—the worst wood.
Build flathead planTailrace Current
Fish legal current seams below Cooper Dam only when access and water-release conditions are safe.
Build tailrace plan| Your goal | Best starting period | Best access style | First bait | First feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trophy blue | Late fall–early spring | Boat or deep bank access | Fresh cut shad | Flat beside creek channel |
| Eating-size cats | Spring–early summer | Pier, shoreline or anchored boat | Prepared bait plus small cut shad | Timber edge or point |
| Flathead | Late spring–early fall | Boat or safe tailrace bank | Legal live bait | Heavy cover beside channel |
| Short beginner trip | Mild spring or fall day | State park shore or pier | Punch bait or worm | Pier edge and first drop |
Cooper Lake Catfish Fishing Guide Contents
Best Time of Year for Cooper Lake Catfish
| Period | Best target | Starting depth | Starting area | Best bait | Insider adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| December–February | Larger blue catfish | Mid-depth to deep, then follow shad | Channel bends, deep flats and shad schools | Fresh cut shad | Check sunny flats beside channels during stable afternoons. |
| March–April | Blue and channel catfish | Shallow-to-mid transitions | Warming flats, inflows and timber edges | Cut shad or prepared bait | Fish the warmest stable water after several mild days. |
| May–June | All three catfish | Shallow cover to channel edge | Timber, creek arms, rock and current | Cut bait, prepared bait or legal live bait | Fish outside spawning cover rather than burying the rig inside it. |
| July–August | Channel cats and flatheads; blues near forage | Shallow at low light, deeper after sunrise | Night flats, timber edges and channels | Prepared bait, fresh shad or live bait | Begin shallow and move one break deeper every 30–45 minutes. |
| September–October | Blue catfish following shad | Variable—follow forage | Creek mouths, points and channel bends | Fresh cut shad | Do not return automatically to summer depth after cooling rain. |
| November | Larger blue catfish | Channel-adjacent flats and deep routes | Main channel and shad concentrations | Medium or large fresh shad pieces | Slow the drift before increasing bait size. |
Calendar shortcut: choose November through March for a larger blue-catfish goal, March through June for broad mixed action and summer dawn or evening for a comfortable bank trip.
Best Time of Day to Fish Cooper Lake
Best for hot-weather setup
Place baits before daylight on a shallow flat, point or timber route. Fish can move back toward the channel shortly after sunrise.
Strong summer bank and boat window
Cover shallow and mid-depth water before heat, recreation traffic and bright light reduce comfort.
Often better than an icy dawn
Stable sunshine can warm a flat beside deep water. Track shad instead of following a dawn-only habit.
Strong bank-fishing window
Fish travel routes connecting channel depth with flats, points and timber where feeding can begin before dark.
Channel and flathead opportunity
Use legal access, clear walking routes and known closing times. State park gates do not remain open because the fish are active.
Current can override the normal clock
Below the dam, moving water can create a short feeding window—but only when access and current are safe.
Two-hour evening plan: arrive about 90 minutes before sunset. Place one bait near the first break, one farther toward the channel and one beside clean cover where legal rod limits and space allow.
Use Water Temperature to Choose Depth and Speed
These temperature ranges are practical planning cues, not legal rules or guaranteed fish locations. Wind, lake level, oxygen, baitfish and recent weather can move catfish outside the expected zone.
| Water condition | Likely pattern | Starting presentation | First adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Below roughly 50°F | Slower blue cats near channels and concentrated forage | Fresh cut shad with slow drift or anchored scent spread | Search a flat beside deep water during stable sunshine. |
| About 50–60°F | Increasing movement toward flats, inflows and timber | Cut bait from shallow edge to channel break | Move shallower after several warm days. |
| About 60–75°F | Broad activity and spawning-related cover use | Timber-edge, creek-arm and current setups | Separate blue-cat bait from flathead live-bait positions. |
| Above roughly 75°F | Low-light shallow movement and deeper daytime holding | Dawn, dusk or night spread from flat to channel | Move deeper after sunrise and shorten bait-soak time. |
Depth staircase: begin with baits at three depths. When one depth produces two meaningful bites, move the quiet rods into that depth band instead of waiting for every rod to prove the same pattern.
How Rain, Wind and Lake Level Change Catfish Location
| Condition | Likely opportunity | Where to start | Safety or access risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Light fresh inflow | Food and scent entering creek arms | Clear-to-stained transition beside inflow | Avoid lightning and dangerous runoff. |
| Stable warming trend | Fish may move shallower | Sun-warmed flat beside channel | A strong cold front can reverse the move. |
| Manageable wind | Shad and food pushed toward a point or bank | Wind-blown edge with safe casting or boat control | Standing timber increases navigation danger. |
| Falling water | Fish concentrating near remaining depth | Creek channels and channel bends | Ramps and hidden timber become major hazards. |
| Rising water | New flooded food and cover | Outer flooded brush and protected creek arms | Floating debris and submerged fences. |
| Dam release | Forage and current activating tailrace fish | Legal slower seam outside strongest flow | Rapid current and water-level change. |
Do not force a wind pattern from a boat. A productive wind-blown shoreline is useless when waves and timber make navigation unsafe. Use a protected bank or cancel the boat plan.
Blue, Channel or Flathead Catfish?
Blue Catfish
Official status: most abundant catfish in the reservoir.
Primary bait: fresh cut shad.
Primary areas: shad schools, channel edges, deep flats, creek mouths and clean timber edges.
Best trophy period: late fall through early spring.
Channel Catfish
Official status: present, but lower density than blue catfish in the latest survey.
Primary bait: punch bait, stinkbait, worms or smaller cut bait.
Primary areas: piers, timber edges, coves, points and low-light flats.
Best practical period: spring through fall.
Flathead Catfish
Official status: present around cover and tailrace current.
Primary bait: legal live bait.
Primary areas: standing timber, channel wood, rock and slower current seams.
Best practical period: late spring through early fall.
One-trip rule: pick one primary species. Use one secondary rod for another target, but do not spread every rod across unrelated bait, depth and habitat until no pattern can be identified.
Best Cooper Lake Catfish Spots and Structures
| Feature | Best target | Best condition | Where to place bait | When to leave |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standing timber on channel side | Blue and flathead | Stable or rising water | Clean edge facing deeper water | No activity after two bait refreshes and no sonar signs |
| Creek-channel bend | Blue and flathead | Falling water or cool season | Inside edge, outside drop and nearby flat | Shad and fish marks are absent |
| Flat beside deep water | Blue and channel catfish | Dawn, dusk, warming trend or forage activity | One shallow, one on break and one near channel | Sun rises and every bite stops |
| Wind-blown point | Blue catfish | Safe manageable wind and visible forage | Downwind edge and first drop | Wind becomes unsafe or baitfish disappear |
| State park pier edge | Channel and smaller blue cats | Short family or evening trip | Shadow, corner, rock change and first break | Crowding prevents safe casting |
| Cooper Dam tailrace | Flathead and blue catfish | Safe water release | Current seam, eddy or slower rock pocket | Water rises, exit narrows or barriers are approached |
Scent-lane trick: place the bait upwind or up-current from cover so the scent travels through the timber while the hook remains in clean water where the fish can be landed.
Cooper Lake Public Access Comparison
| Access | Best use | Official facility detail | Catfish advantage | Check before driving |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| South Sulphur Unit | Bank, pier, family and boat fishing | Multiple ramp lanes, parking, piers, shoreline and cleaning facilities | Several depth choices and family facilities | Active alerts, park capacity and ramp status |
| Doctors Creek Unit | Bank, pier and boat fishing | Three-lane concrete ramp with parking | West-side lake and timber access | Park hours, entry and lake level |
| Tira Boat Ramp | Boat fishing near the east side of the dam | Two-lane concrete ramp with parking for up to 90 | Dam-area and main-lake access | Water level and open-ramp confirmation |
| John’s Creek Ramp | Northwest-side boat access | Two-lane concrete ramp with parking for up to 35 | Upper-lake creek arms and timber | Parking capacity and timber navigation |
| Cooper Dam Tailrace | Bank fishing | West-side bank access, no access fee and open year-round | Release-current blue and flathead opportunity | Texas license, release condition and barriers |
A listed ramp is not automatically usable today. Low water can close a lane or expose the ramp end. Always check the current park alert and reservoir level before towing a boat.
Cooper Lake Bank Fishing Plan
Choose the state park or tailrace intentionally
Use the park for easier family access, piers, restrooms and fish-cleaning facilities. Use the tailrace only when current conditions are safe and the goal is current-related fish.
Find the first depth change
Do not assume the longest cast is best. Place one bait near the first break, one at mid-distance and one farther toward deeper water when space and rod rules allow.
Use two bait purposes
Use prepared bait or a smaller cut for channel and eating-size fish. Use a fresher, larger shad piece on the deeper route for a larger blue catfish.
Keep bait above mud and leaves
Add a small leader float when the bait returns buried, slimed or covered in debris.
Move before the whole evening disappears
After 35–45 minutes without a meaningful bite, change depth or shoreline position. After two unproductive positions, use the backup access.
Pier-corner trick: fish the shadow line, pier corner and rock-to-mud transition before casting to the horizon. Catfish frequently use edges close to the structure.
Cooper Lake Boat Fishing Plan
Best for timber and channel bends
Position the boat so baits cover the flat, break and channel without placing every line into wood.
Best for locating blue cats
Drift across flats beside channels. Use a drift sock or trolling motor to prevent rigs from moving too fast.
Best for precise timber fishing
Hold outside the timber and cast into clean travel lanes. Do not sit directly over shallow fish.
Find forage before dropping bait
Look for shad, fish marks, bottom transitions and channel edges. A pretty map spot can still be empty.
- Open ramp confirmed
- Current lake level checked
- Wind and gusts reviewed
- Timber navigation route planned
- Life jackets ready
- Navigation lights working
- Anchor retrieval plan ready
- Landing net onboard
- Backup ramp saved
- Float plan shared ashore
Timber navigation rule: reduce speed before the wood becomes visible. Fluctuating water can place submerged trunks at propeller or hull height.
How to Fish Standing Timber Without Losing Every Rig
| Timber position | Why fish use it | Best bait placement | Snag-control move |
|---|---|---|---|
| Channel-facing edge | Travel route plus security | First clean bottom beside the channel | Short leader and controlled line angle |
| Up-current side | Scent passes through cover | Outside wood so scent moves inward | Do not drag the rig through branches |
| Isolated tree on flat | Single ambush feature | Several feet beside trunk | Keep rod ready to turn fish immediately |
| Open-water transition | Feeding lane beside cover | Clean opening outside timber line | Use a float-assisted leader |
| Flooded brush | New food and shallow cover | Outer pocket or open lane | Heavy line and short fight angle |
Landing-lane rule: before casting beside timber, identify the direction you will pull the fish. A perfect bite is useless when every possible fight angle leads deeper into wood.
How to Fish the Cooper Dam Tailrace
TPWD notes that trophy flathead catfish catches below Cooper Dam are fairly common during water releases. The official access page lists good west-side bank access, no access fee and year-round operation.
Observe before carrying gear down
Check water level, current, barriers, slippery footing and the route back to the vehicle.
Fish beside the strongest current
Catfish often hold in a seam, eddy, rock pocket or current break where food passes without forcing the fish into the fastest water.
Use current-matched weight
Use enough weight to control the bait. Excessive weight can wedge into rocks and create unnecessary snags.
Keep a clear exit
Never place gear where rising water can cut off the return route. Leave immediately if water changes unexpectedly.
Do not wade an unfamiliar tailrace. Current, depth and release conditions can change quickly. Stay outside barriers and obey every Corps warning.
Best Catfish Bait for Cooper Lake
| Bait | Best target | Best use | Hooking tip | Main mistake |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh cut shad | Blue catfish | Channels, flats, timber edges and tailrace | Leave the hook point and gap fully exposed | Using old repeatedly thawed bait |
| Whole legal shad | Larger blue and flathead catfish | Deep edges and live-bait cover fishing | Hook securely without killing movement immediately | Ignoring bait collection and transport rules |
| Punch bait | Channel and smaller blue cats | Piers, shoreline and timber edges | Load enough bait to hold without covering every hook point | Leaving washed-out bait too long |
| Stinkbait | Channel and blue cats | Stained water and short bank trips | Use a bait holder matched to product consistency | Fishing it far from catfish travel routes |
| Nightcrawlers | Channel cats and mixed fish | Beginner and family trips | Keep enough worm secure while exposing the point | Ignoring bait-stealing panfish |
| Legal live bait | Flathead catfish | Timber, channels and current breaks | Match hook size to bait without blocking movement | Assuming every fish is legal bait |
Freshness beats size: a smaller fresh shad piece that releases oil and blood often outperforms a huge stale chunk.
When Should You Replace Catfish Bait?
Check after roughly 15–25 minutes in warm water, current or heavy panfish activity.
Replace when flesh turns pale, scent weakens or repeated small bites strip the oily section.
Replace when it becomes weak, motionless or tangled and no longer creates a natural signal.
Check more often because current can tear, wash or wedge bait quickly.
Replace or lift bait when it returns buried in silt, leaves or decaying material.
Inspect immediately after repeated taps because the hook may remain bare while appearing active.
Bait-clock rule: set a phone timer when fishing prepared bait. Catfish anglers often mistake an empty hook for “being patient.”
Best Catfish Rigs for Cooper Lake
| Rig | Best use | Basic build | Why it helps |
|---|---|---|---|
| Slip-sinker rig | General bank and anchored-boat fishing | Sliding sinker, bead, swivel, leader and circle hook | Simple, sensitive and easy to resize |
| Float-assisted leader | Mud, leaves, debris and slow drift | Slip-sinker rig with small leader float | Keeps bait above dirty bottom |
| Three-way rig | Tailrace or controlled current | Three-way swivel, sinker dropper and bait leader | Separates bait from bottom weight |
| Slip-float rig | Pier, shallow timber and low-light flats | Bobber stop, sliding float, weight, leader and hook | Controls exact bait depth |
| Heavy live-bait rig | Flatheads near timber | Heavy slip sinker, swivel, short heavy leader and large circle hook | Controls live bait beside cover |
Circle-hook rule: let the rod load, reel steadily and lift into the fish. A violent hookset can pull a circle hook away before it reaches the corner of the mouth.
Hooks, Line, Leaders and Sinkers
| Target | Main line | Leader | Hook starting range | Sinker approach |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Channel cats | 15–25 lb mono or braid | 15–30 lb abrasion-resistant mono | Approximately 3/0–6/0 | Enough to hold without overpowering the rod |
| Eating-size blue cats | 20–40 lb mono or braid | 30–50 lb abrasion-resistant leader | Approximately 5/0–8/0 | Match depth, wind and bottom |
| Trophy blue cats | 30–65 lb braid or heavy mono | 50–80 lb abrasion-resistant leader | Approximately 8/0–10/0 | Enough for anchor or drift control |
| Flatheads in timber | 50–80 lb braid or heavy mono | 60–100 lb abrasion-resistant leader | Large circle hook matched to bait | Hold bait while allowing movement |
| Tailrace catfish | Heavy abrasion-resistant line | Short heavy leader | Strong circle hook | Current-matched no-roll or dropper weight |
These are practical starting ranges rather than legal requirements. Match tackle to rod rating, bait size, cover, current and the fish you can safely land.
Step-by-Step Blue Catfish Strategy
Find shad before anchoring
Use birds, surface activity, wind, points, electronics and channel edges. A good-looking hole without forage may be empty.
Cover a feeding route
Place baits from the flat to the channel instead of putting every rod in the deepest water.
Start with medium fresh bait
Increase bait size only when small fish overwhelm the bait or electronics show larger fish.
Slow the drift
A fast drift reduces scent time, creates tangles and can lift bait above the active zone.
Follow the forage
Move when shad and fish marks disappear, even when the spot produced on a previous trip.
Trophy-blue insight: large blue cats may patrol a flat beside deep water rather than sitting at the bottom of the deepest channel. Search the feeding route, not only the resting depth.
Step-by-Step Channel Catfish Strategy
Piers, shoreline and timber edges
Channel cats are practical family targets, but the latest survey indicates lower density than blue catfish.
Punch bait, stinkbait or worms
Use smaller baits and refresh them more often than cut shad.
Dawn, dusk and legal night periods
Warm-weather channel cats can move onto shallower flats and edges during low light.
Change feature before changing every bait
If there are no taps, shift toward timber, a point, inflow or deeper route.
Two-target spread: fish prepared bait on one rod for channel cats and fresh cut shad on a second rod for blue cats.
Step-by-Step Flathead Catfish Strategy
Choose cover beside a travel route
Prioritize timber or rock beside a creek channel, current seam or open feeding lane.
Use legal lively bait
Verify species, collection, possession and transport rules before fishing.
Leave a landing lane
Place bait close enough to cover to attract a flathead but far enough outside it to turn the fish.
Use steady pressure immediately
Once the rod loads, guide the fish away from wood before it reaches the worst cover.
Bait legality warning: a fish being present in the lake does not automatically make it legal bait. Verify current Texas bait rules first.
Cooper Lake Family and Beginner Catfish Plan
State park shoreline or fishing pier
Choose restrooms, safe walking, lighting, shade and fish-cleaning access over a difficult remote bank.
Two hours near dawn or evening
A short successful trip is better than keeping children in heat or darkness for an entire day.
Prepared bait or worms
Use simple baits that stay manageable and produce bites from channel cats or smaller blue cats.
Simple slip-sinker setup
Use one clearly explained rig and teach safe casting, rod loading and fish handling.
- Park entry or reservation planned
- Closing time confirmed
- Water and shade available
- Pliers and first-aid supplies packed
- Child life jacket available near deep water
- Hooks stored safely
- Short session planned
- Backup non-fishing activity available
Your First Hour at Cooper Lake
| Time | Action | What you are learning |
|---|---|---|
| 0–10 minutes | Check wind, water level, baitfish, current, cover and safe landing space. | Whether the access fits your planned pattern. |
| 10–25 minutes | Place baits at multiple depths or structure positions. | Whether fish are shallow, on the break or near the channel. |
| 25–40 minutes | Refresh weak bait and move the quietest rod. | Whether bait condition or position caused the problem. |
| 40–55 minutes | Move to another point, timber edge or depth band. | Whether the first feature was empty. |
| 55–60 minutes | Commit to the best pattern or use backup access. | The strongest next decision. |
How Long Should You Wait Before Moving?
Recheck after about 15–25 minutes and change location after two fresh presentations without activity.
Give a promising depth roughly 30–45 minutes, then move one rod before moving the whole setup.
Move after 30–50 minutes when electronics and rods show no fish or forage.
Repeat only the depth band that produces bites. Abandon empty lines after one clean pass.
Allow more time at premium cover, but replace weak bait and move when no life remains in the setup.
Move quickly when the bait cannot hold a safe seam or the current changes.
Patience is useful only in occupied water. Give scent time to work, but do not spend hours on a feature with no bait, fish marks, bites or useful current.
Common Cooper Lake Catfish Mistakes
| Mistake | Why it fails | Better action |
|---|---|---|
| Fishing the deepest water all year | Catfish follow forage and temperature changes | Cover the flat, break and channel together |
| Using stale frozen shad | Weak scent and soft texture | Use the freshest legal bait available |
| Dropping every rig inside timber | Hooks and fish become trapped | Fish the clean edge and scent lane |
| Ignoring lake level | Ramps, depth and fish position change | Compare current level with normal pool before driving |
| Buying a license before checking the exemption | State park bank fishing can differ from boat or tailrace fishing | Identify exact access and method first |
| Using too much sinker | Weight wedges into rock and reduces bite detection | Use only enough weight for control |
| Remaining after park closing | Night activity does not override access hours | Use authorized overnight access or leave on time |
| Copying an unattended jugline setup | Gear may violate current marking or placement rules | Read the full TPWD device rule yourself |
Official Cooper Lake Catfish Records
| Record category | Species | Weight | Date | Method or bait | Practical lesson |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rod and reel | Blue catfish | 66.70 lb | January 17, 2025 | Shad | Cool-season shad fishing can produce trophy blues. |
| Rod and reel | Channel catfish | 25.50 lb | April 15, 2001 | Minnow | Quality channel cats exist despite lower current density. |
| Rod and reel | Flathead catfish | 44.10 lb | June 12, 2010 | Perch | Warm-season live-bait patterns can produce large flatheads. |
| All tackle | Flathead catfish | 79.87 lb | April 15, 2026 | Trotline | The reservoir supports much larger flatheads than the rod-and-reel record. |
A record proves potential—not average success. Use records to understand seasonal and bait patterns without expecting a trophy on demand.
Are Current Cooper Lake Fishing Reports Available?
TPWD currently states that weekly fishing reports are on hold while the agency works to improve reporting quality and accuracy. The Cooper report page may therefore show no current report.
Use this five-source replacement instead
Better than an old report: combine current lake level, last 72 hours of weather, wind direction, recent rain and visible shad activity. That information is often more useful than a week-old catch summary.
Do You Need a Texas Fishing License at Cooper Lake?
Age 17+ generally needs Texas privileges
Outside an official exemption, carry a valid Texas freshwater package or another package that includes freshwater fishing.
General youth exemption
Texas anglers under 17 generally do not need the standard license, but all limits and method rules still apply.
No fishing license required from the bank
TPWD states that anglers do not need a fishing license when fishing from shore within Cooper State Park.
License required
The state park bank-fishing exemption does not cover fishing from a boat.
Do not assume the park exemption
The Corps-operated tailrace is not automatically covered by the state park shoreline exemption.
Not automatically license-free
Releasing every fish does not remove license requirements outside an applicable exemption.
Read the Texas fishing license guide before buying. Compare resident and nonresident package prices in the Texas fishing license cost guide.
Access controls the answer: “I am fishing Cooper Lake” is not specific enough. State park bank fishing, boat fishing and tailrace fishing can produce different license results.
Current Texas Catfish Limits for Cooper Lake
TPWD lists Jim Chapman Lake under statewide fishing regulations. The rules below apply during the Texas regulation period from September 1, 2025 through August 31, 2026.
| Species | Daily bag | Length rule | Important detail |
|---|---|---|---|
| Blue and channel catfish | 25 combined | No statewide minimum under this rule | Only 10 of the combined bag may measure 20 inches or longer. |
| Flathead catfish | 5 | 18-inch minimum | Measure before placing the fish in the cooler. |
Combined means combined: the limit is not 25 blue cats plus 25 channel cats. Blue and channel catfish count together.
Juglines, Throwlines and Trotlines at Cooper Lake
Texas allows certain non-rod devices for catfish, but marking, gear tags, hook limits, placement and prohibited-location rules are detailed and can change.
| Method | Catfish use | Important restriction |
|---|---|---|
| Rod and reel | Legal standard method | Follow license, bait, bag and park rules. |
| Jugline | Detailed rule applies | Gear tag, float color and prohibited-location rules apply. |
| Throwline | Detailed rule applies | Gear tag, float marking and state park boundary restrictions apply. |
| Trotline | Detailed rule applies | Hook, length, tag, marking and placement rules apply. |
| Handfishing | Freshwater rule applies | Artificial traps, barrels, pipes or boxes may not be placed for handfishing. |
State park restriction: juglines, throwlines and trotlines may not be used in reservoirs or river sections lying totally within state park boundaries. Read the complete current rule before setting any device.
Current Cooper Lake Alerts, Ramp Status and Lake Level
Active alert check on July 17, 2026: the official park alert still listed the Honey Creek boat ramp at South Sulphur as closed due to low lake level. It listed Gulls Bluff, Tira Satellite and Lone Pine at Doctors Creek as remaining open. The same alert page also carried South Sulphur facility and trail notices.
Do not rely on this dated snapshot for your trip. Open the live park-alert page because water level, construction and access can change after publication.
Trip-day five-point check
Cooper Lake Catfish Safety and Fish Handling
Slow down early
Submerged timber can damage the propeller, lower unit or hull. Low water can bring more hazards close to the surface.
Large open water builds quickly
Wind can make timber navigation and ramp loading difficult. Change to a protected bank when needed.
Current can rise rapidly
Keep a clear exit and never cross barriers or wade unfamiliar current.
Mark the route before dark
Carry a headlamp and backup light. Pack early enough to leave before the gate closes.
Use pliers and controlled grip
Small and medium catfish can puncture hands with pectoral and dorsal spines.
Support the belly
Do not hang a large blue or flathead vertically for a long photo session.
Large-cat release: prepare the camera first, remove the hook efficiently, support the fish horizontally, take one quick photo and hold it upright in the water until it swims strongly.
What to Bring for Cooper Lake Catfish Fishing
Trip information
- Texas license proof if required
- Photo ID
- Park reservation or entry plan
- Current alert screenshot
- Current lake-level screenshot
- Backup access saved
Fishing equipment
- Medium-heavy or heavy rods
- Circle hooks matched to bait
- Several sinker sizes
- Abrasion-resistant leader
- Fresh bait in a cooler
- Landing net or fish gripper
Safety and tools
- Life jacket for boat or kayak
- Long-nose pliers and cutters
- Measuring board or tape
- Headlamp and backup light
- Water and sun protection
- First-aid supplies
Harvest and cleanup
- Cooler with enough ice
- Current limit screenshot
- Legal stringer or livewell
- Trash bag for line and bait packages
- Separate container for used hooks
- No unused live bait released
Bring more ice than bait. Warm Texas conditions can spoil fish rapidly. Cool harvested catfish immediately.
Official Cooper Lake and Texas Fishing Links
Use this article for the complete explanation. Open official sources for current lake levels, closures, regulations, reservations and license payment.
Jim Chapman Lake Fishing Guide
Official species, habitat, regulations, records and TPWD catfish tactics.
Cooper Lake Public Access
Directions and facility details for state park units, ramps and the tailrace.
Cooper State Park Alerts
Check ramp, construction, trail and facility notices before driving.
Jim Chapman Reservoir Level
Compare current elevation and storage with conservation pool.
Cooper State Park
Current hours, entry fees, reservations, directions and park maps.
Texas Freshwater Limits
Verify the current blue, channel and flathead catfish rules.
Texas Legal Devices
Read the complete jugline, throwline, trotline and pole-and-line rules.
Texas License Packages
Use after deciding whether freshwater, all-water, senior or nonresident coverage applies.
Official Local Forecast
Check wind, heat, rain and thunderstorms near Cooper State Park.
Related FishingLicenseGuide.org Resources
Texas Fishing License Guide
Freshwater packages, exemptions, state park fishing, proof and online buying.
Texas Fishing License Cost
Resident, nonresident, one-day, senior, freshwater and all-water costs.
Lake Fishing Near Me
Find legal public lakes, compare access and build a backup fishing location.
Buy Fishing License Online
Use the official-portal safety workflow and save digital proof correctly.
Catch-and-Release License Rules
Understand why releasing every fish does not automatically remove license requirements.
Cooper Lake Catfish Fishing FAQs
What is the best time to fish Cooper Lake for catfish?
Late fall through early spring is a strong window for larger blue catfish. Spring provides broad mixed action, while summer trips are usually better around dawn, dusk or legal nighttime periods.
Is Cooper Lake the same as Jim Chapman Lake?
Yes. Jim Chapman Lake in Delta and Hopkins counties, Texas, was formerly known as Cooper Lake.
Which catfish is most abundant?
TPWD identifies blue catfish as the most abundant catfish in the reservoir. Channel and flathead catfish are also present.
What is the best bait for Cooper Lake blue catfish?
Fresh cut shad is the strongest all-around choice. Start with a medium fresh piece and leave the hook gap fully exposed.
Where can I bank fish?
Cooper State Park provides shoreline fishing and fishing piers in the South Sulphur and Doctors Creek units. The Cooper Dam tailrace also has good west-side bank access.
Do I need a fishing license from the state park bank?
TPWD states that a license is not required when fishing from shore within Cooper State Park. Park entry, hours and fishing regulations still apply.
Do I need a license from a boat?
Yes, unless another official exemption applies. The state park shoreline exemption does not cover boat fishing.
Is Cooper Lake good for trophy blue catfish?
Yes. Blue catfish are abundant, and the official rod-and-reel lake record is 66.70 pounds, caught on shad in January 2025.
Where should I target flatheads?
Focus on standing timber, creek-channel wood, heavy cover and safe slower current seams below Cooper Dam.
What rig should I use?
A slip-sinker rig is the simplest all-around choice. Add a leader float over muddy or debris-covered bottom, and use a three-way rig in current.
How long should I wait before moving?
Give a promising bank or anchored position roughly 30–45 minutes, but refresh prepared bait sooner. Move when there are no bites, forage, fish marks or useful current.
Can I fish at night?
Night fishing can be productive, but Cooper State Park normally lists park hours from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. unless authorized overnight access applies.
What are the current catfish limits?
Through August 31, 2026, blue and channel catfish have a combined daily bag of 25, with only 10 measuring 20 inches or longer. Flatheads have a daily bag of five and an 18-inch minimum.
Are weekly Cooper fishing reports available?
TPWD currently states that weekly fishing reports are on hold while reporting methods are improved. Use the fishery page, survey, lake level, alerts and current weather instead.
Can I use juglines or trotlines?
Texas allows certain devices under detailed tagging, marking, hook and placement rules. Read the current TPWD legal-device page before setting anything.
What should I check before launching?
Check the active park alert, lake level, open ramp, wind, trailer parking, timber hazards and a backup ramp.
The Best Cooper Lake Catfish Plan Starts With One Clear Target
Choose blue catfish for the strongest overall opportunity. Use fresh cut shad around forage, channel edges, flats and clean timber lanes. Use prepared bait for channel cats and legal live bait for flatheads near heavy cover.
The complete trip stack is: correct lake + target species + seasonal window + current level and alert check + legal access + fresh bait + structure-matched rig + move rule + Texas license decision + current limits + backup plan.