Boyd Lake

Larimer County, CO

An 1,800-acre plains reservoir at Boyd Lake State Park in Loveland. A popular Front Range warmwater fishery for walleye, largemouth bass, crappie, channel catfish, and yellow perch.

Live · updated

Walleye, Largemouth Bass, Crappie & Channel Catfish — tied at the top (43/100)

4 species tied for best of 5 tracked at Boyd Lake.

43 /100
ok
NWSActive weather alert

Air Quality Alert issued June 5 at 4:10PM MDT by NWS Denver CO

Air Temp
90°F
Sunny
Wind
9 mph
SE
Rain
3%
This Afternoon
Pressure
Steady
6-hour trend
Water Temp
Inland
Sunrise
5:30 AM
Sunset
8:26 PM
Moon · 70%
waning gibbous

5 species tracked, ranked by today's conditions. The top 4 (tied) are open below — tap any species to expand it, or a chip to focus.

#1 Walleye Marginal conditions for Walleye. In season 43/100

What's helping

  • 9 mph wind — light chop — baitfish active, fish willing to feed

What's hurting

  • NWS alert active — check the alert before heading out

About. Sander vitreus — Maryland's premier cool-water gamefish. Deep Creek Lake is the flagship fishery; also found in the non-tidal Potomac and the Youghiogheny River. Low-light feeder — dusk, dawn, and overcast/windy days are prime. Jigs, crankbaits, and nightcrawler harnesses are standard.

Prefers. Water 50–72°F (ideal 62°F) · either tide · depth 10–40 ft.

Daily creel
5

Statewide: 5/day, 5 in possession. Several Front Range reservoirs are more restrictive (an 18" minimum).

Source: Colorado non-tidal regulations · verified 2026-06-01.

#1 Largemouth Bass Marginal conditions for Largemouth Bass. In season 43/100

What's helping

  • 9 mph wind — light chop — baitfish active, fish willing to feed

What's hurting

  • NWS alert active — check the alert before heading out

About. Micropterus salmoides — Most popular gamefish in MD non-tidal waters. Ambush predator around cover — lily pads, submerged timber, docks, grass edges. Hits plastics, spinnerbaits, jigs, and topwater across the season.

Prefers. Water 55–85°F (ideal 72°F) · either tide · depth 3–25 ft.

Min size
15"
Daily creel
5

Largemouth and smallmouth in aggregate: 5/day, 15" minimum statewide.

Source: Colorado non-tidal regulations · verified 2026-06-01.

#1 Crappie Marginal conditions for Crappie. In season 43/100

What's helping

  • 9 mph wind — light chop — baitfish active, fish willing to feed

What's hurting

  • NWS alert active — check the alert before heading out

About. Pomoxis spp. — Covers both black crappie (P. nigromaculatus) and white crappie (P. annularis). Schooling panfish around brush, docks, and submerged timber. Spring pre-spawn is the prime season — small minnows and 1/16-oz jigs are the go-to.

Prefers. Water 50–80°F (ideal 65°F) · either tide · depth 3–20 ft.

Daily creel
20

Black and white crappie in aggregate: 20/day, 20 in possession.

Source: Colorado non-tidal regulations · verified 2026-06-01.

#1 Channel Catfish Marginal conditions for Channel Catfish. In season 43/100

What's helping

  • 9 mph wind — light chop — baitfish active, fish willing to feed

What's hurting

  • NWS alert active — check the alert before heading out

About. Ictalurus punctatus — Native catfish of MD non-tidal rivers, reservoirs, and farm ponds. Bottom-feeder that takes chicken liver, stinkbait, nightcrawlers, and cut bait. Most active at night and in warm water.

Prefers. Water 60–85°F (ideal 75°F) · either tide · depth 5–30 ft.

Daily creel
10

Channel, blue, and flathead catfish in aggregate: 10/day, 10 in possession.

Source: Colorado non-tidal regulations · verified 2026-06-01.

#5 Yellow Perch Marginal conditions for Yellow Perch. In season 37/100

What's helping

  • 9 mph wind — light chop — baitfish active, fish willing to feed

What's hurting

  • incoming tide — yellow perch prefers slack tide
  • NWS alert active — check the alert before heading out

About. Perca flavescens — Late-winter and early-spring favorite. Schools up in tidal tributaries for the pre-spawn run in February and March, taking small minnows, shad darts, and small jigs. A classic Eastern Shore "neds" fishery.

Prefers. Water 45–70°F (ideal 58°F) · slack tide · depth 5–30 ft.

Daily creel
20

20/day east of the Continental Divide; unlimited west of the Divide.

Source: Colorado non-tidal regulations · verified 2026-06-01.

Water Body

Reservoir

Access

Pier, shore, and ramp

Jurisdiction

Colorado non-tidal

Coordinates

40.4333, -105.0417

Local reports & rules for Boyd Lake: Colorado Parks & Wildlife fishing & regulations → · fish-consumption advisory →

Do I need a fishing license to fish at Boyd Lake?

Yes (anglers age 16 and older). To fish at Boyd Lake you need the appropriate state fishing license. See the agency's current rules: the state agency website

What fish are commonly targeted at Boyd Lake?

Boyd Lake is listed on this site for 5 commonly-targeted species: Walleye, Largemouth Bass, Crappie, Channel Catfish, and 1 more. Which species is currently in season and which is scoring highest today is shown in the per-species ranking on this page.

When is the best time to fish at Boyd Lake?

It depends more on the species and the day's conditions than on a fixed "best hour." Water temperature, weather, and — at tidal locations — the stage of the tide drive activity most. The per-species ranking on this page scores every target species at Boyd Lake against today's live conditions, so the fish near the top are your best bets right now; check back as conditions change through the day.

What kind of access does Boyd Lake have?

Boyd Lake has multiple access types — pier, shoreline, and at least one public boat ramp.

Which state's fishing regulations apply at Boyd Lake?

state agency regulations apply at Boyd Lake. Size limits, creel limits, and seasonal closures are listed per species on each species page. Always confirm against the agency source linked from each regulation block — emergency closures can take effect mid-season.

Is Boyd Lake tidal water?

No. Boyd Lake is non-tidal — water level varies with rainfall, seasonal flow, and (where applicable) upstream dam releases rather than tidal exchange.

esc