Weiss Lake

Cherokee County, AL

A Coosa River reservoir near the Georgia line billed as the "Crappie Capital of the World," with excellent largemouth and catfish alongside its famous crappie.

Live · updated

Largemouth Bass & Channel Catfish — tied at the top (76/100)

2 species tied for best of 3 tracked at Weiss Lake.

76 /100
great
Air Temp
84°F
Mostly Sunny
Wind
0 mph
Rain
0%
This Afternoon
Pressure
Steady
6-hour trend
Water Temp
75°F
Inland
Flow
5,950 cfs
Steady · -2% / 24h
Sunrise
5:30 AM
Sunset
7:50 PM
Moon · 70%
waning gibbous

3 species tracked, ranked by today's conditions. The top 2 (tied) are open below — tap any species to expand it, or a chip to focus.

#1 Largemouth Bass Great day to fish for Largemouth Bass. In season 76/100

What's helping

  • 75°F water — right in largemouth bass's ideal range

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
10

10 black bass/day (no more than 5 smallmouth); 15" minimum on Guntersville and many reservoirs.

Source: Alabama regulations · verified 2026-05-29.

#1 Channel Catfish Great day to fish for Channel Catfish. In season 76/100

What's helping

  • 75°F water — right in channel catfish's ideal range

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
no limit

No limit under 34"; only one over 34"/day.

Source: Alabama regulations · verified 2026-05-29.

#3 Crappie Workable day for Crappie. In season 64/100

What's helping

  • 75°F water — inside crappie's active range

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.

Min size
9"
Daily creel
30

9" minimum, 30/day.

Source: Alabama regulations · verified 2026-05-29.

Water Body

Reservoir

Access

Pier, shore, and ramp

Jurisdiction

Alabama

Coordinates

34.1800, -85.5500

Local reports & rules for Weiss Lake: Outdoor Alabama (ADCNR) fishing & regulations → · fish-consumption advisories (EPA directory) →

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

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

What fish are commonly targeted at Weiss Lake?

Weiss Lake is listed on this site for 3 commonly-targeted species: Crappie, Largemouth Bass, Channel Catfish. 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 Weiss 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 Weiss 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 Weiss Lake have?

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

Which state's fishing regulations apply at Weiss Lake?

state agency regulations apply at Weiss 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 Weiss Lake tidal water?

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

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