How to Fish Juneau, Alaska: A First-Timer's Guide to Salmon, Halibut, and Shore Fishing
how_to_fish

How to Fish Juneau, Alaska: A First-Timer's Guide to Salmon, Halibut, and Shore Fishing

What a beginner needs to fish Juneau — the Alaska license and king stamp, charters for salmon and halibut out of Auke Bay, the road-system shore fishery for salmon and Dolly Varden, crabbing, and the gear and tactics that work in Alaska's Inside Passage capital.

Colin

Saturday, September 13, 2025

Share
juneaualaskabeginnerhow to fishking salmoncoho salmonhalibutdolly vardenshore fishinginside passage

Juneau, Alaska's capital, sits on the Inside Passage hemmed between steep coastal mountains and the sea — and unusually for Southeast Alaska, it has a road system that makes a surprising amount of its fishing accessible without a boat. You can charter the protected marine waters for king salmon and halibut, cast from the beaches and creeks of the road system for salmon and Dolly Varden, drop a pot for crab, and do it all against a backdrop of glaciers and rainforest. For a first-timer, Juneau offers both the big charter experience and genuine DIY shore fishing. This guide covers both.

For the bigger picture — the species, the spots, and the charter scene — read our complete Juneau fishing guide.

First: License and the King Stamp

Every angler 16 or older needs an Alaska sport fishing license, and Alaska does NOT let a charter cover its passengers — each person fishes on their own license. To keep a king (Chinook) salmon you also need a separate king salmon stamp. Buy both online from the Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G) before your trip; non-resident 1-day, 3-day, 7-day, and 14-day options exist. King salmon retention rules change year to year and by area, and the freshwater trout and Dolly limits are specific (Dolly Varden are generally 2 per day; on road-system drainages, cutthroat and rainbow trout have a combined 2-fish limit with a 14-inch minimum and 22-inch maximum), so check the current ADF&G Juneau-area regulations before you keep fish.

Salmon: Charter and the Road-System Shore Fishery

Juneau's marine waters hold all five Pacific salmon, and you can catch them two ways.

From a charter (most depart from Auke Bay), you'll troll or mooch — pulling or drifting a flasher and a plug-cut herring at depth on a downrigger or a cannonball sinker — for king salmon (spring into mid-summer) and coho/silver salmon (late summer and fall, the most abundant and aggressive). The captain supplies the gear and knows where the fish are staging in the channels and straits.

From shore, the road system is the magic. Fish Creek and Fish Creek Pond are famous, accessible spots to target king salmon in early summer and then silvers and pinks later, and you can cast spoons and spinners from beaches along Gastineau Channel and other road-accessible shoreline for silvers and pinks when they're in. Pink salmon (humpies) in particular flood the shore in mid-summer and hammer a small pink or chartreuse Pixee spoon or a Vibrax spinner — they're the easiest, most fun salmon for a beginner. A 9-foot medium spinning rod with a 4000-size reel and 20-pound braid covers shore salmon.

Inside Passage Salmon and Halibut Fishing

Halibut and Bottomfish

Halibut are the other marquee charter target, available roughly March through October. Charters run to the productive grounds — Icy Strait, North Pass, Halibut Cove, and the reefs north of Shelter Island — and fish at anchor on the bottom, dropping big baits (herring, salmon belly, octopus) on heavy circle-hook rigs into deep water. This is heavy tackle: a stout rod and a big conventional reel with 80-pound braid and a pound or two of lead to hold bottom. When a barn-door halibut loads up, pace yourself. Lingcod and rockfish round out the bottom mix (with rockfish often requiring a descending device for release). It's an all-day, gear-intensive trip best done on a charter that supplies everything.

Freshwater: Dolly Varden and Cutthroat Trout

Juneau's road-system creeks and lakes offer relaxed, accessible freshwater fishing for Dolly Varden (a sea-run char) and cutthroat trout, available July through October. Popular spots include Montana Creek, Peterson Creek and its saltchuck (the tidal estuary, great as the Dollys stage), Cowee Creek, Auke Lake, and Windfall Creek and Lake (note Windfall Creek is closed June–July). Fish a small Vibrax spinner, a Berkley Gulp, a single egg/bead, or a fly (egg patterns and small streamers) in the creeks and the saltchuck on light tackle. The 14-to-22-inch trout slot protects the fish, so measure and release outside that range. It's a lovely, low-key way to fish Juneau on foot.

Crab: Dungeness and King

Juneau's waters also hold Dungeness crab and king crab, and crabbing is a fun add-on. Many charters drop pots during your fishing trip, and if you have access to a boat you can set your own baited pots in the bays. There are size, sex, and season rules (and some areas/closures for king crab), so check the current ADF&G shellfish regulations. Fresh-caught Dungeness is a highlight of any Juneau trip.

Reading the Road System and the Tides

What makes Juneau special for a do-it-yourself angler is that the road system puts dozens of beaches, creek mouths, and saltchucks within easy reach — but catching fish from them still comes down to timing the tide and the run. Salmon and the Dolly Varden that follow them stage and move with the tide, so the hours around a tide change (especially an incoming tide pushing fish toward a creek mouth) are far better than slack water. Watch a tide chart and plan your beach or saltchuck session around the moving water and the low-light windows of morning and evening. The other half is timing the run — salmon come in waves keyed to each species' calendar (kings first, then pinks and chums mid-summer, then silvers in late summer and fall), so the same beach that's dead in June can be loaded in August. A quick check of the ADF&G Juneau fishing report or a local tackle shop tells you what's running where right now, which is the single most useful thing a visitor can do.

The Shore Salmon Run, Species by Species

Knowing which salmon is in changes where and how you fish from shore. King salmon show first, from spring into early summer, and the road-system hot spot is Fish Creek — but kings are the hardest of the shore salmon and have the tightest, most-changeable retention rules, so check the regs. Pink salmon (humpies) are the beginner's delight: they flood the beaches and creek mouths in huge numbers in mid-summer of (especially) even or odd years depending on the run, and they'll hammer a small pink or chartreuse spoon or spinner on nearly every cast — perfect for kids and first-timers. Chum salmon show alongside the pinks and pull hard. Coho (silver) salmon are the prize of late summer and fall — aggressive, acrobatic, and excellent eating — and they take spoons, spinners, and (for fly anglers) bright streamers as they stage off the beaches and push into the creeks. Match your spoon size and color to the run, fish the moving tide, and you can have a banner day on foot.

More on Halibut and a Charter Day

Halibut fishing is worth understanding because it's the classic Juneau charter experience. The boats run out of Auke Bay early, make the run to the grounds (the reefs and holes off Shelter Island, North Pass, Icy Strait), and anchor over likely bottom, often hanging a chum bag to draw fish. You drop a big bait to the bottom, reel up a turn so you're not snagged, and wait for the heavy "thump" of a halibut — then reel steadily and hang on, because even a modest "chicken" halibut pulls hard and a big one feels like lifting a manhole cover. The captain and deckhand bait up, gaff, and handle the fish, so your job is to drop, wait, and grind. Many trips combine a morning of salmon trolling with an afternoon of halibut, and pull a crab pot on the way in — a full Alaska sampler. Dress warm, take motion-sickness medication ahead of time if you're prone (the straits can be bouncy), and arrange to have your catch processed and shipped home; Juneau processors will freeze and box your fillets.

A Note on Conservation

Southeast Alaska's fisheries are managed carefully, and king salmon in particular have faced real pressure, which is why the king rules change so often and can be restrictive — always confirm the current king retention before you keep one, and consider releasing wild kings even when it's legal to keep them. Use barbless or pinched hooks where required, release undersized and over-limit fish quickly and in the water, and on the bottom use a descending device to send rockfish back down. The Dolly Varden and cutthroat trout in the road-system creeks are protected by slot and bag limits — measure your fish and keep only what's legal and what you'll eat. Fishing within the rules keeps Juneau's runs healthy for the next angler and the next season.

Gear: What to Bring

Charters supply everything for salmon, halibut, and crab. For shore fishing on your own:

  • Salmon (shore): a 9-foot medium spinning rod, a 4000-size reel, 20-pound braid, and Pixee spoons and Vibrax spinners in pink and chartreuse.
  • Dolly/trout: a light 7-foot spinning rod, Vibrax spinners, Berkley Gulp, beads, or a fly setup.
  • Clothing: this is a rainforest, so Grundens rain gear and Xtratuf boots are essential, plus warm layers — it's cool and wet even in summer.
Fishing an Alaska Coastal Creek for Salmon

When to Go

  • May–mid-July: King salmon in the marine waters and the road-system creeks; halibut fishing ramps up.
  • Mid-July–August: Pink and chum salmon flood the shore (easy, fun fishing), halibut strong, Dolly Varden begin (July).
  • August–September: Peak coho (silver) salmon — fast, aggressive fishing — plus continued halibut and Dollys.
  • October: Late silvers, Dollys, and bottomfish wind down as the season closes.

A First-Timer's Plan

Juneau is one of the easier Alaska towns to fish on your own thanks to the road system: cast spoons for pink and silver salmon from a road-accessible beach or creek in mid-to-late summer, or fish a spinner for Dolly Varden at the Peterson Creek saltchuck — both are cheap, scenic, and beginner-friendly. For the big experience, book a charter out of Auke Bay for kings, silvers, and halibut, often with a crab-pot pull included. Buy your Alaska license and king stamp online first, pack Grundens and Xtratuf, and check the current king and trout regulations.

Recommended Gear

Daiwa BG 4000 Spinning Reel

Shore salmon casting along the Juneau road system

Acme Pixee Spoon

Pink and chartreuse for shore silvers and pinks

Blue Fox Vibrax Spinner

Salmon and Dolly Varden in the creeks and saltchuck

Shimano Tekota Line-Counter Reel

Mooching and trolling herring for kings and silvers on a charter

Penn Squall II 50 Conventional Reel

Halibut bottom fishing off Shelter Island and Icy Strait

Grundens Rain Jacket

Essential rainforest raingear for Southeast Alaska

Xtratuf Ankle Deck Boots

Wet decks and muddy creek banks — the Alaska standard

Top Fishing Guides in Juneau

Juneau's captains know where the kings and silvers are staging in the channels, where the halibut are holding off Shelter Island, and how the salmon runs are timing on the road-system creeks. They supply the gear and handle the Alaska regulations, so a first-timer can just fish the Inside Passage.

Pybus Point Lodge

Pybus Point Lodge

Juneau, AK, US

5.0 (166 reviews)

Pybus Point Lodge Pybus Point Lodge is a premier fishing destination in Alaska's Juneau area, renowned for its expert halibut fishing in the pristine waters of Pybus Bay. The lodge operates custom-built boats captained by experienced, Coast Guard-certified guides who understand these waters intimately. Beyond halibut, anglers have opportunities to target five salmon species, rockfish, and ling cod throughout the season. All-inclusive packages combine exceptional fishing with gourmet meals and luxurious accommodations, allowing guests to focus entirely on their experience. The lodge's location also provides remarkable access to Alaska's wilderness—visitors frequently encounter humpback whales, brown bears, and other iconic wildlife during their stay. Whether seeking trophy halibut or diverse saltwater species, guests discover why Pybus Point Lodge is considered one of Southeast Alaska's finest fishing destinations.

Glacier Guides

Glacier Guides

Juneau, AK, US

5.0 (140 reviews)

Glacier Guides Glacier Guides has been Alaska's premier wilderness outfitter since the early 1970s, offering luxury yacht-based adventures throughout Glacier Bay National Park and the Tongass National Forest. As the region's longest-established operator, the company brings unmatched local knowledge and access to some of Alaska's most pristine hunting and fishing waters. Specializing in expeditions for iconic Alaskan species—including Brown Bear, Black Bear, Mountain Goat, and Sitka Blacktail Deer—Glacier Guides combines exceptional service with custom-built luxury vessels designed for remote exploration. Their diverse guide use areas and flexible trip planning ensure clients experience the best that Alaska's wilderness has to offer, whether pursuing trophy game or world-class fishing in truly untouched territory.

The Local Guy Charters

The Local Guy Charters

Juneau, AK, US

5.0 (140 reviews)

The Local Guy The Local Guy Charters brings personalized expertise to Alaska's most productive waters around Juneau. Specializing in both inshore and offshore fishing, the guide tailors each private charter to match clients' skill levels and preferences, whether targeting Alaska's prized salmon or halibut. With deep local knowledge and a commitment to customization, every trip is designed to deliver an authentic and memorable Alaskan fishing experience. Beyond the rod and reel, The Local Guy understands that Alaska's appeal extends beyond the catch. Charter trips seamlessly incorporate whale watching opportunities, giving clients the chance to encounter the region's iconic wildlife. For outdoor enthusiasts seeking a well-rounded Alaskan adventure, The Local Guy offers the versatility and local insight that transforms a fishing trip into something truly unforgettable.

Fly Fish Juneau

Fly Fish Juneau

Juneau, AK, US

5.0 (20 reviews)

Fly Fish Juneau offers premier guided fly fishing experiences in Southeast Alaska's most remote and pristine waters. Specializing in salmon, steelhead, trout, and Dolly Varden, the service combines exceptional fishing opportunities with the dramatic scenery of Juneau's glaciers and wilderness. Their guides bring deep local knowledge and genuine passion for the region's rivers and tidelands. Small group excursions—limited to four participants—create an intimate setting where anglers receive personalized attention and instruction tailored to their skill level. Each trip includes all necessary fly fishing gear and transportation, allowing guests to focus entirely on the experience. Whether seeking trophy fish or simply immersing themselves in Alaska's unspoiled landscape, visitors can expect a memorable adventure guided by professionals committed to showcasing the best of Southeast Alaska's waters.

Tidewater Fly Fishing

Tidewater Fly Fishing

Juneau, AK, US

5.0 (20 reviews)

Tidewater Fly Fishing Based in Juneau, Tidewater Fly Fishing offers private fly fishing expeditions throughout Southeast Alaska's most pristine waters. Guided by Dave McKenna, who brings over 18 years of regional expertise, trips explore remote destinations including the Chilkat Peninsula and the Admiralty & Chichagof Islands. Dave's deep knowledge of these storied fisheries ensures anglers connect with abundant opportunities while immersed in Alaska's remarkable wilderness. The operation specializes in personalized experiences tailored to individual skill levels and preferences. Whether pursuing a partial or full-day adventure, guests benefit from Dave's intimate familiarity with local waters, seasonal patterns, and the region's exceptional wildlife. Tidewater Fly Fishing delivers the kind of authentic Alaskan fly fishing experience that lingers long after the trip ends.

Juneau Fly Fishing

Juneau Fly Fishing

Juneau, AK, US

5.0 (20 reviews)

Juneau Fly Fishing brings three decades of expertise to Alaska's most pristine waters. Based in Juneau, this premier guide service specializes in fly fishing adventures accessed via floatplane, reaching remote locations where world-class fishing meets untouched wilderness. Their intimate knowledge of local waters and species ensures every angler—regardless of experience level—encounters exceptional opportunities. Beyond the rod and reel, Juneau Fly Fishing offers guided bear viewing expeditions that showcase Alaska's iconic wildlife in its natural habitat. Each trip is custom-tailored to match guests' interests and skill levels, reflecting the service's commitment to personalized adventures. Whether seeking the thrill of a take or the awe of encountering bears in their element, visitors discover why this guide service has earned its reputation for unforgettable Alaskan experiences.

For the full seasonal calendar and the charter rundown, see our complete Juneau fishing guide. Fishing more of Alaska? We also have first-timer guides for Sitka and Homer.

Frequently Asked Questions

What fish can you catch in Juneau, Alaska?

King and coho (silver) salmon, plus pink, chum, and sockeye, and Pacific halibut in the marine waters, with lingcod and rockfish on the bottom. In the road-system creeks and lakes, Dolly Varden and cutthroat trout. Dungeness and king crab round it out.

Can you fish Juneau without a boat?

Yes — unusually for Southeast Alaska, Juneau's road system gives shore access. Fish Creek targets king salmon early and silvers/pinks later, beaches along Gastineau Channel produce salmon, and creeks like Montana, Peterson (saltchuck), and Windfall hold Dolly Varden and cutthroat trout.

Do I need a license to fish Juneau?

Yes — an Alaska sport fishing license for anyone 16 or older, and a charter does NOT cover passengers (each buys their own). A separate king salmon stamp is required to keep a king. Buy both online from ADF&G; non-resident short-term options exist.

When is the best time to fish Juneau?

May to mid-July for king salmon and the start of halibut; mid-July through August for easy pink and chum salmon and strong halibut; and August–September for peak coho (silver) salmon. Dolly Varden run July through October.

What should I bring fishing in Juneau?

Charters supply the rods, reels, tackle, and bait. You bring weatherproof clothing for the rainforest — Grundens rain gear, Xtratuf boots, and warm layers — since it's cool and wet even in summer. For shore fishing, bring a spinning rod with Pixee spoons and Vibrax spinners.

Related Articles