How to Fish Ludington, Michigan: A Beginner's Guide to Salmon, Steelhead, Piers, and Charters
how_to_fish

How to Fish Ludington, Michigan: A Beginner's Guide to Salmon, Steelhead, Piers, and Charters

Everything a first-timer needs to fish Ludington — what gear to bring, how to rig for the breakwater piers, what the charter captains run on Lake Michigan, how the Pere Marquette River salmon and steelhead run works, and where to take the family for walleye and panfish on Hamlin Lake.

Colin

Friday, November 14, 2025

Share
ludingtonmichiganbeginnerhow to fishsalmonsteelheadpier fishingtrollingpere marquette riverwalleye

Ludington is one of the Great Lakes' great fishing towns. It sits where the Pere Marquette River empties into Lake Michigan through Pere Marquette Lake, and that geography stacks the deck: a world-class salmon and steelhead river, a deep-water big-lake fishery that produced a 47.86-pound state-record Chinook in 2021, two long breakwater piers you can fish for free, and a pair of inland lakes full of walleye and panfish. For a first-timer, that range is the hard part — fishing Ludington well means knowing which of its four worlds you're stepping into. This guide walks through all of them: the gear, the rigs, the bait, and the realistic plan for each.

For the big-picture overview — the full species list, the charter fleet, the calendar, and where to stay — read our complete Ludington fishing guide.

First: License and Rules

Anyone 17 or older needs a Michigan fishing license, and there's only one type — the Michigan all-species license covers everything from pier perch to a charter Chinook. Buy it online through the Michigan DNR (the Michigan DNR Hunt Fish app works too), at Meijer, or at local shops like Captain Chuck's on US-10. A non-resident annual runs about $76, but if you're in town for a long weekend the 24-hour ($10) or 72-hour ($30) options are the smart buy.

One quirk worth knowing: Lake Michigan is boundary water, and Michigan and Wisconsin honor each other's licenses on the lake itself. On the piers, in the river, and on the inland lakes, you need Michigan. Salmon and trout have a combined daily limit (currently five, with no more than three being lake trout) — confirm the current numbers in the Michigan Fishing Guide before you keep a cooler full.

The Breakwater Piers: Free Fishing You Can Walk To

You don't need a boat to catch fish in Ludington. The North Breakwater (the one with the iconic black lighthouse, reached from Stearns Park) and the South Breakwater (off the Buttersville side) both put you within casting range of staging salmon, steelhead, and brown trout — for the price of a parking spot.

The gear: A 9- to 10-foot medium-heavy spinning rod gives you the casting distance and the backbone to fight a 15-pound king on a concrete pier. Pair it with a 4000-size reel — a Penn Battle III 4000 or a Daiwa BG 4000 — spooled with 20-pound braid and a 20-pound fluorocarbon leader. Bring a long-handled pier net; you cannot lift a salmon straight up out of the water onto a six-foot-high pier without losing it.

The two rigs that catch most pier fish:

The spawn-bag float rig is the workhorse for staging kings and steelhead. Run a slip float (a Raven FM Float or any 6- to 10-gram slip bobber) above a small swivel, then 18 inches of fluorocarbon to a size 4 or 6 egg hook. Tie a spawn bag — salmon eggs in mesh netting, sold at every Ludington bait shop in the fall — and suspend it three to eight feet down along the pier wall. Set the depth so the bag drifts just off bottom.

The casting spoon covers water when fish are moving. A 2/3-ounce silver Acme Little Cleo or a KO Wobbler thrown out and retrieved with a slow, wobbling pace draws reaction strikes from coho, kings, and browns, especially in low light. Tie it on with a Palomar knot — it's the strongest, simplest connection for braid-to-spoon.

How to Tie a Palomar Knot

When: Pier fishing peaks at the edges of the season. Spring (April into May) brings brown trout and steelhead close to shore as the water warms near the warm-water discharge. The big show is fall — late August through October, when mature Chinook and coho mass off the river mouth before running upstream. Fish the first and last hour of daylight; midday on a bright, calm day is slow. An east wind that flattens the lake and a little stain in the water is prime.

The Big Lake: Charter Trolling on Lake Michigan

The deep water off Ludington is where the giants live, and it's almost entirely a trolling fishery run from boats bristling with rod holders. Unless you own a rigged boat, this is a charter day — and it's worth it. A half-day off Ludington can put kings, coho, steelhead, and lake trout in the box, and the captain supplies all the gear.

Here's what's happening on that boat so it makes sense when you're out there. The captain is presenting a dozen baits at once across the water column:

  • Downriggers (Scotty or Cannon) drop weighted lines to a precise depth — fish-finder marks a school at 60 feet, the spoon goes to 60 feet. This is the heart of king fishing.
  • Dipsy Divers are weighted discs that dive and plane out to the side, spreading lines away from the boat. A size 1 Dipsy with a Dreamweaver Spin Doctor flasher and a Howie's Fly is a classic Lake Michigan king setup.
  • Lead core and copper line sink line by their own weight — counted out in "colors" — to reach mid-depth fish without a downrigger.
  • Planer boards (Off Shore Tackle OR12) carry lines far out to the sides so the boat's wake doesn't spook fish in the top 20 feet — deadly for steelhead and early-season browns.

The lures are mostly spoons (Moonshine, Dreamweaver, and Silver Streak) and flasher-fly or flasher-squid combos, with J-plugs (a Lucky 7) earning their keep at first light. You'll fish line-counter reels — a Shimano Tekota or Okuma Convector on a long trolling rod — so the captain can repeat exactly what just worked.

Your actual job as a beginner: when a rod loads up and the reel screams, take it out of the holder, keep the rod tip up, and reel only when the fish lets you. Don't horse it. A Ludington king will run, and the drag is set to let it.

Coho and King Salmon Trolling on Lake Michigan

When: The big-lake troll fishes from roughly June through Labor Day. July and August are peak Chinook months, with boats often starting on salmon in the cold morning water and shifting offshore for steelhead over deep water as the sun climbs.

The Pere Marquette River: The Salmon and Steelhead Run

The Pere Marquette is a national Wild and Scenic River — over 60 miles without a dam — and it's one of Michigan's premier salmon and steelhead streams. When the fish leave the lake and pour into the river, the whole character of fishing here changes from heavy trolling tackle to light line, drifting, and reading current.

Fall salmon (September into October): Mature Chinook stage in the lower river and Pere Marquette Lake, then push upstream to spawn. You can find them in Ludington, upstream around Scottville and Custer, and at access points like Indian Bridge and Walhalla. The classic presentations are a drifted spawn bag or a swung egg fly under an indicator, fished on a 9- to 10-foot 8-weight fly rod or a long float ("noodle") rod with a centerpin or spinning reel. These are big, aggressive, hard-fighting fish in tight quarters — hooking one is the easy part; landing it in a snag-filled river is the challenge.

Steelhead (fall, winter, and a strong spring run): Chrome steelhead follow the salmon in and hold all winter, with the spring run peaking March into April. The go-to rig is a float setup: a slip float, split shot down the leader, and a small egg fly, a single bead (8-10mm, peach or natural), or a spawn sac drifted at the fish's nose along the seams and bucket water. Drift naturally — the float should travel at the speed of the current, no faster.

Note that the famous upper "Flies Only" water has tackle restrictions, and gear rules vary by stretch and season — read the Michigan regulations for the Pere Marquette before you fish a new section. For first-timers, the river is the one piece of Ludington where a half-day with a local float guide pays for itself immediately; the wading, the drifts, and the fish-fighting in current are all skills, and a guide compresses a season of learning into a morning.

Winter Steelhead Fishing the Pere Marquette River

Hamlin Lake and Pere Marquette Lake: The Family Option

When the lake is too rough or you've got kids along, Ludington's two inland lakes are the answer. They're calm, productive, and forgiving.

Hamlin Lake, just north of town in Ludington State Park, is a big, shallow, weedy lake that's excellent for bluegill, black crappie, yellow perch, largemouth bass, and northern pike. For panfish, a simple setup catches everything: a 7-foot light spinning rod, 6-pound mono, a small bobber, a size 8 Aberdeen hook, and a piece of nightcrawler or a wax worm fished near weed edges. For pike, throw a red-and-white Eagle Claw Dardevle spoon or a spinnerbait along the weed lines, or set a tip-up with a live shiner.

Pere Marquette Lake is the harbor lake the river runs through, and it fishes for walleye and staging salmon. Walleye come on a nightcrawler harness or a Rapala Shad Rap trolled or drifted along bottom in 15 to 40 feet; the channel between the lake and Lake Michigan holds salmon trolled on spoons and J-plugs in season.

How to Troll a Crawler Harness for Walleye

Winter: Ludington is a serious ice-fishing town. Once Hamlin and Pere Marquette Lake lock up (typically January into early March), anglers drill for bluegill, crappie, perch, and pike. A short ice rod, a teardrop jig tipped with a wax worm or a spike, and a flasher-style sonar (a Vexilar FLX-28 or a Garmin Striker) is the standard kit. Always check ice thickness with a spud bar — four inches of clear ice is the minimum for foot travel.

Bait: What to Use and Where to Buy It

Ludington fishing runs on a handful of baits, and you can get all of them in town.

Salmon spawn is the currency of the fall fishery. Cured salmon eggs tied into mesh "spawn bags" are the top bait for staging kings and steelhead on the piers and drifting in the Pere Marquette. You can buy them pre-tied at local shops or tie your own — many anglers cure their own eggs from caught fish as the run progresses.

Single beads (8-12mm, in peach, natural roe, and clown colors) have largely taken over for river steelhead. They imitate a loose, drifting egg, snell easily, and let you release fish cleanly because the hook rides outside the mouth. Carry a range of colors and sizes — fish key on different shades depending on water clarity.

Nightcrawlers are the universal inland bait — panfish on Hamlin Lake, walleye on a harness in Pere Marquette Lake. Keep a flat of them cool. Wax worms and spikes (maggots) are the panfish and ice-fishing staples; a wax worm on a teardrop jig is the single most reliable bluegill bait there is.

Live shiners and suckers are the pike and walleye live bait — fished under a tip-up through the ice or on a slip-bobber along the weeds. Local bait shops keep them in tanks through the season.

For tackle and bait in town, Captain Chuck's on US-10 is the long-standing full-service shop, and the marinas around Pere Marquette Lake carry the trolling spoons and terminal tackle the charter crowd burns through.

Reading Conditions Like a Local

Two factors decide a Ludington day more than anything in your tackle box: wind and water temperature. An onshore (west) wind that's been blowing for a day or two piles warm surface water and baitfish against the beach and into the harbor, pulling salmon and browns within pier range — but it also makes the piers wet and dangerous, so check the forecast and wear cleats on the concrete. A hard offshore (east) wind flattens the lake and can drop the near-shore water temperature overnight as cold water upwells; that cold push often turns on the salmon bite but can scatter the browns.

In summer, the charter fleet chases a moving "temperature break" — salmon hold where the water is in the low-to-mid 50s, which might be 40 feet down in July and much shallower at dawn. That's why the captain is constantly adjusting downrigger depths. You don't need to manage any of it on a charter, but understanding it explains why the boat keeps moving and re-setting lines until it finds the fish.

A First-Timer's Plan

If you have one day and no boat: fish a breakwater pier at dawn with a spawn-bag float in the fall, or chase panfish on Hamlin Lake the rest of the year. If you want the signature Ludington experience and you're willing to book a trip, a summer big-lake salmon charter or a fall Pere Marquette float trip is the move — both put you on fish that this town is genuinely famous for, with a captain handling everything you haven't learned yet.

Recommended Gear

Penn Battle III 4000 Spinning Combo

Pier all-rounder — backbone for salmon and steelhead off the breakwater

Acme Little Cleo 2/3 oz Nickel

Casting spoon for coho, kings, and browns off the piers in low light

Raven FM Slip Float

Spawn-bag and bead float rig for piers and the Pere Marquette River

Off Shore Tackle OR12 Side-Planer Board

Big-lake trolling — carries lines away from the boat for top-water steelhead and browns

Moonshine Lures RV Series Spoon

Downrigger and Dipsy spoon for Lake Michigan kings and coho

Rapala Shad Rap SR07

Walleye crankbait for Pere Marquette Lake and Hamlin Lake

Eagle Claw Dardevle 3/4 oz Red/White

Pike spoon along Hamlin Lake weed edges

Top Fishing Guides in Ludington

Ludington's charter captains know which depth the kings are running, when the salmon push into the Pere Marquette, and where the walleye sit on Hamlin Lake. Whether you want a big-lake troll, a river float for chrome steelhead, or a relaxed inland-lake trip, a local guide turns a tough-to-crack fishery into a great day.

Fishing Affair

Fishing Affair

Ludington, MI, US

5.0 (107 reviews)

Fishing Affair Sport Fishing Charters operates out of Ludington, Michigan, specializing in world-class King Salmon and Steelhead fishing on Lake Michigan and its western river tributaries. Captain Ryan combines years of expertise with a deep commitment to sustainable catch-and-release practices, ensuring guests enjoy exceptional fishing while protecting the local fishery for future generations. The operation features two premier vessels: a 36-foot Tiara Open equipped with cutting-edge electronics and an enclosed cockpit for all-weather comfort, and a custom 20-foot jet sled for accessing premier river fishing spots. Whether pursuing salmon in open water or targeting steelhead in tributaries, Fishing Affair delivers hands-on, personalized adventures. River trips include a hot lunch, making for a complete and comfortable day on the water.

Charter Ludington

Charter Ludington

Ludington, MI, US

5.0 (107 reviews)

Charter Ludington Charter Ludington operates from Michigan's premier salmon fishing destination on Lake Michigan. With a fleet staffed by over 25 USCG-licensed captains and fully inspected vessels, the service prioritizes safety and quality across every outing. Whether anglers are seeking their first salmon or adding to a lifetime of catches, Charter Ludington accommodates all skill levels with morning, afternoon, and full-day trip options. The team's deep local knowledge and commitment to customer satisfaction set them apart in one of the Great Lakes' most productive fishing regions. Their focus on salmon fishing, combined with years of operational experience, ensures guests spend their time on the water with seasoned professionals who know where the fish are and how to catch them.

Relentless Fishing Adventures

Relentless Fishing Adventures

Ludington, MI, US

5.0 (56 reviews)

Relentless Fishing Adventures Captain Mark Hitchingham brings years of proven expertise to premier charter fishing experiences across Michigan's premier waters. Operating from both Ludington and Bay City, Relentless Fishing Adventures specializes in pursuing trophy salmon and walleye in Lake Michigan and Saginaw Bay—two of the region's most productive fisheries. Whether casting for the first time or refining advanced techniques, anglers of all skill levels receive personalized instruction tailored to their experience and goals. Each charter includes top-quality equipment and professional fish cleaning services, allowing guests to focus entirely on the experience while taking home their catch.

West Michigan Guides

West Michigan Guides

Ludington, MI, US

5.0 (38 reviews)

West Michigan Guides offers exceptional fishing charters throughout the Manistee area, one of Michigan's premier fishing destinations. Operating on both Lake Michigan and the renowned Manistee River, they pursue salmon, trout, and steelhead with seasoned captains who bring extensive local knowledge to every outing. Their well-maintained vessels are equipped with modern GPS and fishfinder technology to maximize success and safety on the water. Whether anglers are casting a line for the first time or bringing decades of experience, West Michigan Guides tailors each trip to match individual skill levels and preferences. The combination of pristine waters, abundant fish populations, and professional guidance makes the Manistee region an unforgettable destination for serious anglers seeking a rewarding day on the water.

Chunky Monkey Charters

Chunky Monkey Charters

Ludington, MI, US

5.0 (26 reviews)

Chunky Monkey Charters Captain Jody Blain leads Chunky Monkey Charters, delivering premier fishing experiences from Ludington, Michigan. Specializing in Lake Michigan salmon fishing, the operation brings years of expertise to both inshore and offshore charters, targeting Chinook and Coho salmon, Lake Trout, Walleye, and other species. Whether guests are casting lines for the first time or are experienced anglers seeking their next trophy, Chunky Monkey Charters tailors each trip to match skill level and goals. From jigging for salmon on Lake Michigan to pursuing trophy walleye in Lake Erie, Captain Blain ensures every day on the water combines exciting fishing with local knowledge and professional guidance.

Hit The Mark Charters

Hit The Mark Charters

Ludington, MI, US

5.0 (26 reviews)

Hit The Mark Charters operates a premier salmon fishing service from Ludington, Michigan, offering expert-guided trips on Lake Michigan's renowned waters. The charter specializes in king and coho salmon, alongside lake trout, brown trout, and steelhead, providing anglers of all skill levels the opportunity to pursue these prized species in one of the Great Lakes' most productive fisheries. The operation features a spacious 31-foot Tiara boat outfitted with quality fishing equipment, accommodating up to six guests comfortably. Hit The Mark Charters welcomes families and delivers both half and full-day excursions, prioritizing safety and creating meaningful experiences that foster long-term relationships with clients. Whether seeking an introductory outing or an ambitious full-day adventure, anglers can expect professional guidance and a commitment to memorable time on the water.

For the seasonal calendar, the full charter rundown, and where the fish are by month, see our complete Ludington fishing guide. Fishing your way around Great Lakes salmon country? We also have first-timer guides for Traverse City, Door County, and Duluth on Lake Superior.

Frequently Asked Questions

What fish can you catch in Ludington, Michigan?

Lake Michigan and the piers give up Chinook (king) salmon, coho salmon, steelhead, brown trout, and lake trout. The Pere Marquette River has a famous fall salmon run and fall-through-spring steelhead. Hamlin Lake and Pere Marquette Lake hold walleye, bluegill, crappie, yellow perch, largemouth bass, and northern pike.

Can you fish Ludington without a boat?

Yes. The North and South Breakwater piers are free to fish and reach staging salmon, steelhead, and brown trout — best in spring and fall. Hamlin Lake in Ludington State Park offers easy shore and dock fishing for panfish and bass, and the Pere Marquette River is wadable at many public access points.

When is the best time to fish Ludington?

July and August are peak for big-lake king salmon charters. September into October is the famous Pere Marquette salmon run and prime pier fishing. Spring (March-May) brings steelhead in the river and brown trout near shore. Winter is ice-fishing season for panfish and pike on the inland lakes.

Do I need a fishing license in Ludington?

Yes, anyone 17 or older needs a Michigan all-species fishing license, sold online through the Michigan DNR and at local shops. Non-resident 24-hour and 72-hour options are available for short trips. On Lake Michigan itself, Michigan and Wisconsin honor each other's licenses.

What gear do I need for the Ludington piers?

A 9- to 10-foot medium-heavy spinning rod, a 4000-size reel with 20-pound braid and a fluorocarbon leader, and a long-handled pier net. Fish a spawn-bag slip-float rig for staging salmon and steelhead, or cast a 2/3-ounce silver Little Cleo spoon at first and last light.

Related Articles