Puget Sound and the surrounding marine waters of Washington State support some of the most diverse salmon fishing in the Pacific Northwest. Year-round resident Chinook (blackmouth), summer ocean returns, fall Coho, and the iconic odd-year pink salmon runs all contribute to a fishery that produces salmon every month of the year. The geography is unique: protected inland waters (the Sound itself), the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Hood Canal, and the outer Pacific Coast all fall within driving distance of Seattle, giving anglers options across multiple water types within a single weekend.
This guide covers Puget Sound and Washington State marine salmon fishing — the major ports and access points (Westport, Sekiu, Neah Bay, Tacoma area, San Juan Islands), the marine area regulation system, blackmouth Chinook timing, summer ocean returns, the Coho fishery, and the pink salmon shore access during odd years. Pair with the Pacific salmon fishing guide for broader context and the species-specific articles for technique details.
Puget Sound Geography and Marine Areas
Washington State divides its marine waters into numbered Marine Areas (MAs) for regulatory purposes. Each Marine Area has its own season dates, daily limits, and species rules. Familiarity with the Marine Area system is essential for fishing the region:
| Marine Area | Location | Key Salmon Targets |
|---|---|---|
| MA 1 (Ilwaco) | Columbia River mouth (Pacific side) | Chinook, Coho |
| MA 2 (Westport) | Grays Harbor, outer coast | Chinook, Coho — peak summer ocean fishery |
| MA 3 (La Push) | Olympic Peninsula coast | Chinook, Coho, lingcod |
| MA 4 (Neah Bay) | Northwest tip, Strait of Juan de Fuca | Chinook, Coho, bottom fish |
| MA 5 (Sekiu) | Eastern Strait of Juan de Fuca | Chinook — mooching capital |
| MA 6 (East Strait) | Eastern Strait to Port Angeles | Chinook, Coho |
| MA 7 (San Juan Islands) | San Juan Islands area | Resident Chinook, Coho |
| MA 8 (Skagit and Whidbey) | Skagit Bay and east Whidbey | Coho, pinks (odd years) |
| MA 9 (Admiralty Inlet) | Whidbey-Olympic Peninsula | Blackmouth, Chinook, Coho |
| MA 10 (Seattle metro) | Central Puget Sound | Coho, pinks (odd years) |
| MA 11 (Tacoma) | South-central Puget Sound | Resident blackmouth, Coho |
| MA 12 (Hood Canal) | Hood Canal | Chum, summer Chinook |
| MA 13 (South Sound) | Southern Puget Sound | Resident blackmouth, Chum |
Each Marine Area has its own season schedule. Some MAs are open most of the year (resident blackmouth fishing); others have narrow seasons tied to specific runs. Verify current MA regulations before each trip — the WDFW website maintains current rules.
Major Puget Sound Salmon Ports
Westport (Marine Area 2)
The most-active outer coast charter port for ocean salmon fishing. Charters run from late spring through early fall, targeting ocean Chinook and Coho in 50-200+ feet of water. The Westport Marina supports a substantial commercial and charter fleet. Bar crossing safety considerations apply (Grays Harbor bar) — see the safety guide. Peak season: July-August for Chinook, August-September for Coho.
Sekiu (Marine Area 5)
The classic PNW mooching destination. Sekiu sits on the Strait of Juan de Fuca with protected water that supports excellent mooching conditions. The peak season is July-September for ocean-returning Chinook. The town is small but supports multiple charter operations and tackle shops. Many Seattle-area anglers consider Sekiu their summer salmon home base.
Neah Bay (Marine Area 4)
The northwestern-most point in the Lower 48 — a Makah Tribal community at the entrance to the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Charter operations target both Strait fishing (protected) and outer Pacific fishing (less protected). The mix of mooching and trolling techniques produces consistently. Tribal regulations apply alongside state regulations.
La Push (Marine Area 3)
Smaller-scale Quileute Tribal charter port on the outer Olympic Peninsula coast. Less developed than Westport or Neah Bay but produces strong salmon fishing. Multi-species opportunities including bottom fish and lingcod.
Edmonds and Seattle Area
Central Puget Sound charter operations target resident Chinook (blackmouth), seasonal Coho, and odd-year pink salmon. Pier fishing in the Seattle area produces Coho and pinks during peak runs. The proximity to the urban Seattle population makes these the most-accessible Puget Sound fishing for the largest population concentration in the region.
Tacoma and South Sound (Marine Areas 11, 13)
The southern Puget Sound area produces resident blackmouth Chinook and seasonal Coho. Various ports and access points throughout South Sound support a less-concentrated but legitimate fishery.
Anacortes and San Juan Islands (Marine Area 7)
The San Juan Islands area produces year-round Chinook (resident populations) and seasonal Coho. Multi-day trips with boat-based exploration are common. Less concentrated charter activity than Westport but high-quality fishing in stunning settings.
Resident Chinook (Blackmouth) — Year-Round Fishery
Blackmouth are immature resident Chinook that stay in Puget Sound rather than migrating to the Pacific Ocean. They feed on baitfish (herring, candlefish, anchovies) in protected water year-round, growing slowly compared to ocean-going Chinook. Adult blackmouth typically run 5-12 pounds — smaller than ocean returners but consistently available.
The blackmouth fishery sustains Puget Sound salmon fishing through the winter and early spring months when migratory runs have ended. Seasons vary by Marine Area — some MAs are open year-round for blackmouth, others have specific closures and re-openings. Mooching and downrigger trolling both work; the smaller fish requires lighter gear than ocean Chinook setups.
Blackmouth produce best in October-March (the migratory salmon offseason). Multiple Marine Areas open for blackmouth fishing during winter, with December-February often the peak window. The fishery is regulated heavily for conservation; verify current rules before fishing.
Summer Ocean Returning Chinook
July-September brings adult Chinook returning to Pacific Northwest rivers. The major ports (Westport, Sekiu, Neah Bay) intercept these fish as they push through Puget Sound and the Strait. Charter operations focus on this window:
- Westport: Ocean trolling in 50-150 feet. Brad’s Cut Plug with herring is the dominant lure. Peak July-August.
- Sekiu: Mooching in Strait water with strong tidal currents. Mid-July to early September.
- Neah Bay: Mix of Strait mooching and outer Pacific trolling. July-August.
- San Juan Islands: Mooching in protected water for fish staging before pushing further into the Sound. July-August.
The combination of techniques (mooching at Sekiu, trolling at Westport) gives anglers options based on their preferences. Many serious Puget Sound salmon anglers visit multiple ports across the summer to experience different fishery characteristics.
Coho — September-November Fishery
Coho return to Puget Sound rivers from September through November. The fishery progresses across the Sound:
- August-September: Coho appearing in outer waters and Strait. Ocean trolling produces.
- September-October: Coho push into Puget Sound proper. Marine area trolling and pier fishing produce.
- October-November: River-bound Coho concentrated near tributary mouths. Estuary casting and river fishing both produce.
Coho techniques in Puget Sound: surface trolling with small spoons or pink hoochies, casting Blue Fox Vibrax spinners in river mouths, pier fishing with light tackle, and standard bobber-doggin’ for fish that have entered tributaries.
The Coho fishery makes Puget Sound a strong late-season destination after Westport and Sekiu Chinook seasons wind down. Many anglers transition from Chinook focus in summer to Coho focus in fall without leaving Washington State.
Pink Salmon — Odd-Year Beach Fishing
Puget Sound supports the most accessible pink salmon fishing in the Pacific Northwest. During odd-numbered years (2025, 2027), massive pink runs return to Puget Sound rivers — Puyallup, Skagit, Snohomish, Skykomish, Stillaguamish — and stage in saltwater near beach access points. The result: Puget Sound beaches become productive pink salmon fisheries during August of odd years.
Notable pink salmon beach access points (in odd years):
- Bush Point (Whidbey Island) — classic pink salmon beach access
- Possession Bar area — produces during major pink years
- Marrowstone Island — multiple beach access points
- Hood Canal beaches — various access locations
- South Sound beaches — Day Island, Kopachuck area, others
- Edmonds Pier — accessible pier fishing in central Sound
Pink salmon gear is light — see the pink salmon fishing guide for the full technique breakdown. The combination of beach access, light tackle, and high catch rates during major pink years makes this the most family-friendly PNW salmon fishery.
Hood Canal — Chum Salmon Specialty
Hood Canal (Marine Area 12) supports the strongest chum salmon fishery in the Lower 48. Chum return from late October through December, with peak action in November. Hood Canal anglers cast small spoons, pink jigs, or chrome lures at concentrations of chum staging in the protected canal water before pushing into tributaries.
The chum fishery is less developed than Chinook or Coho but produces consistently for anglers who target the species. Chum are aggressive on lures (a “dog” that’s hungry attacks chrome like a coho) and provide late-season fishing when other Puget Sound salmon are winding down.
Puget Sound Calendar
| Month | Primary Action |
|---|---|
| January-February | Blackmouth Chinook (resident) in select MAs |
| March | Blackmouth continues; spring Chinook approaching |
| April | Spring Chinook entering some Puget Sound rivers |
| May-June | Early ocean fish appearing in outer Sound |
| July | Ocean Chinook peak — Westport, Sekiu, Neah Bay |
| August | Chinook continues, pink salmon (odd years), Coho beginning |
| September | Coho peak, late Chinook, fall fishery building |
| October | Coho in rivers, late Chinook, Chum arriving in Hood Canal |
| November | Chum peak in Hood Canal, late Coho, winter blackmouth opening |
| December | Blackmouth season; late Chum |
Public Access and Pier Fishing
Puget Sound supports extensive public access:
- Public piers — Edmonds, Mukilteo, Bremerton, Point Defiance, various others all support pier fishing during runs
- State park access — multiple Washington State Parks with marine access
- Tribal access — some areas open to tribal members with appropriate permits
- City and county parks — local jurisdictions offer additional shoreline access
- Boat launches — public ramps throughout Puget Sound area for trailered boats
The combination of pier, beach, and launch ramp access makes Puget Sound the most-accessible salmon fishery for non-boat owners in the Pacific Northwest. Many Seattle-area anglers fish productively without ever owning a boat.
Common Mistakes
Wrong Marine Area regulations. Each MA has its own rules. Fishing MA 9 rules in MA 10 leads to citations or worse. Verify the MA you’re in and its current regulations before each trip.
Skipping the WDFW updates. Puget Sound salmon regulations change frequently mid-season. Check WDFW within 48 hours of each trip.
Wrong season for the target. Pink salmon expect odd years only. Chinook seasons differ across MAs. Match target species to current open seasons.
Inadequate weather preparation. Puget Sound weather is mild compared to outer coast but still demands serious rain gear. Grundens Herkules bibs work; cotton clothing doesn’t.
Underestimating Strait of Juan de Fuca. Sekiu and Neah Bay water is protected compared to outer Pacific but still demands respect — tidal currents are strong, weather changes fast, and proper safety gear is essential.
Crowding popular spots. Bush Point during pink years, Westport during Chinook peak, Sekiu during mooching season all see significant crowds. Respect other anglers, follow established etiquette, and consider less-crowded alternatives.
Wrong gear for resident blackmouth. Blackmouth are smaller than ocean Chinook. Heavy ocean Chinook gear is overkill. Lighter setups produce better.
Frequently Asked Questions
What’s the best place to fish salmon in Puget Sound?
Depends on season. Westport for July-August Chinook. Sekiu for mooching Chinook. Neah Bay for mixed Chinook/Coho. Bush Point and Puget Sound beaches for pink salmon (odd years only). Hood Canal for November chum.
What’s blackmouth?
Resident Chinook salmon that stay in Puget Sound year-round rather than migrating to the Pacific Ocean. Smaller than ocean Chinook (5-12 lbs typical) but available throughout the winter and early spring when other salmon aren’t running. The Puget Sound winter salmon fishery.
What’s a Marine Area in Washington?
Washington State divides its marine waters into 13 Marine Areas (MAs) for regulatory purposes. Each MA has its own season schedule and rules. Crucial to know which MA you’re fishing — regulations vary significantly across boundaries.
When can I fish pink salmon in Puget Sound?
Odd-numbered years only — 2025 was recent, 2027 is next. August is the peak month. Beach fishing from Puget Sound shores is the dominant access method.
Do I need a saltwater license for Puget Sound salmon?
Yes — Washington State fishing license plus salmon endorsement plus catch record cards. The combination varies by year and Marine Area. Verify current requirements before each trip.
Can I salmon fish from shore in Puget Sound?
Yes — extensive shore and pier access. Pink salmon during odd-year August runs is the most-accessible shore salmon fishing in the PNW. Year-round resident blackmouth from select piers. Coho during September-October from shore. See above for specific access points.
What’s the difference between Westport and Sekiu?
Westport is outer Pacific Coast (Grays Harbor) — open ocean with bar crossing required. Trolling-dominated technique. Sekiu is Strait of Juan de Fuca — protected water without bar crossing. Mooching-dominated technique. Both produce Chinook; the geography and technique differ.
Plan Your Trip
- SST Charts
- Fleet Tracker
- Marine Weather
- AI Fishing Predictions
- Pacific Salmon Fishing Guide
- Pacific Salmon Safety Guide
- Columbia River Salmon Fishing
Related Guides
- Pacific Salmon Fishing Guide
- Pacific Salmon Safety Guide
- Columbia River Salmon Fishing
- Pacific Chinook Salmon Fishing
- Pacific Coho Salmon Fishing
- Pacific Pink Salmon Fishing
- Best Pacific Salmon Rods
- Best Pacific Salmon Lures and Plugs
- Mooching for Salmon
- Bobber-Doggin’ for Salmon
- Plunking for Salmon
- Best Water Temp for King Salmon
- Best Water Temp for Coho Salmon
- Best Fishing Line by Pound Test
- Best Fishing Knots
Tight lines!
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