Wisconsin Fishing Season Calendar: Month by Month Guide

Wisconsin fishing built American musky culture. The Hayward chain produced the modern musky tradition. The Chippewa Flowage owns the fall trophy window. Northwest Wisconsin’s lake country contains hundreds of musky and walleye waters. Lake Michigan and Door County’s Sturgeon Bay produce trophy smallmouth and salmon. The Mississippi River backwaters hold catfish, panfish, and trophy walleye. Wisconsin’s fishing breadth covers nearly every freshwater species and technique relevant to the Upper Midwest.

This calendar pulls together the seasonal patterns across Wisconsin’s primary fisheries — the Northwoods musky chain, the Sturgeon Bay system, the Mississippi River system, and the south-central walleye and bass lakes. Use it alongside the SST charts to time your trip and the Minnesota calendar for the neighboring state’s patterns.


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At a Glance: Wisconsin Fishing Calendar

Month Avg Surface Temp Primary Targets Trip Types
Jan 32°F (ice) Walleye, Pike, Panfish (ice) Ice fishing
Feb 32°F (ice) Walleye, Pike, Trophy Crappie (ice) Ice fishing — peak conditions
Mar 32-40°F Late-ice Crappie, Pike Late ice / early open water
Apr 40-52°F Trophy Pike, Trout (streams) Pre-spawn pike, trout opener
May 52-65°F Walleye (opener), Pike, Smallmouth Walleye opener
Jun 65-72°F Musky (opener), Walleye, Smallmouth, Bass Musky season opens; multi-species
Jul 72-78°F Musky, Walleye, Smallmouth, Largemouth Peak summer fishing
Aug 74-80°F Musky (transition), Walleye (deep) Multi-species trips
Sep 62-72°F Musky (trophy window), Walleye, Pike Fall trophy season begins
Oct 50-62°F Musky (peak), Walleye, Pike (trophy) Fall trophy peak
Nov 40-52°F Musky (sucker pattern), Walleye Late-season fishing
Dec 32-40°F Early-ice fishing begins First-ice fishing

Winter: December through March

Water/ice condition: 32°F surface, varying ice thickness

Wisconsin ice fishing is a serious recreational economy. The northwoods chain freezes consistently by mid-December and stays solid through March. Ice fishing tournaments, derbies, and resort weekends fill the calendar. The Hayward area produces ice-fishing fly-ins, while the Chippewa Flowage and Lake Winnebago each support major ice fishing communities.

What’s biting:

  • Walleye — Active throughout winter. Tip-ups with shiners or jigging spoons produce. Lake Winnebago is the famous winter walleye destination with the spring sturgeon spearing season immediately following.
  • Northern Pike — Big pike very catchable through ice. Tip-ups with large shiners or suckers along weed edges. February-March trophy window.
  • Yellow Perch — Schools concentrate in deep basins. Small jigs with maggots or waxworms produce numbers.
  • Black Crappie — Deep basin schools. January and February best for big slabs.
  • Bluegill — Wisconsin produces trophy ice bluegills (8+ inches). Small jigs and waxworms.

Spring: April through Mid-May (Pre-Opener)

Water temperature: 40-58°F

Wisconsin’s pre-opener period produces some of the best trophy pike fishing of the year. Lake Winnebago’s sturgeon spearing season runs mid-February, but the open-water fishing begins as ice clears (typically mid-April in the northwoods). Trout streams open in early May. Crappie fishing on smaller lakes can be excellent.

What’s biting:

  • Northern Pike (Trophy Window) — Post-ice-out trophy pike. Shallow bays. Dardevle spoons and live suckers produce. Many Wisconsin pike anglers travel north specifically for this window.
  • Black Crappie — Pre-spawn on smaller, warmer lakes. Slab fish in shallow water.
  • Trout (streams) — Wisconsin’s stream trout opener varies by region. Driftless area in the southwest produces excellent spring brown trout.
  • Bullheads — Underrated Wisconsin fishery, particularly in spring. Worm-and-bobber from shore.

Walleye Opener: First Saturday in May

Water temperature: 50-58°F

Wisconsin’s walleye opener falls on the first Saturday in May — one week earlier than Minnesota’s. The northwoods lakes (Lake Vermilion, the Northwoods chain) produce excellent opener fishing. The Mississippi River system around La Crosse produces big numbers of walleye and sauger on the opener.

What’s biting:

  • Walleye — The headline species. Jigs tipped with minnows on rocky structure. Northland Fireball jigs are the standard.
  • Pike — Still aggressive in shallow weeds. Large suckers and spoons produce.
  • Crappie — Late spawning crappie in shallow water. Excellent panfish action.
  • Smallmouth Bass — Catch-and-release until bass opener (mid-May).

Late Spring: Late May through Mid-June

Water temperature: 58-68°F

Wisconsin musky season opens around Memorial Day weekend (varies by zone). This is when the entire state shifts toward musky-focused fishing. Post-spawn musky in northwoods lakes provide accessible fishing as fish recover and begin feeding actively.

What’s biting:

Summer: June through August

Water temperature: 65-80°F

The deep summer pattern. Surface temperatures push past the prime band for walleye and pike. Musky and smallmouth remain active. The Northwoods chain shifts toward musky-focused fishing while Wisconsin’s bigger lakes (Lake Winnebago, the Mississippi system) produce walleye on deep structure.

What’s biting:

  • Musky — Active feeding period. Big baits on weed edges. Bull Dawg soft plastics dominant.
  • Walleye — Push to deeper water. Trolling with Rapala Shad Rap or Flicker Shad along structure.
  • Smallmouth Bass — Active across multiple depths. Mille Lacs class structure on Wisconsin lakes.
  • Pike — Push deep to escape heat. Trolling crankbaits at thermocline edge.
  • Largemouth Bass — Topwater at dawn, plastics at depth. South Wisconsin lakes.
  • Lake Michigan Salmon — Door County, Algoma, Sturgeon Bay produce king salmon trolling. See the king salmon temperature guide.

Fall Trophy Window: September through October

Water temperature: 50-65°F

Wisconsin’s fall is the trophy season. The Hayward chain becomes a destination for serious musky anglers. Walleye, pike, and smallmouth all become more aggressive simultaneously. Tourist crowds thin. Resort prices drop. The fishing is exceptional.

What’s biting:

  • Musky (Trophy Window) — The famous Wisconsin fall musky bite. 50+ inch fish become realistic targets. Big jerkbaits and live suckers. See the musky fishing guide for technique.
  • Walleye (Trophy Window) — Aggressive pre-winter feeding. Trolling crankbaits and vertical jigging both produce.
  • Pike (Trophy Window) — Second trophy pike window. Big females actively feeding before winter.
  • Smallmouth Bass — Aggressive fall feeding. Z-Man Finesse TRD on Ned heads produces.
  • Salmon (Tributary Runs) — Wisconsin Lake Michigan tributaries see king salmon runs in September-October. See the river salmon fishing guide.
  • Brown Trout — Lake Michigan browns run into harbors and tributaries. The Atlantic salmon guide covers related cool-water species.

Late Fall: November

Water temperature: 40-52°F

The end of open water fishing. Most resorts close by early November. The musky sucker pattern produces the year’s biggest fish for cold-weather specialists. Walleye fishing continues on deep structure until ice forms.

What’s biting:

  • Musky (Sucker Pattern) — Cold-weather trophy specialists fish 12-16 inch suckers on quick-strike rigs. Hayward chain, Chippewa Flowage, Boulder Junction. See the musky fishing guide.
  • Walleye — Deep, slow feeding. Vertical jigging on structure. Numbers down, size up.
  • Pike — Late-fall trophy potential with suckers along deep weed edges.

Top Wisconsin Lakes by Season

Lake Primary Species Best Window
Hayward Chain (Lac Courte Oreilles, Round) Musky, Walleye, Smallmouth June through October
Chippewa Flowage Musky (Trophy), Walleye, Crappie Fall trophy musky, summer multi-species
Lake Winnebago Walleye, White Bass, Sturgeon Spring opener, ice fishing
Boulder Junction Lakes Musky, Walleye, Smallmouth Summer through fall
Sturgeon Bay (Lake Michigan) Smallmouth Bass (Trophy), Salmon Spring smallmouth, summer salmon
Mississippi River (La Crosse area) Walleye, Sauger, Catfish Spring opener, fall walleye
Lake Pepin (Mississippi) Walleye, White Bass Spring and fall
Lake Geneva Largemouth Bass, Trout Summer, year-round trout
Big Eau Pleine Musky, Walleye, Pike Summer through fall

How to Use Ocean & Lake Data to Plan Your Trip

  1. Identify the season — Use this calendar to narrow target species by month.
  2. Check the SST charts — current surface temperatures.
  3. Look for temperature structure — Breaks, warm pockets, cold inflows.
  4. Cross-reference the chlorophyll map — Productive water concentrates bait.
  5. Watch the fleet tracker — Real-time intelligence on where boats are finding fish.
  6. Check the AI predictions — Daily forecasts synthesizing the data.

Plan Your Trip

Related Guides

Tight lines!

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