Tuna Ground

Ipswich Bay

Bluefin close to the beach. North of Cape Ann, Ipswich Bay is inshore water where, in the right years, bluefin push in tight chasing bait, a short run for the North Shore fleet.

Ipswich Bay, the water north of Cape Ann off Ipswich and Rockport, is primarily inshore ground, but in the right years bluefin push right in chasing bait, giving North Shore anglers a shot at tuna on a short run. It is also excellent striped bass and groundfish water.

The ground

The bay's bait concentrations and current edges are the key. When herring, mackerel and pogies flood the bay, the tuna can follow them in surprisingly close.

How to fish it

When bluefin are inside, look for surface feeds and marked fish, then pop, jig or live-bait them. Watch the bait and the birds; inshore tuna fishing is a sight-fishing game.

Tip Keep an eye on the bait reports in late summer. When the herring and pogies pile into Ipswich Bay, the bluefin can show close to the beach, and being ready to run when the bait arrives is half the battle.

About the coordinates The coordinates on this page are an approximate reference to orient you, not a navigation waypoint. Fish move, and numbers vary boat to boat, get exact, current marks locally and always run on a plotter with proper charts.
Regulations Tuna are federally managed highly migratory species requiring an HMS permit, with category, size and retention rules that change through the season. Confirm current rules with NOAA Fisheries HMS before fishing.
From the page to the water

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Note: fishing regulations (size limits, bag limits, seasons, permits) change often. Always confirm current rules with the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries (saltwater), MassWildlife (freshwater), or NOAA Fisheries (offshore/HMS) before you keep a fish.