Spearfishing

Gulf Coast spearfishing — species, regulations, and the gear that gets you home with dinner.

Free diving or scuba, pole spear or speargun — spearfishing puts you in the water with the same reef and nearshore species Gulf Coast anglers chase from a boat.

The northern Gulf of Mexico’s limestone reefs, artificial wrecks, and nearshore structure hold some of the best spearfishing in the country — red snapper, gag and red grouper, amberjack, triggerfish, and flounder are all legal targets in season. It’s a natural extension of everything Get Out Mor already covers on Gulf Coast saltwater fishing, just from underwater instead of from the rail.

Know the Regulations Before You Load a Gun

Spearfishing regulations are not the same as rod-and-reel rules, even for the same species. Size and bag limits generally match standard saltwater regs, but state wildlife agencies restrict spearfishing gear (powerheads, certain spear types) in specific zones, and marine sanctuaries, jetties, and some state waters are closed to spearfishing entirely. Regulations vary by state and change year to year — always confirm current rules with your state’s wildlife or marine fisheries agency (FWC in Florida, for example) before you dive, and check for species-specific closures on top of the general saltwater season.

Core Gear Categories

  • Propulsion: pole spear, Hawaiian sling, or speargun (band or pneumatic) — each with different range, learning curve, and legal status by state.
  • Exposure protection: a wetsuit rated for Gulf water temps, which swing from the upper 60s in winter to the upper 80s in summer.
  • Safety: a dive flag or float (required in most states when diving away from a boat), a dive knife, and a weight system matched to your suit and depth.

Buying Guides

Related from Get Out Mor

Written by Cole Hartwell — a Gulf Coast angler with time on Texas and Louisiana flats and offshore structure.