It’s Artificial Lure checking in with your Lake Guntersville fishing report for Saturday, September 6th, 2025. Fall is just starting to tease the waters here in North Alabama and, let me tell you, the fish have noticed. Air temps are hovering in the upper 60s at sunrise, climbing steadily through the morning, with a light breeze rippling the grass edges—classic late-summer conditions but with a hint of that autumn cool-down setting up for more aggressive bites.
Sunrise today rolled in around 6:25 AM, and sunset is coming up at 7:12 PM. There’s no tidal swing on Guntersville, but TVA is pulling a bit of current in the afternoons, so keep your eyes on generation schedules if you’re looking for active fish. Overcast skies are giving way to clear patches as the day heats up. Water temps are still warm, hanging around the low 80s, but cooler overnight air is helping drop that surface temp, making baitfish more active along the grass mats and creek channels.
Bassmaster and several local guides are seeing a definite uptick in **bass activity**, with packs of shad starting to bunch up in the back pockets and grass edge flats. This means it’s prime time for early topwater—walking baits, buzzbaits, and especially a white or shad-imitating frog fished tight against hydrilla mats. If you’re out when the sun gets higher, don’t be afraid to punch with a heavy Texas-rigged creature bait; Guntersville’s thick mats are still holding good numbers of largemouth through midday.
According to reports coming in this week on the Lake Guntersville Alabama Daily Fishing Report podcast, anglers are routinely putting three- to five-pounders in the boat, and there’s even been a couple of limit sacks stretching fifteen pounds or more, so the bigger bass are out there for folks grinding through the grass. The deep channel ledges and old river points have also produced some solid catches for those working big shaky heads or magnum crankbaits in green pumpkin and natural shad colors[Lake Guntersville, Alabama Fishing Report - Daily - Spreaker].
Don’t sleep on the bream and crappie bite, either. Families and panfishermen alike are hauling in nice stringers near the state park piers and backwater docks, using red worms or crickets under slip floats about two feet deep. Catfish are pretty steady, too—drifting cut shad on flats around Honeycomb and Mud Creek is yielding good blues and channel cats, especially through the evening.
As for **hot spots**, try flipping mats around Brown’s Creek and just south of Goose Pond—there’s been a concentration of schooling baitfish in those areas and a lot of shredded hydrilla from recent catches. For a classic Guntersville kicker, take some time to work the grass and stump flats just off the Seibold Ramp; plenty of local tournaments see big bites there, especially with the current moving or right before sunset.
Top lures today: white frogs, walking topwaters, bladed jigs in bluegill or shad, 3/4 oz black-and-blue jigs for flipping, and for deeper work, a magnum shaky head or a deep-diving crankbait in natural hues. Soft plastics like Senkos and big worms in junebug or green pumpkin always have a home on this lake—texas-rigged or wacky style near grass edges.
That’s the action for Lake Guntersville on this September Saturday. Thanks for tuning in—be safe, take a kid if you can, and don’t forget to subscribe for your next daily report.
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