Good morning from Lake Lanier—Artificial Lure here with your September 7, 2025, fishing report. First light crept over the lake this morning at 7:09 AM, and we’ll see sunset at 7:57 PM, giving us over twelve hours on the water. Right now, temps are sitting in the low 70s, climbing well into the 80s this afternoon, and skies are mostly clear—expect hot late-summer sun and those classic shimmery lake breezes. Lanier’s water is about a foot below full pool, which is revealing some extra shoreline and shallow structure; clarity remains mostly clear.
No tides to worry about on Lanier, but the lower lake level, courtesy of ongoing drought, means fish are more concentrated and structure is really king this week. As reported by Lakeside News on September 4, bass fishing is fair, with fish holding tight to points, ledges, and timber, especially where that deeper water touches shallow breaks. The bite’s best in the early morning and picking back up just before dark—those cool windows are your golden ticket.
According to the Lake Lanier Daily Fishing Report from September 3, the spotted bass have been reliable along deeper rock piles, brush, and drop-offs in 18–28 feet of water. Folks are catching decent numbers, though most are running in that 10- to 15-inch range. Striper action remains steady despite low water, with several double-digit fish—some tipping 10 pounds—being landed recently, especially on the north end and deeper channels exposed by drought. Catfish, including some real tankers, are biting around the newly revealed banks, with cut bait or live bream producing best.
Crappie are schooling up around docks with brush and shaded bridge pylons. Limits have been coming in for anglers using small minnows and micro-jigs under slip bobbers—stick to 15–20 feet down.
Best baits this week: A drop shot rigged with a natural-colored finesse worm is pulling in the most bass, but a morning topwater session with a walking bait or a buzzbait near sunrise could bag a good one. Several locals have had luck throwing a “June Bug” colored stickbait or curly worm when the sun gets high—sometimes that subtle color just outperforms the rest in this late summer heat. For stripers, go with live blueback herring on unweighted lines or deploy a white bucktail jig when they’re marking deep on sonar. Catfish continue to smash cut shad and even chicken livers after dusk.
Lure tip: Mix up your presentation by adding a paddle tail or a frog trailer to your buzzbait for a little extra thump—the bite may be slow, but that extra profile can make all the difference, as anglers have noted when the lake gets pressured in late summer.
Today’s hot spots: Try Old Federal Point early for spotted bass and stripers—work those submerged humps with a shaky head or live bait. Later in the day, shift to the back of Bald Ridge Creek, targeting shady boat docks and isolated brush in 12–24 feet. Browns Bridge area is producing crappie and the occasional surprise slab bass, especially near newly exposed structure. And don’t sleep on the riprap banks by Lanier Islands for late-day topwater action as shad push shallow.
That’s the word from your dock for September 7, 2025. Good luck on the water, and remember: Stay hydrated, respect your fellow anglers, and keep those rods bending!
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates and lake tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn