Best fishing times in Freeport, TX
The best time to fish Freeport, TX today (Wednesday, July 8) is the moving water around the 3:58 AM low, around the 8:41 AM high, around the 4:41 PM low. Today rates slow: Quarter moon means neap tides — gentler water movement; 1.2 ft of swing on the day.
The moon is a last quarter today (46% illuminated). For the live tide curve, wind, and water temperature at this spot, open the Freeport, TX tide chart or jump straight to its live fishing planner.
| Day | Outlook | Moon | Bite windows (CDT) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Today, Wed, Jul 8 | Slow | Last Quarter | around the 3:58 AM low around the 8:41 AM high around the 4:41 PM low |
| Thu, Jul 9 | Slow | Last Quarter | around the 1:20 AM high around the 5:25 PM low |
| Fri, Jul 10 | Fair | Waning Crescent | around the 2:34 AM high around the 6:17 PM low |
| Sat, Jul 11 | Fair | Waning Crescent | around the 3:36 AM high around the 7:13 PM low · first/last light |
| Sun, Jul 12 | Fair | Waning Crescent | around the 4:32 AM high around the 8:10 PM low · first/last light |
| Mon, Jul 13 | Good | New Moon | around the 5:25 AM high · first/last light around the 9:08 PM low · first/last light |
| Tue, Jul 14 | Good | New Moon | around the 6:13 AM high · first/last light around the 10:04 PM low |
Windows are the ~90 minutes around each predicted high and low at NOAA station 8772440. Ratings weigh moon phase (spring vs neap tides), tide range, and light overlap — local structure, bait, and weather always outrank the calendar.
Fishing the tide at Freeport, TX
- What is the best time to fish in Freeport, TX?
- Fish the moving water: the hour or so on either side of each high and low tide, when current pushes bait. At Freeport, TX the windows shift roughly 50 minutes later each day with the tide. The strongest days pair a new or full moon (bigger spring tides, more water movement) with a tide change near dawn or dusk.
- What is the best fishing day at Freeport, TX this week?
- Monday, July 13 looks strongest this week. New moon means spring tides — more moving water at every change; a tide change lines up with first or last light; 3.1 ft of swing on the day.
- Do tides really affect fishing?
- Yes — moving water concentrates bait and triggers feeding. Slack water at the top and bottom of the tide is usually the slowest stretch; the falling or rising water on either side of the change is when current seams, points, and flats fish best. Wind and water temperature matter too, so check the live conditions on the station page before you go.