Last updated: 2 weeks ago
Urban estuary mark on the Hotwells side of the Cumberland Basin and River Avon, offering deep, fast, highly tidal water alongside vertical quay walls and railings. Access is easy from pavements along Hotwell Road near the swing bridges/locks, but expect powerful currents, big tide range, coloured water and changing levels....
A classic roadside estuary mark on the tidal River Avon at Shirehampton. You fish from the riverside wall/railings into a deep, fast-scouring channel with a huge tidal range. Best results are usually on the flood and the first of the ebb, with neap tides being easier to hold bottom than...
A tidal creek on the north bank of the River Avon between Sea Mills and Shirehampton. Muddy, estuarine ground with a very strong tide run and big Bristol Channel range. Most anglers fish from firm ground by the old harbour/pill walls and paved path rather than the soft mud. Best...
A tidal estuary bank on the River Avon beside Lamplighters Marsh (Shirehampton). Mixed mud, shingle and stone revetment with a fast, deep channel on springs. Fishing is best around the last two hours of flood through the first of the ebb; neaps give clearer water for mullet. Access is easy...
Urban, tidal-river mark at the head of the tide on the River Avon. Netham Weir creates fast-flowing seams and slack eddies that draw mullet and occasional bass on the flood, with eels and flounder more active at dusk and into the night. Access is straightforward from paths by Netham Lock/Feeder...
The New Cut is a fast-flowing tidal channel of the River Avon running through south-central Bristol, with steep stone/concrete embankments, mud margins at low water, and strong currents on spring tides. It fishes like an urban estuary: mullet are the headline quarry, with flounder, eels and the odd bass. Access...
Bristol’s “coastline” is really the inner Bristol Channel/Severn Estuary and the tidal River Avon around Avonmouth – a short, largely industrial shore with immense tides, soft mud, and fast flows. It’s not a classic beach county, but it offers gritty, productive estuary fishing for bass, thornback rays, smoothhound, conger eel, and winter codling/whiting when conditions line up. The appeal is heavy-tide estuary sport close to the city, with bigger open-coast options a short drive into North Somerset or South Gloucestershire.
Avonmouth and Portbury fringe (within the Bristol boundary):
Tidal River Avon (Sea Mills to the Gorge/Hotwells):
Severnside fringe – Severn Beach, Aust, New Passage (immediately NE of Bristol in South Gloucestershire):
Portishead to Clevedon (immediately SW of Bristol in North Somerset):
| Species | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bass | C&R likely, odd fish | C&R likely, odd fish | Picking up on warmer neaps | Better on mild floods | Good on crab | Good | Good | Good | Peak shoals + larger fish | Peak larger fish | Tails off with cold | C&R likely, odd fish |
| Thornback ray | Occasional | Occasional | Starting | Improving | Good | Good | Good | Good | Good | Good | Fading | Rare |
| Smoothhound | - | - | Rare | First arrivals | Good | Peak | Peak | Good | Tailing off | Rare | - | - |
| Whiting | Good in cold spells | Good | Fading | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | First arrivals | Good |
| Codling (variable) | Occasional | Occasional | Rare | - | - | - | - | - | - | Rare | Occasional | Occasional |
| Conger eel | Year-round, best at night | Year-round | Year-round | Year-round | Year-round | Year-round | Year-round | Year-round | Year-round | Year-round | Year-round | Year-round |
| Thick-lipped mullet | - | - | Occasional | Starting | Better | Good | Peak | Peak | Good | Good | Fading | - |
| Flounder (declined) | Occasional | Occasional | Occasional | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | Occasional | Occasional |
Notes:
Do I need a licence to sea fish around Bristol?
What are the bass regulations here?
Is night fishing allowed?
Where’s best for a beginner from Bristol?
Can I keep what I catch?
| Area | Character & Access | Best species | Best methods | Prime season | Safety/facilities |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Avonmouth/Portbury fringe (Bristol) | Industrial sea walls near the Avon mouth; strictly controlled access around docks | Bass, thornback ray, conger, winter whiting/codling | 6–8 oz grippers; pulley pennel with crab/squid; up-and-over for rays | Apr–Oct for bass/rays; Nov–Feb for whiting/codling | Watch for overtopping, ship wash; observe port byelaws |
| Tidal River Avon (Sea Mills–Hotwells) | Mud banks and walls with short HW windows | School bass, mullet, eels (release), odd flounder | Small worm/crab baits; short snoods; bread for mullet | May–Sep for bass/mullet | Soft mud, slippery steps, fast ebb; urban parking care |
| Severnside fringe (Severn Beach/Aust) | Long seawalls, huge tides; 10–20 min from Bristol | Thornback ray, smoothhound, bass, winter whiting | Pulley pennel with crab; squid/bluey for rays; heavy grip leads | May–Sep for rays/hounds; winter for whiting | Overtopping risk on big springs; stay off mud |
| Portishead–Clevedon (North Somerset) | Deeper-water walls/piers close to Bristol | Bass, rays, hounds, conger | Pulley/dropper; crab/squid; night for conger | May–Oct for bass/rays; summer for hounds | Ticketing on some piers; stronger flows near headlands |