Santa Cruz County, CA · Pacific Ocean
Santa Cruz Main Beach
Santa Cruz Main Beach offers public shoreline and pier access on the Pacific coast in Santa Cruz County. Common targets include california halibut, barred surfperch, white seabass, rockfish, and lingcod.
Live · updated
Top pick today
Barred Surfperch — Great day to fish for Barred Surfperch.
Best conditions of 5 species tracked at Santa Cruz Main Beach.
Atmosphere
Water
Sun & Moon
Today's Tides
| Time | Type | Height |
|---|---|---|
| 3:55 AM | Low | -1.3 ft |
| 10:51 AM | High | 3.7 ft |
| 2:35 PM | Low | 2.8 ft |
| 9:01 PM | High | 6.9 ft |
Species at Santa Cruz Main Beach
5 species tracked, ranked by today's conditions. The top pick is open below — tap any species to expand it, or a chip to focus.
#1 Barred Surfperch Great day to fish for Barred Surfperch. In season 72/100
What's helping
- 60°F water — right in barred surfperch's ideal range
What's hurting
- high slack tide — barred surfperch prefers incoming tide
About. Amphistichus argenteus — The staple of the California surf — caught right in the wash on sand crabs, bloodworms, and small grubs. A year-round, shore-accessible fishery that needs no boat; best on a building tide into structure and troughs.
Prefers. Water 50–68°F (ideal 60°F) · incoming tide · depth 1–12 ft.
Last verified 44 days ago on 2026-05-29. Open source page →
- Daily creel
- 20
No minimum size. Part of the 20-fish general finfish bag (no more than 10 of any one species).
Source: California regulations · verified 2026-05-29.
#2 California Halibut Workable day for California Halibut. In season 60/100
What's helping
- 60°F water — inside california halibut's active range
What's hurting
- high slack tide — california halibut prefers incoming tide
About. Paralichthys californicus — The signature flatfish of the California coast — a sandy-bottom ambush predator drift-fished with live bait or bounced with jigs along beaches, bays, and channel edges. Bites best on a moving tide.
Prefers. Water 55–72°F (ideal 64°F) · incoming tide · depth 4–60 ft.
Last verified 44 days ago on 2026-05-29. Open source page →
- Min size
- 22"
- Daily creel
- 5
22" total length minimum, 5/person/day (3 south of Point Conception).
Source: California regulations · verified 2026-05-29.
#2 White Seabass Workable day for White Seabass. In season 60/100
What's helping
- 60°F water — inside white seabass's active range
What's hurting
- high slack tide — white seabass prefers incoming tide
About. Atractoscion nobilis — The largest croaker on the Pacific coast — a prized, hard-fighting gamefish hunted around kelp beds and squid spawns, often at first light or under a strong moon. Targeted with live squid, sardines, and surface irons.
Prefers. Water 58–72°F (ideal 65°F) · incoming tide · depth 10–100 ft.
Last verified 44 days ago on 2026-05-29. Open source page →
- Min size
- 28"
- Daily creel
- 3
28" total length minimum, 3/person/day — but only 1 fish/day from Mar 15–Jun 15 south of Point Conception.
Source: California regulations · verified 2026-05-29.
#4 Rockfish Skip the Rockfish trip today. In season 30/100
What's hurting
- 60°F water — above rockfish's active range (45–58°f) — fish move deep
About. Sebastes spp. — The Pacific “RCG complex” — dozens of Sebastes species worked over rocky reefs, kelp, and structure from jetties to offshore banks. The backbone of West Coast bottom fishing; dropped baits and shrimp flies take them.
Prefers. Water 45–58°F (ideal 52°F) · either tide · depth 20–300 ft.
Last verified 44 days ago on 2026-05-29. Open source page →
- Daily creel
- 10
10 fish/day in combination (rockfish, cabezon, greenlings), with species sub-limits (e.g. 1 copper, 2 canary). Boat-based season is typically Apr 1–Dec 31; shore fishing is open year-round.
Source: California regulations · verified 2026-05-29.
#4 Lingcod Skip the Lingcod trip today. In season 30/100
What's hurting
- 60°F water — above lingcod's active range (45–58°f) — fish move deep
About. Ophiodon elongatus — A toothy, aggressive ambush predator of Pacific rocky reefs and kelp — hammers jigs and live bait fished near the bottom. Often caught while rockfishing; big “lings” are a prize from jetties and nearshore reefs.
Prefers. Water 45–58°F (ideal 52°F) · either tide · depth 20–300 ft.
Last verified 44 days ago on 2026-05-29. Open source page →
- Min size
- 22"
- Daily creel
- 2
22" total length minimum, 2/person/day. Season tracks the groundfish complex (typically Apr 1–Dec 31 for boats; shore open year-round).
Source: California regulations · verified 2026-05-29.
Location Info
Water Body
Pacific Ocean
Region
Access
Pier, shore, and ramp
Jurisdiction
California
Coordinates
Local reports & rules for Santa Cruz Main Beach: California CDFW fishing & regulations → · fish-consumption advisory →
Nearby Access Points
Frequently Asked
Do I need a fishing license to fish at Santa Cruz Main Beach?
Yes (anglers age 16 and older). To fish at Santa Cruz Main Beach you need the appropriate state fishing license. See the agency's current rules: the state agency website
What fish are commonly targeted at Santa Cruz Main Beach?
Santa Cruz Main Beach is listed on this site for 5 commonly-targeted species: California Halibut, Barred Surfperch, White Seabass, Rockfish, and 1 more. Which species is currently in season and which is scoring highest today is shown in the per-species ranking on this page.
When is the best time to fish at Santa Cruz Main Beach?
It depends more on the species and the day's conditions than on a fixed "best hour." Water temperature, weather, and — at tidal locations — the stage of the tide drive activity most. The per-species ranking on this page scores every target species at Santa Cruz Main Beach against today's live conditions, so the fish near the top are your best bets right now; check back as conditions change through the day.
What kind of access does Santa Cruz Main Beach have?
Santa Cruz Main Beach has multiple access types — pier, shoreline, and at least one public boat ramp.
Which state's fishing regulations apply at Santa Cruz Main Beach?
state agency regulations apply at Santa Cruz Main Beach. Size limits, creel limits, and seasonal closures are listed per species on each species page. Always confirm against the agency source linked from each regulation block — emergency closures can take effect mid-season.
Is Santa Cruz Main Beach tidal water?
Yes. Santa Cruz Main Beach sits on tidal water with a NOAA tide station nearby. Today's high/low timing is in the tide chart on this page.