2026 East Coast Spring Fishing Run — Striped Bass, Catfish & Shad

The 2026 spring run is a high-stakes, 60-day window where the Atlantic’s tidal rivers surge with life.

Whether on the James, Potomac, Delaware, Hudson, or Connecticut rivers, preparing for peak migration and predator activity is essential to catching more fish while avoiding lost gear.

Spring awakening of an East Coast tidal river with blue heron and shad in flowing water, illustrating the seasonal migration of forage fish and predator activity

Key Takeaways

What is the best rig for the East Coast spring run?

The FATKAT drift rig is the top choice for 2026. As predators follow shad and herring into tidal rivers, you need a rig that masters Compound Signaling™. The FATKAT lifts your bait into the current where predators are actively hunting.

How do you catch Striped Bass during the shad run?

Big Stripers follow the "scent trail" of migrating shad. Use a FATKAT rig to suspend large live bait. This creates a clear silhouette and mimics a wounded fish drifting naturally in the current.

Why is snag-resistance vital in tidal rivers?

Tidal rivers are full of "river junk" like sunken logs and rocks. The FATKAT stays off the bottom, helping you avoid the Retying Tax. This keeps your bait in the water longer during the short, high-energy spring window.

The USGS website Provides the best location for anglers to monitor temperatures

When Does the 2026 Spring Fishing Run Start?

The spring run begins when water temperatures rise and forage fish move upstream.

Timing this shift correctly is the difference between watching the river and catching fish.

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Multiple forage species often overlap during the spring run, creating nonstop feeding opportunities.

Primary spring forage includes:

  • Lamprey
  • River herring (alewife & blueback)
  • White and yellow perch
  • Hickory shad
  • American shad
  • Gizzard shad

Key feeding behavior:

  • Predators target exhausted or injured fish
  • Known as the “drift and die” pattern
  • Baits that drift naturally outperform anchored rigs

USGS river gauges provide the most reliable real-time water temperature data for tracking the spring run.

What Are the Fish Eating Right Now? Timing the Bait Fish Wave

The Mid Atlantic's Big Three —the James River, Potomac River, and Delaware River—support up to seven different forage species simultaneously, creating a predator feeding frenzy.

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  • Hickory shad (early and aggressive movers)
  • American shad (later, heavier-bodied forage)
  • River herring (high-density bait)
  • Perch and lamprey (early-season triggers)


For anglers, this feeding pattern is best approached using controlled drift fishing that keeps bait moving naturally with the current.


Primary spring forage species include Hickory Shad & American Shad,  found in East Coast tidal rivers.

2026 River Peak Migration Timing

Each river follows the same pattern, but timing shifts by latitude. This table helps you plan where to fish first.
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River System Forage Species Present (The "Menu") 2026 Forage Start Striper Harvest Starts
The James River(VA) Lamprey, Yellow & White Perch, Gizzard Shad, Hickory & American Shad, Blueback Herring Early March (Perch/Lamprey) May 16 (Ches. Bay/Tidal)
The Potomac River (DC/MD) Hickory & American Shad, White Perch, Herring, Gizzard Shad Mid-March (Shad) May 16 (Potomac Mainstem)
The Delaware River (DE/PA/NJ) American Shad, River Herring, White Perch, Gizzard Shad Late March (Herring) April 1 (NJ) / May 1 (DE)
The Susquehanna River (MD/PA) American Shad, River Herring, Gizzard Shad, White Perch Early April May 16 (MD Tidal)
The Hudson River (NY/NJ) River Herring, American Shad, White Perch, Gizzard Shad Early April April 1 (Tidal Hudson)
The Connecticut River (CT) American Shad, Alewife, Blueback Herring, White Perch Late April Year-Round (1 fish limit)
Infographic showing where fish gather during their run, and where you should focus your efforts

Where to Fish in Tidal Rivers During the Spring Run

Fish do not spread evenly across the river in spring. They stack in places where current delivers food.

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Both forage and predators hold in energy-efficient zones.

High-percentage locations include:

  • Current seams
  • Slack water beside fast flow
  • Edges of riffles and rock piles
  • Drop-offs leading into deep pools
  • Areas just downstream of forage schools

Observation tip:

  • Feeding birds = active forage
  • Active forage = nearby predators

Let the river show you where to fish.

How Do I Avoid Snags While Fishing in High River Flows?

Spring floods turn river bottoms into tackle traps. Snag-resistant rigs keep you fishing longer.

Reducing snags isn’t just about saving money — it’s also part of responsible, sustainable fishing in debris-heavy tidal rivers.

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High water moves debris into productive zones.

Common spring hazards:

  • Fallen trees
  • Root balls
  • Man-made debris
  • Shifting rocks

Why standard rigs fail:

  • Sinkers drag the bottom
  • Hooks wedge into cover
  • Frequent break-offs kill momentum

Better approach:

  • Use snag-resistant or suspended drift rigs
  • Keep bait above debris, not in it
  • Fish where predators feed — not where tackle is lost

The FATKAT rig's buoyancy and hydrodynamic shape allow it to glide over these hazards. By keeping your hook out of the snags and slightly elevated, you stay in the water longer and avoid the "terminal tackle tax" of the spring migration.

Comparison of a snagged bottom fishing rig versus a snag-resistant FATKAT rig in high-flow river conditions with debris.
Diagram of a catfish lateral line and sensory system detecting vibration and scent trails in turbid, muddy river water.

How to Catch Fish in Muddy Spring Water

Spring water is often muddy and low visibility. Fish adapt by using senses other than sight.


The secret to catching the "Bigger Fish" is keeping your bait elevated so vibrations and the scent trail can disperse 360 degrees in the current.

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Predators rely on their Sensory Trinity:

  • Vibration: detected by the lateral line
  • Smell: carried downstream by current
  • Taste: final confirmation before striking

What works best:

  • Suspended baits
  • Natural drift
  • Strong scent dispersion
  • Minimal bottom contact

If your bait can’t be felt or smelled, it won’t be eaten.

Spring Bait Fish Migration: Biological Triggers & Holding Areas

Each forage species responds to specific environmental triggers. Knowing them helps you fish ahead of the run.
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Species Typical Arrival Window Primary Trigger Common Holding Areas
Lamprey Late winter Cold water tolerance + flow Lower river, riffles, upstream edges of poolsr
River Herring (Alewife & Blueback) Late winter–early spring Temperature + flow Lower river, tidal reaches
Perch Early spring Day length + warming water Eddies, slower margins
Hickory Shad Early–mid spring Temperature threshold Mid-river runs, seams
American Shad Mid spring Sustained warmth + flow Deeper channels upstream
Striped Bass Mid–late spring Forage abundance + temperature Downstream of forage, seams, edges
Catfish Spring–summer Flow + forage availability Deeper pools, near forage patches
Infographic showing the various conditions required to trigger the migration run of striped bass

Predator Timing — Striped Bass and Catfish

Predators follow bait fish, not dates. Their position reflects food and flow.

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Striped Bass:

  • Stage downstream of forage
  • Hold on seams and edges
  • Feed in moving water

Catfish:

  • Remain resident year-round
  • Become more active as forage increases
  • Hold in deep pools and slack water near feeding lanes

Find forage first — predators will be close.

Get Ready For Spring
angler holding a monster blue catfish caught in muddy waters in late spring

The "Science of the Strike" FAQ (The East Coast Edition)

Usually when water temps hit 50-55°F. This "wakes up" the river. Predators like Blue Catfish and Stripers move into the main channels to intercept them. Using Active Hunting with a FATKAT lets you cover these "travel lanes" effectively.

Lamprey lead, followed by yellow perch and herring usually lead the way, followed by Shad and then Striped Bass. Because these fish use different depths, the FATKAT is essential—it lets you adjust your Bait Presentation to match exactly where the "meat" is moving.

It’s all about the "easy meal." After a long winter, predators are looking for the biggest Compound Signal. The FATKAT makes your bait look like the easiest target in the river by broadcasting vibrations that mimic a struggling baitfish.

The run brings trophy-sized fish within reach of the shore. The FATKAT is a bank angler’s best friend because it won't snag on the rocks near the bank, protecting your precious time and ensuring you don't lose the fish of a lifetime to a snapped line.

They often share the same deep-water "highways" to move upstream. By drifting a FATKAT through these channels, you are putting your bait right in the middle of a massive underwater buffet. This is The Science of the Strike in action.

You need enough weight to stay in the zone but not so much that you "anchor" in the mud.
The FATKAT uses an inline steel weight. It’s heavy enough for tidal currents but keeps your rig drifting, so bait still appears naturally for the fish to locate it.

Yes. Because we Master the Biology and Protect the Ecology, we use circle hooks that prevent "gut hooking." This is critical during the spring run when many fish are preparing to spawn. We ensure a safe release so the run stays strong for years to come.

Stripers will hold in the "seams" (where fast and slow water meet). Cast your rig into the faster water and let it drift into the slower seam where predators are waiting to ambush spent shad.

Tidal rivers have complex bottoms with rocks and downed timber. During the spring, increased "flow velocity" moves more debris, making traditional rigs nearly impossible to use without constant break-offs.

A suspended bait rig is snag-resistant and a top choice for spring. It keeps your bait above the silt and prevents the high-flow debris from snagging your line.

Herring, shad and perch migrate to spawn, not to feed. Their movement creates the forage base that striped bass depend on during their own spring migration.


Predator fish follow food — and food arrives before the predators do. Knowing when and where forage concentrates helps anglers fish smarter and more responsibly.







While lamprey aren’t targeted by most anglers, their early upstream movement signals the start of the forage season. Predators key into areas where lamprey congregate, making these zones hotspots once shad and perch arrive.






Focus on seams, riffle edges, transitional zones, and deeper pools — the natural intersections of forage and predator activity.







Striped Bass

Learn About Striped Bass Run Along Tidal Atlantic Rivers

Dive deeper into the behaviors of striped bass as they make their run up Atlantic Ocean tidal rivers. Where they hold, where your best opportunity is to land them.

Resident Species vs Migratory Fish

Spring Catfish Fishing: When Resident Fish Wake Up

Unlike striped bass, catfish do not migrate to spawn. Learn how warming water changes catfish behavior, feeding patterns, and where to find them during spring.

Get Your Gear Ready

Prepare for the Spring Fishing Season with these Gear Tips

The spring run is the most anticipated time of the year for most fishermen, but it only lasts 60 days, so you need to prepare now.

Resources and Further Reading:

  1. Burdick, S., & Hightower, J.E. (2006). Distribution of spawning activity by anadromous fishes in an Atlantic slope drainage after removal of a low-head dam. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society. https://doi.org/10.1577/T05-190.1
  2. Harris, J.E., & Hightower, J.E. (2011). Spawning habitat selection of hickory shad (Alosa mediocris). North American Journal of Fisheries Management. https://doi.org/10.1080/02755947.2011.591263
  3. Legett, H.D., Aguilar, R., Heggie, K.D., Richie, K.D., & Ogburn, M.B. (2023). Timing and environmental drivers of spawning migrations of alewife and blueback herring in rivers of Chesapeake Bay. Fishery Bulletin. https://doi.org/10.7755/FB.121.3.4