Glenelg jetty, South Australia

A snapper caught from Brighton Jetty
A snapper from Adelaide’s original Brighton jetty … Glenelg jetty has also produced big reds

Glenelg jetty is one of Adelaide’s more interesting fishing jetties, as it has extensive broken bottom at the seaward end.

Most other Adelaide jetties have a plain sand bottom.

Glenelg jetty produces the usual tommy ruffs, garfish, yelloweye mullet and blue swimmer and two-spot sand crabs.

The seaward quarter of the jetty has sand, weed and rock bottom which attracts squid, snook, flathead and red mullet.

Squid are caught all year whenever the water is clear, best at dusk and dawn.

Snook are caught around the jetty lights at night, along with garfish and tommies.

Mullet visit the shallow wave zone in big numbers in autumn/winter.

Blue crabs are caught in summer, with sand crabs in April/May, both are taken using drop nets.

Big snapper are off the menu now but have been caught off Glenelg jetty in years past, usually off the end during and immediately after rough weather.

king george whiting are occasionally caught in winter, also from the end of the jetty in rough weather.

Gummy sharks, eagle and smooth rays are found around all of Adelaide’s jetties, as are Port Jackson sharks and fiddler rays.

Note that there are special rules for fishing for sharks and rays in South Australia.

Elephant fish show up on occasion at night, along with the very occasional school mulloway.

Adelaide’s other metro jetties are Brighton, Henley, Semaphore and Largs Bay.

Some more landbased spots to try near Adelaide include North Haven, the productive Port River estuary and its sea entrance Outer Harbour, and West Lakes, a reclaimed marsh that is now a saltwater canal estate and a great spot to target large black bream.

Register and leave a comment and/or photo about your Glenelg jetty fishing experience.

Here is the SA seasonal fishing calendar for various fish species.

Book your fishing stay early at Booking.com

Adelaide (Outer Harbour) tides
West Beach webcam
SA fishing regulations
SA marine parks
SA stocked dams
SA dam water levels
Murray River fishing spots

NOTE: Special snapper rules apply in South Australia – more info here.

Email corrections, additions, pictures or video here.

Brighton jetty, South Australia

A snapper caught from Brighton Jetty
A snapper caught from Adelaide’s original Brighton jetty

Brighton Jetty is perhaps Adelaide’s best metro fishing jetty.

The author was present when six snapper over 20 pounds were caught off the end at night during a spring storm.

It was not the only time large snapper were caught there, the author caught the fish pictured above around 1980.

Snapper are off the menu now but there are other fish to be caught, including squid, tommy ruffs, garfish, gummy sharks and rays.

There is a summer run of blue crabs and a separate run of two-spot sand crabs in April/May. Both can be caught with drop nets.

Some king george whiting are caught in winter, usually from the end of the jetty in rough weather.

Most reliable are calamari squid, which can be caught all year whenever the water is clear by floating out a baited squid jig at dusk or dawn, or casting an artificial squid jig.

Gummy sharks, eagle and smooth rays are found around Adelaide’s jetties, as are Port Jackson sharks and fiddler rays.

Note that there are special rules for fishing for sharks and rays in South Australia.

Elephant fish also show up on occasion, as do yelloweye mullet (autumn-winter) in the shallows.

Adelaide’s other metro jetties are Glenelg, Henley, Semaphore and Largs Bay.

Some more landbased spots to try around Adelaide include North Haven, the productive Port River estuary and its sea entrance Outer Harbour, and West Lakes, a reclaimed marsh that is now a saltwater canal estate and a great spot to target large black bream.

Register and leave a comment and/or photo about your Brighton jetty fishing experience.

Here is the SA seasonal fishing calendar for various fish species.

Book your fishing stay early at Booking.com

Adelaide (Outer Harbour) tides
West Beach webcam
SA fishing regulations
SA marine parks
SA stocked dams
SA dam water levels
Murray River fishing spots

NOTE: Special snapper rules apply in South Australia – more info here.

Email us any corrections, additions, pictures or video here.

When to catch fish around Adelaide – the seasonal calendar

The following advice applies to the Adelaide metro coast and gulf waters.

Black bream – All year, best in winter/spring, day or night. They move further up waterways in summer.

Crabs, blue swimmer – Best in summer, day or night.

Crabs, sand (two-spot) – May to June. Their presence is usually noted when they start stealing fishing baits.

Flathead – All year, they bite all day.

Flounder – All year, but the usual method is spearing in the shallows at night in summer.

Garfish – Best in summer/autumn but bigger fish often caught in winter. Dab netting is usually done at night with light at night in summer.

Mullet – Strong run of fish in autumn/winter. They bite in daylight, coming in very close along beaches at high tide.

Mulloway – Best in summer but caught all year. Fish dusk into the night at turn of tide. Also under bridge lights.

Salmon – Big fish best in autumn/winter but small fish show up all year. Best at high tide at dusk and dawn.

Snapper – All year best in spring/summer. Best at dusk and dawn and they come in close after stormy weather. Severe restrictions currently apply.

Bluefin tuna – these appear off western SA before Christmas, reaching Port Lincoln about late February, and the eastern SA coast around March, depending on currents. Early season brings the biggest fish, along with albacore.

Snook – Bite all year but best in summer. They often bite well at night under jetty lights.

Squid – Available all year but best when the water is clear, dawn, dusk and night.

Tommy ruffs – All year, bigger fish in winter. Best at night.

Whiting, king george – All year but often better quality fish in winter, they bite all day but often tide dependent.

Whiting, silver – All year.

Whiting, yellowfin – All year but best in summer in spots well away from swimmers.

Kingfish – summer.

Silver trevally – summer.

Chow (yakkas) – summer.

Red mullet – all year.

Leatherjackets – all year.

Sweep and zebra fish – all year.

Sharks – all year but better in summer.

Native freshwater fish – summer.

Here is the SA seasonal fishing calendar for various fish species.

Book your fishing stay early at Booking.com

Adelaide (Outer Harbour) tides
West Beach webcam
SA fishing regulations
SA marine parks
SA stocked dams
SA dam water levels
Murray River fishing spots

NOTE: Special snapper rules apply in South Australia – more info here.

Email corrections, additions, pictures or video here.

Book your fishing B&B early at Booking.com



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