Tahoe is enormous and up to 1,645 feet deep, so most serious lake fishing happens from a boat, trolling deep for lake trout. But there's plenty for shore anglers and river fans too — and the nearby Truckee River and Pyramid Lake make the area one of the West's great fishing road trips.
The headliner. These deep-dwelling lake trout are the biggest fish in Tahoe, commonly 3–10 lb and occasionally topping 20 — almost always caught trolling deep with a guide.
The most accessible catch for shore and small-boat anglers, found closer to the surface and along the shoreline, especially in the cooler months.
Landlocked sockeye that turn brilliant red in fall. They run in the Taylor Creek area and the rivers, and are a prized late-season target.
Deep-water mackinaw charters, the best shore rocks near Cave Rock and Sand Harbor, and the two-state license rules — the full playbook for the big lake.
The family-friendly option: NDOW-stocked rainbows and bowcutts 20 minutes from Incline Village, with a five-fish limit, no motors and an easy shoreline loop.
Wild-trout fly water from Tahoe City through Truckee, and the desert lake where ladder-standing anglers hook 10–20 lb Lahontan cutthroat all winter.
| License | Required for anyone 16+. Because Tahoe straddles the state line, California and Nevada have a reciprocal agreement covering the lake itself — but the rivers and shoreline are state-specific. |
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| Lake Tahoe season | Generally open year-round, with specific gear and limit rules; a stretch of the lake near tributary mouths closes seasonally to protect spawning fish. |
| Limits | Daily bag and possession limits apply and vary by species — check current regulations before you keep anything. |
| Best seasons | Mackinaw: year-round by boat. Trout: spring and fall near shore. Kokanee: late summer into fall. |
Fishing slots in beautifully alongside the beaches and trails on this side of the lake.