NOAA to Close Recreational Bluefin Tuna Season

NOAA to close recreational Atlantic bluefin tuna fishery — all sizes, all areas — from Aug. 12 through year’s end. Catch-and-release only.

NOAA Announces Closure of Recreational Atlantic Bluefin Tuna (All Sizes, All Areas)

August 8, 2025 — NOAA Fisheries announced a closure of the Atlantic Bluefin Tuna Angling Category (recreational) across all areas and all size classes, effective 11:30 p.m. local time on Tuesday, August 12, 2025, through December 31, 2025. This action takes effect in less than a week, impacting anglers during the peak of the late-summer offshore tuna season, when recreational boats typically target bluefin ranging from school-size to giants. It applies to anglers fishing under HMS Angling and HMS Charter/Headboat permits. Read the NOAA notice.

Exactly Which Sizes Are Affected?

The closure covers all recreational bluefin size classes listed by NOAA:

  • School
  • Large school
  • Small medium
  • Large medium
  • Giant

What You Can Still Do

During the closure, anglers may catch-and-release or tag-and-release bluefin of any size when following NOAA’s catch-and-release program requirements. Harvest of other HMS (e.g., yellowfin) remains open per current regulations. See NOAA resources: Safe Handling & Release Guidance and HMS Permits & Reporting.

Why This Closure is Happening

NOAA reports the Angling category preliminary adjusted quota—including the Gulf of Maine Trophy quota—has been reached, triggering the closure through year’s end. Details here.

Who Is—and Isn’t—Affected

  • Affected: Recreational anglers on vessels with HMS Angling or HMS Charter/Headboat permits (no retention of bluefin of any size).
  • Not affected: The commercial bluefin fishery remains open under its separate categories and quotas.

Quick Links

For weekly offshore fishing reports, visit OnTheWater.com.

3 comments on NOAA to Close Recreational Bluefin Tuna Season
3

3 responses to “NOAA to Close Recreational Bluefin Tuna Season”

  1. fearmytwin

    Well that’s fucking stupid. All about $$$.

  2. cjensen519

    It’s frustrating for a normal idiot like me who occasionally gets to go out there and throw a hail mary but it really hurts the charter captains who will probably lose 10’s of thousands of dollars on cancelled trips in the matter of weeks.

  3. chuckkraft099@outlook.com

    Why is it recreational anglers are the 1st ones to be affected? Meanwhile, the rapers of the open waters (commercial)
    aren’t affected !
    Same thing with Chesapeake bay rockfish ! Commercial hook & liners, netters RAPE the bay of THOUSANDS of TONS of ROCKFISH
    from December-February & we’re only allowed to keep ONE ROCKFISH, 19″-24″ !
    Explain this backward ass process to us, Rec. Fishermen.
    Especially when Rockfish can EASILY be “farm raised”!
    Ft. Detrick has been doing research on this exact thing for the last 30 years.
    NOAA is definitely not a friend of “Recreational Fishermen”!
    Apparently it is all about MONEY !!!

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