A Species in Demand
While it is great news that so many people are enjoying our natural resources, the recreational pressure on our wild redfish populations is increasing. This is primarily a catch-and-release fishery—however, of the 85% of catches released, 8% of them die when released.
A 2024 stock assessment shows that our southern redfish stock (covering South Carolina to Florida’s east coast) is overfished and experiencing ongoing overfishing. Georgia regulators must take action before the pressure of increased fishing drives this population too low for a natural recovery.
OHM supports more aggressive management strategies from GA DNR and an innovative, flexible regulatory process backed by scientific data.
Where are we now with redfish regulations? Watch this video from GSAA to find out.
Take Action NOW
Today, Georgia regulators limit five redfish per person (with the slot size between 14”-23”) and no limit for a boat. This means that if six people are on a boat, collectively they can take 30 fish per day. This is a far cry from our neighbors to the north and south, whose regulations have responded to decreasing populations by instituting 1-2 fish bag limits (see table below).
Even with excellent regulations, the road to redfish population recovery is long, with DNR estimating a more than twenty year journey back to a biologically healthy stock. To bring redfish to “target” (see the graph below), end overfishing, and restore a resilient stock within a reasonable timeframe, we ask that GA DNR act NOW by:
- Reducing the bag limit to a maximum of 3 fish.
- Raising the minimum catch size to 16″ to protect vulnerable winter congregations of juvenile redfish.
- Choosing F40% (or Spawning Potential Ratio [SPR] 40), not F35%, to reduce fishing pressure and efficiently rebuild the stock, lower ecological risk, and encourage economic certainty.
The question is simple: why settle for a compromise that delays true recovery?
Additional Resources
What is SPR? How did we get here? Click the images for videos, documents, and websites diving deeper into the world of redfish protection and regulation.
Key Partners & Organizations to Know
Redfish in the News
The Brunswick News | 2/28/26
Savannah Morning News | 11/11/25
Savannah Morning News | 9/30/25
The Darien News | 9/18/25
The Brunswick News | 12/19/24
Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission | 10/23/24
Flylords Magazine | 6/5/22
The Sustainable Angler | 6/21/22
Southern Culture on the Fly | Spring 2022 (pg 65)
“Don’t be haunted by empty waters—we must take action to protect our redfish population from overfishing now.”
Please contact Susan Inman, Mid Coast Advocate, to learn more about our work to protect redfish.


































Here you see

