Houtman Abrolhos Islands (Wallabi / Easter / Pelsaert Groups)
Sat 18 Apr 2026 · Australia/Perth
Houtman Abrolhos Islands (Wallabi / Easter / Pelsaert Groups)
Bite Compass is showing a medium fish activity bite score on 18 Apr 2026. Wind is around W at 21 km/h. Solunar feeding windows are listed below.
Local Knowledge
The Abrolhos sit 60 to 80 kilometres west of Geraldton across three island groups — Wallabi to the north, Easter in the middle and Pelsaert to the south — and have one of the strangest fish lists on the Australian coast. The Leeuwin Current drags tropical species this far south, so dhufish, pink snapper and samson share reef with spangled emperor, coral trout and the occasional Spanish mackerel. There are nearly 400 fish species recorded across the islands, the wreck of the Batavia from 1629 is on Beacon Island, and most of the chain now sits inside the Houtman Abrolhos Islands National Park gazetted in 2019. This is a charter or private-boat fishery — there is no public ferry and you cannot drive there.
Live-aboard charter is the dominant access mode: 3 to 6 day trips out of Geraldton on a moored barge or motor yacht, fishing the bommies and shoals each day from a tender. Drop baits and jigs on the 30 to 80 metre reef edges for dhufish, pink snapper and baldchin groper; bait of choice is a fresh squid strip or octopus leg. Live-bait drift across the deeper shoals for samson and yellowtail kingfish, particularly around the Pelsaert wrecks and the Easter Group passages. Troll skirts and minnows in the warm-current months for Spanish mackerel and tuna. Squid jig the lagoon weed edges at change of light for southern calamari, which are abundant and a useful bait source for the next morning's snapper drift.
Pink snapper, dhufish, baldchin groper, breaksea cod, samson and yellowtail kingfish are the staple table mix, with spangled emperor, coral trout, Spanish mackerel and yellowfin tuna possible when the Leeuwin warms the water.
The wilderness fishing rules at the Abrolhos cap the demersal mixed bag tighter than the broader West Coast — verify DPIRD rules before each trip and travel with a copy on the boat. Sanctuary zones overlay parts of all three groups; charter skippers know them but private-boat crews need to plot them on the plotter before leaving Geraldton. The Western Rock Lobster fishery operates from rock-lobster camps on many islands during the season — give the working boats and pots room. Keep one fish for the table and release the rest carefully; descender weights save deep-caught snapper from barotrauma.
Access & Conditions
Charter or private boat only. There is no public ferry and no road. Live-aboard charters depart Geraldton (around 4.5 hours north of Perth) for 3 to 6 night trips and include all meals, bunks and tender fishing. Day-charter and fly-and-fish operators run shorter trips when the weather allows. Private boats need to be capable of the 60 to 80 kilometre offshore crossing in changeable Indian Ocean conditions and a serviceable EPIRB, log-on with marine rescue, and a competent skipper. Limited camping permits exist on a handful of islands through DBCA but are not a fishing platform — most overnight access is via charter. Geraldton has fuel, tackle, supermarkets, an airport and a major port.
The Leeuwin Current runs strongest in autumn and early winter and brings warm water and tropical strays as far south as the Easter Group. Westerly and south-westerly swells dominate; the lagoons inside the island groups stay fishable when the open ocean is unworkable. Summer trade winds blow hard from the south in the afternoons — early starts and lagoon shelter are the working pattern. Visibility on the deeper reef is excellent in winter and drops with run-off after a winter storm. Tides are modest by Pilbara standards but the current through the passages can be strong.
Open Indian Ocean crossing — weather windows close fast and a 60-kilometre run home in a southerly buster is no joke. Sanctuary zones carry serious penalties and zoning is non-trivial; have the current DBCA visitor map on board. Submerged reef at low water around all three groups has wrecked plenty of vessels — the original Batavia in 1629 was the first of many. Sharks tax slow-retrieved demersals on the deeper drops. Sun, dehydration and limited mobile coverage off the islands are the usual remote-fishing baseline; pack water and a working PLB.
Gear & Rigs
Demersal reef: 15–24kg overhead jig and bait gear with 60–80lb fluoro leader, 6/0–8/0 circles or 9/0 paternoster rigs and 12–20oz of lead depending on drift. Samson and kingfish: 24kg jig stick or stand-up overhead with 80–100lb leader and metal jigs in the 200–400g range, or live yellowtail / squid drifted on a snelled rig. Pelagic trolling: 15kg outfits with skirted lures and bibbed minnows, single-strand wire trace for mackerel. Squid: 1.8 to 2.5 size jigs on a 2500-size spin reel and 6–10lb braid. Bring more leader than you think — abrasion against coral is constant.
Seasons
The Abrolhos sit at the northern edge of the West Coast Bioregion, and the West Coast demersal closure applies to boat-based fishing here — verify current DPIRD dates each year because the closure window has been extended in recent reviews. Rock-lobster recreational seasons are separate. Pink snapper spawning closures apply in nearby Cockburn and Geographe but Abrolhos snapper rules are wilderness-specific; check the DPIRD Abrolhos guide before booking. The prime weather window is April to July — settled conditions, warm Leeuwin water and the demersal closure timing varying year to year. Summer brings stronger trade winds but better pelagic action.
If this spot's blown out
- Geraldton (Fisherman's Wharf / Separation Point) — Mainland charter departure point and fallback fishery if the crossing shuts.
- Kalbarri (Murchison River Mouth / Wittecarra / Coastal Cliffs) — Drive 1.5 hours north of Geraldton for cliff-top land-based and Murchison mouth fishing.
- Dongara / Port Denison (Harbour / Granny's Beach / South Beach / Irwin River Mouth) — Drive 1 hour south of Geraldton for the next sheltered-port reef fishery on the West Coast.
Frequently Asked
No. The Abrolhos are 60 to 80 kilometres offshore from Geraldton with no road, no bridge and no public ferry. Access is by chartered vessel, private boat or fly-in fly-out scenic flight. Most fishing visitors take a 3 to 6 day live-aboard charter out of Geraldton.
Yes — the Abrolhos sit at the northern edge of the West Coast Bioregion and the boat-based demersal closure applies. Wilderness-specific rules also apply at the islands themselves, with tighter mixed-bag and possession limits. Check the DPIRD Abrolhos recreational fishing guide and confirm dates with your charter skipper before each trip.
April to July is the traditional window — settled weather, warm Leeuwin water still pushing south, and reliable charter availability. Summer is also fishable for pelagics like Spanish mackerel and tuna but the trade winds are harder. The exact demersal closure dates vary each year and shape booking timing more than weather alone.
Yes. Multiple sanctuary and special-purpose zones overlay the three island groups under the Houtman Abrolhos Islands National Park and the Fish Habitat Protection Area. Charter skippers know them; private boats need a current DBCA visitor map and a plotter with the zones loaded. Penalties for fishing in sanctuary are significant.