Derby (Derby Jetty / King Sound)
Fri 19 Jun 2026 · Australia/Perth
Bite Compass is showing a low fish activity bite score on 19 Jun 2026. Wind is around SE at 20 km/h. Solunar feeding windows are listed below.
Local Knowledge
Derby sits at the bottom of King Sound, which funnels the Indian Ocean into the largest tides in Australia — up to eleven metres in a single day. Nothing here happens without the tide. The town's long jetty drops into deep tidal water and fishes for barramundi, threadfin, mangrove jack, queenfish and trevally without a boat; by boat, King Sound and the river mouths of the Fitzroy, Meda, Lennard, May and Robinson are a barramundi and mud-crab fishery that draws people across the country. It is remote, hot and croc-thick — and one of the genuine bucket-list shore fisheries in WA.
The Derby jetty is the easy land-based option — fish the deeper tidal water off the end with float-rigged mullet or live bait for threadfin and barramundi, and cast metals and stickbaits for queenfish and trevally as the tide runs. By boat, work the river mouths and snag-lines on the run-out: paddle tails, prawn imitations and shallow hardbodies for barramundi and mangrove jack, with mud-crab nets set in the mangrove drains. Golden snapper and jewfish hold in the deeper holes. Neap tides fish best on lures here — the eleven-metre springs move so much water that the bite shuts down on the biggest runs and the flats turn to mud.
Barramundi are the prize — the build-up and run-off months either side of the wet are prime — backed by threadfin and blue salmon year-round, mangrove jack and golden snapper from the snags and holes, queenfish and trevally off the jetty, plus mulloway, catfish and the occasional shark. Mud crabs from the mangrove drains are half the reason people fish King Sound at all.
Read the tide before anything else — Derby's range is the biggest in the country, and the neaps, not the springs, are when lures work. Launch only from mid-tide up; the ramp dries to mud on the bottom of a big tide and boats get stranded. Carry far more water and fuel than a southern trip would need, because this is remote Kimberley country. Set a crab net while you fish the snags and you'll often eat better than you fish.
Access & Conditions
Sealed road in via the Great Northern Highway, around 22 hours from Perth or a short hop from Broome at 2.5 hours; most visitors fly to Broome and drive. Derby town has fuel, a supermarket, a hospital and basic tackle. The jetty has sealed parking and is the most accessible, kid-friendly land-based spot — though the height and the tide demand a close eye on children. The boat ramp is at the jetty with ample parking but is tide-limited. Point Torment, north of town, and May River off the Gibb River Road are 4WD-only and serious croc country.
The eleven-metre tides dominate everything — the water rips through King Sound, and slack water around the neaps is the productive window for lure fishing. The dry season, May to September, is the comfortable visiting window with settled weather and clearer water. The wet, November to April, brings the barramundi run-off but also cyclones, heat, flooding and stinger risk, and many operators stand down. Water is turbid through most of the sound, so this is a tide-and-structure fishery, not a sight fishery.
Derby is serious saltwater crocodile country — King Sound, the river mouths and every creek and drain hold them, and this is not a place to wade, swim, clean fish at the water's edge or stand on a steep bank. Treat all tidal and river water as croc habitat. The eleven-metre tides are the second hazard: they expose kilometres of mud, strand boats, and cut anglers off — people get bogged and stuck every season. Sharks are thick in the sound. The wet season adds heat, flooding, irukandji and box jellyfish, and remoteness means help is hours away. This is a trip to plan properly, not wing.
Gear & Rigs
Barramundi and threadfin: 7ft 15–30lb baitcaster or heavy spin, 30–50lb leader, paddle tails, prawn imitations and shallow-to-mid hardbodies worked tight to snags on the run-out. Jetty queenfish and trevally: 8–12kg spin, 30–50lb leader, 30–60g metals and 5-inch stickbaits. Golden snapper and jewfish: heavier 15kg jig or bait gear with 50–60lb leader for the deeper holes. Mud-crab nets baited with mullet or fish frames. Single-strand wire trace when mackerel are about.
Seasons
Derby is in the North Coast Bioregion, so the West Coast demersal closure does not apply, but barramundi carry their own WA size and seasonal rules — confirm the current minimum and bag before keeping one. The barramundi run peaks across the build-up and run-off, roughly October to April, with the run-off the standout. Mangrove jack limits were reset in DPIRD's 2025–26 reform, so check before fishing. Threadfin, queenfish and trevally hold year-round. May to September is the prime visiting window; the wet fires for barra but is harder and more dangerous to fish.
If this spot's blown out
- Broome (Town Beach / Gantheaume Point / Roebuck Bay) — Drive 2.5 hours west for the Town Beach jetty, Gantheaume Point rocks and the Roebuck Bay fishery.
- Wyndham / Cambridge Gulf (Five Rivers) — Head into the east Kimberley for the Cambridge Gulf barramundi and big-tide fishery.
- Port Hedland (Spoilbank Marina / Cooke Point / tidal creeks) — Drive 7–8 hours south for the Pilbara threadfin run and the Spoilbank Marina platform.
Frequently Asked
Yes — the Derby jetty is the town's main land-based spot, dropping into deep tidal water that holds barramundi, threadfin, mangrove jack, queenfish and trevally. Fish it around the tide change with bait or lures. Mind the height and the enormous tidal range, especially with children, and never climb down toward the water — this is crocodile country.
Derby has the largest tides in Australia — up to about eleven metres between low and high in a single day. King Sound funnels and amplifies the ocean tide as it narrows toward the town. The range governs the whole fishery: launch only from mid-tide up, and fish the neap tides rather than the biggest springs, because the run on an eleven-metre tide is often too strong for lures.
Yes, and they are a genuine, constant hazard. King Sound, the Fitzroy and the other river mouths, and every mangrove creek around Derby are saltwater crocodile habitat. Do not wade, swim, clean fish at the water's edge, or stand on a low or steep bank. Keep well back from the water, keep children and dogs close, and follow DBCA and Shire crocodile advice. Treat every bit of tidal water as occupied.
The barramundi run peaks across the build-up and the run-off, roughly October to April, with the run-off after the wet the standout. The dry season, May to September, is the more comfortable and safer time to visit with settled weather, and the jetty and King Sound still fish well for threadfin, queenfish and trevally. Fish the neap tides for the best lure results.
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