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Fish Activity

Port Hedland (Spoilbank Marina / Cooke Point / tidal creeks)

Mon 15 Jun 2026 · Australia/Perth

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Port Hedland (Spoilbank Marina / Cooke Point / tidal creeks)

Monday 15 Jun 2026
Bite Score
79
High Fish Activity
Summary for 15 Jun 2026

Bite Compass is showing a high fish activity bite score on 15 Jun 2026. Wind is around SW at 9 km/h. Solunar feeding windows are listed below.

Feeding Windows
Best times to fish based on activity score.
Peak
11:00 am → 1:30 pm
83
2h 30m
Good
5:00 pm → 7:00 pm
68
2h
Good
5:30 am → 7:30 am
67
2h
Good
11:30 pm → 12:00 am
48
30m
Weekly Bite Forecast
Port Hedland (Spoilbank Marina / Cooke Point / tidal creeks) + nearby Perth spots. Thursday 6pm — top windows, conditions, what's biting.
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Local Knowledge

Why locals fish this spot

Few WA towns are shaped by tide the way Port Hedland is — the range swings six metres or more, the water charges in and out of the harbour and the back creeks, and the whole land-based fishery moves with it. It is a working iron-ore port that happens to sit on one of the best threadfin runs in the state. The shore fishery runs off the new Spoilbank Marina platform, the public jetty by Marapikurrinya Park, Cooke Point, and the Four Mile and Six Mile creek mouths — threadfin and blue salmon through winter, barramundi in the creeks over summer, queenfish and trevally year-round. The offshore grounds out past Finucane Island hold mackerel, red emperor and coral trout for anyone with a boat and a weather window between the bulk carriers.

How to fish this spot

Spoilbank Marina's dual-level fishing platform is the easy option — fish the lower deck on the low and the upper on the high, and the reef balls beneath it hold bait and trevally. Cooke Point fishes best on the tide change: float-rigged mullet or live herring for threadfin as the run starts, metals and stickbaits for queenfish and trevally working the current lines. The creeks — Four Mile, Six Mile — are a run-out game: paddle tails and shallow hardbodies tight to the mangroves for barramundi and mangrove jack on the bottom of the tide, with mud crab pots soaking while you wait. The public jetty produces threadfin, trevally and the odd mackerel at change of light. Offshore, troll the shipping-channel edges for mackerel and drop baits on the shoals for emperor and rankin cod.

Common catches

Threadfin and blue salmon are the headline — the winter run off Spoilbank and Cooke Point is what people drive for. Add barramundi and mangrove jack from the creeks in the warmer months, queenfish, trevally and the occasional mackerel from the jetty and points year-round, mud crabs from the back creeks, and a mixed demersal bag of red emperor, coral trout, rankin cod and mackerel offshore.

Access and tips

Plan around the tide, not the clock — Port Hedland's six-metre range is the whole game, and the start of the run is when threadfin and queenfish switch on. Spoilbank Marina is the best free, wheelchair-accessible land-based option and a sensible first stop for visitors. Crab pots in the creeks earn their keep while you fish the mangrove edges. The harbour is an active shipping channel, so keep boats well clear of the carriers and the marked exclusion zones.

Access & Conditions

Getting there

Sealed road in via the Great Northern Highway, around 16 hours from Perth, with an airport and full town services — supermarkets, fuel, tackle and a hospital. The Spoilbank Marina precinct has a sealed car park, the dual-level fishing platform and a boat ramp; the public jetty and Cooke Point have sealed parking nearby. Trailer boats also launch at the Richardson Street ramp near the town centre and on Finucane Island. The Spoilbank platform is wheelchair-accessible and the most kid-friendly land-based spot in town; the creek mouths are unsealed and better suited to a 4WD and an angler who reads the tide.

How it fishes

Tides run to six metres or more on the springs and drive the entire fishery — the run-in and run-out are the windows, and slack water is slow. South-west trade winds blow most afternoons through the dry season, so morning sessions are the working hours. Cyclone season runs November to April with real storm risk and creek-flooding barramundi pulses on either side of it. Water colours up in the build-up and after a blow. The shipping channel and tug traffic sit right beside the recreational water, so visibility and courtesy both matter.

Hazards

Saltwater crocodile sightings are occasional and rising along the Pilbara coast — several have been recorded around Port Hedland and Pretty Pool, fewer than Broome but enough to take seriously. Treat the back creeks and any tidal margin as potential croc habitat, don't wade the mangroves, and don't clean fish at the water's edge. The six-metre tides expose vast mudflats and rip through the channels — anglers get cut off and bogged every season. Sharks work the harbour and the bait schools. Stonefish and stingrays sit in the shallows, so wear reef shoes near the flats. Cyclone-season planning is non-negotiable, and the working port means live shipping lanes — stay out of the marked exclusion zones.

Gear & Rigs

Threadfin and queenfish: 8–10kg spin, 20–30lb braid, 30–40lb fluoro leader, float-rigged mullet or herring and 20–40g metals or 3–4 inch soft plastics worked on the tide change. Creek barramundi and jack: 7ft 15–20lb baitcaster, 30–50lb leader, paddle tails and shallow hardbodies tight to snags. Land-based trevally and mackerel: heavier 10–15kg spin with 5-inch stickbaits and single-strand wire trace for the macks. Offshore demersal: 15–24kg jig and bait gear, 60–80lb leader, 8/0–10/0 hooks for emperor and rankin cod. Mud crab pots baited with mullet frames.

Seasons

Port Hedland sits in the North Coast Bioregion, so the West Coast demersal closure does not apply — North Coast rules run a 5-fish demersal mixed bag with emperors capped at 3, plus species size and bag limits. The threadfin run peaks in the cooler months, roughly May through August. Barramundi fire in the creeks over the summer wet, November to March, under WA's barramundi size and seasonal rules — confirm the current regs before keeping one. Mangrove jack limits were reset in DPIRD's 2025–26 reform, so check before you fish. Spanish mackerel run September to April under the statewide 90cm minimum and two-day possession rule. May to September is the prime visiting window for settled weather.

If this spot's blown out

Frequently Asked

Where can I fish from the shore at Port Hedland?

The Spoilbank Marina precinct has a purpose-built, dual-level, wheelchair-accessible fishing platform with reef balls beneath it — the easiest and most family-friendly option. The public jetty beside Marapikurrinya Park and Cooke Point both fish well around the tide change for threadfin, trevally and queenfish, and the Four Mile and Six Mile creek mouths produce barramundi, mangrove jack and mud crabs on the run-out.

When is the threadfin salmon run at Port Hedland?

Threadfin and blue salmon are around year-round, but the land-based run peaks through the cooler months, roughly May to August, off Spoilbank and Cooke Point. Fish the start of the tide movement — threadfin switch on when the water starts running and go quiet at slack.

Are there crocodiles at Port Hedland?

Occasionally, and increasingly. Saltwater crocodile sightings have been recorded around Port Hedland and Pretty Pool, and the Pilbara's resident population is slowly expanding southward. Numbers are far lower than Broome, but the back creeks and tidal margins should be treated as potential croc habitat — don't wade the mangroves and don't clean fish at the water's edge. Check Shire and DBCA alerts before fishing.

Why are Port Hedland's tides such a big deal for fishing?

The tidal range regularly hits six metres, which moves an enormous volume of water through the harbour and the back creeks. That current is what turns the fish on — threadfin, queenfish and trevally feed hardest as the tide starts to run, and the creek barramundi and mangrove jack fire on the bottom of the run-out. Slack water is slow, so bring a tide chart and plan the session around the change, not the time of day.