Fish Activity

Steep Point (Edel Land — Mainland's Westernmost Point)

Mon 20 Apr 2026 · Australia/Perth

Change spot

Steep Point (Edel Land — Mainland's Westernmost Point)

Monday 20 Apr 2026
Bite Score
57
Low Fish Activity
Summary for 20 Apr 2026

Bite Compass is showing a low fish activity bite score on 20 Apr 2026. Wind is around S at 31 km/h. Solunar feeding windows are listed below.

Feeding Windows
Best times to fish based on activity score.
Peak
3:30 pm → 5:00 pm
59
1h 30m
Good
7:00 pm → 8:00 pm
47
1h
Weekly Bite Forecast
Steep Point (Edel Land — Mainland's Westernmost Point) + nearby Perth spots. Thursday 6pm — top windows, conditions, what's biting.
Free. Unsubscribe any time.

Local Knowledge

Why locals fish this spot

Steep Point is the mainland's westernmost point and one of the world's serious land-based game fisheries — a wall of cliffs at the entrance to Shark Bay where deep water sits within metres of the rock. The headline target is Spanish mackerel taken off the cliffs by ballooning gar baits hundreds of metres out on the wind, but giant trevally, big samson fish, spangled emperor and pink snapper all turn up. It's not a casual fishery: the access is a 4WD-only track, the platforms are dangerous, and people have been swept off the cliffs and not seen again.

How to fish this spot

Whistleblower (Mushroom Rock), False Entrance and Thunder Bay are the headline cliff platforms. Ballooning is the standard mackerel technique — a latex balloon rigged to a skipping garfish bait carries the line offshore on the prevailing southerly, dropping it into deeper water hundreds of metres out. Heavy stickbaits and poppers worked off the lower ledges produce giant trevally and queenfish in the right conditions. Lefroy Bay (Crayfish Bay) is the calmer beach option for tailor, calamari and mulloway. Bring a gaff on a long rope; landing big fish up the cliffs requires it.

Common catches

Spanish mackerel (the cliff-fishing headline, October–May), giant trevally (off the platforms year-round in suitable conditions), big samson fish, spangled emperor and pink snapper (Gascoyne demersal limits apply), queenfish in summer, plus tailor, mulloway and squid from Lefroy Bay and the calmer beaches.

Access and tips

Life jackets, ropes and a long-handled gaff are standard kit, not optional. Don't fish the cliffs alone; don't fish in heavy swell; don't drink alcohol while ballooning. Pre-rig at the campground in daylight rather than on the platform. Sharks taking hooked fish are routine — expect to lose some, particularly mackerel.

Access & Conditions

Getting there

Steep Point is accessed from the North West Coastal Highway via a long unsealed road through Tamala and Useless Loop turnoffs — around 185km from the highway, the last 30km a soft single-lane sand track winding through dunes. High-clearance 4WD only; tyre pressures down to 20psi or less to avoid being bogged. Camping permits and park entry fees apply, managed by the Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions through the Steep Point Ranger Station — book online well in advance. No fuel, no shop, no mobile coverage on site; carry everything in including water. Closest fuel and supplies are Denham (5–6 hours back via Hamelin) or Overlander Roadhouse. Drive from Perth is about 13 hours, the last 4 of those on the unsealed track.

How it fishes

South-westerly wind drives the ballooning fishery — the gar bait skips offshore on the breeze and the mackerel hit on the way out or back. Calm easterly conditions can shut the ballooning down but improve giant trevally and stickbait fishing off the lower ledges. Big southerly swells make the cliffs genuinely lethal; don't fish in any sea over 2 metres. The Leeuwin Current pushes warm water past the point through summer, bringing pelagics inshore. Water clarity is generally excellent; tannin-stained patches occasionally drift through after big seas.

Hazards

This is the most dangerous land-based fishery in WA. Multiple anglers have been swept from the cliffs and not all have been recovered. Don't fish alone, don't fish in heavy swell, wear a life jacket and harness on the platforms, and never turn your back on the water. The 4WD track in is remote — recovery costs are high, mobile coverage is non-existent, and the nearest hospital is hours away. Carry a satellite communicator, recovery gear, spare fuel and water for breakdowns. Sharks routinely take hooked fish off the cliffs. Verify current Gascoyne demersal rules with DPIRD before each trip.

Gear & Rigs

Ballooning for Spanish mackerel: dedicated land-based-game (LBG) outfit — 24kg rod, large overhead reel with 24–37kg braid, 200lb wind-on leader, 60–80lb single-strand wire trace, 8/0–10/0 ganged hooks, latex balloons and helium. Stickbaits and poppers for GT and queenfish: 60–80lb popper rod, large spin reel, 80lb braid, 100–130lb leader. Demersals (snapper, emperor, samson): 15–24kg setup with whole fresh baits on a running rig. Long-handled gaff on rope is essential. Carry spare leader, hooks, balloons and a knife.

Seasons

Spanish mackerel are the spring-through-autumn headline (October–May) when warmer water pushes inshore. Giant trevally are year-round but most active in calm easterly conditions through summer and autumn. Pink snapper, spangled emperor and samson are year-round demersals — Gascoyne Coast bioregion bag and size limits apply (mixed daily bag of 5 demersals with emperors capped at 3 within that total, plus species-specific size limits; pink snapper closures in Shark Bay inner gulfs apply separately). The West Coast demersal closure does not apply at Steep Point. Tailor, mulloway and squid are year-round options off the calmer beaches with cooler-months peaks.

If this spot's blown out

Frequently Asked

How do you actually fish from the cliffs at Steep Point?

Ballooning is the headline technique. A latex balloon inflated with helium, rigged to a skipping garfish bait on a heavy land-based-game outfit, carries the line offshore on the prevailing southerly. The bait skips the surface hundreds of metres out, drops into deep water and Spanish mackerel hit on the way out or back. Landed fish are gaffed up the cliff on a long-handled gaff run down a rope.

How dangerous is rock fishing at Steep Point?

Genuinely dangerous. Multiple anglers have been swept from the platforms and not recovered. Life jackets, harnesses and ropes are standard kit. Never fish alone, never fish in swell over 2 metres, and never turn your back on the water. Fishing fatalities at Steep Point are well-documented; the platforms are unforgiving.

What 4WD do I need to get there?

High-clearance 4WD with low-range gears and the ability to drop tyres to 20psi or less. The last 30km is a soft single-lane sand track winding through dunes; standard SUVs and AWDs are not suitable. Recovery gear, spare fuel, water and a satellite communicator are essential — there's no mobile coverage and recovery costs are high.

Do the West Coast demersal closures apply?

No — Steep Point is in the Gascoyne Coast bioregion, which is managed separately. The Gascoyne mixed demersal daily bag is 5 fish with emperors capped at 3 within that total, plus species-specific size limits. Shark Bay inner-gulf pink snapper closures apply separately and are zone-specific. Verify current rules with DPIRD before each trip; the rules continue to evolve.

Nearby fishing spots
Other spots close to Steep Point (Edel Land — Mainland's Westernmost Point).