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Select a subregion of Florida Keys |

Our subregion pages are actively under construction... please be patient. To view all charters in the state or main region, click "View All Charters" below.
View All Florida Keys Charters

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Key West

Key West lies at the end of the Florida Keys, making it the southern-most city in the USA. Grunts, porgies, kingfish, mackerel, amberjack, and sharks can be caught year round. Wintertime trolling can produce tuna, mackerel, sailfish, barracuda, marlin, bonito, and cobia. Summer time trolling can produce dolphin, barracuda, sailfish, and Wahoo.
People searching this region use the following keywords: Garrison bight, eaton, rockland, Truman annex, Florida keys fishing, key west charters, gulf of Mexico, fort taylor
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Cudjoe Key

Key Cudjoe is a premier spot for both backwater fishing and ocean fishing. Fish caught in Key Cudjoe include bonefish, permit, tarpon, barracuda, sharks, jacks, and snappers, jewfish, and bluefish, tuna, marlin, cobia, and sailfish.
People searching this region use the following keywords: Charlotte harbor waters, cudjoe bay, cudjoe fishing charters, gulf of mexico, pirates cove, upper sugar loaf sound
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Summerland Key

Summerland Key, home to excellent shallow water fishing, is bountiful with permit, bonefish, barracuda, and tarpon to name a few. Most charters in this region fish in the Gulf of Mexico, for Marlin, Tuna, Sailfish, bluefish, and more.
People searching this region use the following keywords: Overseas hay, big toreb key, gulf of mexico, summerland key charter fishing
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Big Pine Key

Big Pine Key is known as the gateway to the lower keys. The Key contains undisturbed tropical forests, and 100+ mangrove islands. Wide varieties of fish inhabit the shallow water surrounding Big Pine, including Bonefish (up to 15 pounds!), tarpon, and permit.
People searching this region use the following keywords: Big pine charter fishing, gulf of mexico, summerland key
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Marathon Key

Marathon Key is located 50 miles north of Key West and 50 miles south of Key Largo. According to history, during construction of Henry Flaglers railroad, a builder commented that the job was like a marathon which is where the name for the Key came from.
People searching this region use the following keywords: Marathon fishing charters, gulf of mexico, boot key harbor, atlantic ocean, Florida bay
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Islamorada

Islamorada Key, known as the Sports fishing Capital of the World, is home to over 25 fishing charters, which is quite a bit compared to the other Keys. Islamorada is in the heart of the Keys, surrounded by crystal clear waters. Fish offshore for dolphin, tuna, wahoo, sailfish, kingfish, and marlin. Reef fish for snappers and grouper, or head into the Everglades National Park for excellent backwater fishing.
People searching this region use the following keywords: Everglades national park, plantation, Islamorada, matecumbe, village of islands, atlantic ocean charter fishing, gulf of mexico, Islamorada charter fishing.
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Plantation Key

Once known as Vermont Key and considered two keys, Plantation Key (now one key) provides for excellent backwater and deep-water fishing. Backwater fish in the Everglades National Park, or head out into the Gulf of Mexico for marlin, tuna, dolphin, wahoo, sailfish, and more.
People searching this region use the following keywords: Plantation, plantation key charter fishing, overseas hay, everglades national park, gulf of mexico
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Tavernier Key

Key Tavernier is located immediately south of Key Largo. Tavernier creek provides access to the Atlantic as well as Florida Bay, making fishing in either location easy. Backwater fish at the Everglades National Park for bonefish, permit, tarpon, and more.
People searching this region use the following keywords: Florida bay, everglades national park, gulf of mexico, Tavernier charter fishing, plantation key colony, Thompson, sunset point
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Key Largo

Key Largo, made famous by the Beach Boys Kokomo, is great for deep-sea fishing as well as backwater fishing. Charters fishing the Gulf of Mexico troll for dolphin, tuna, Wahoo, sailfish, marlin, and shark. Over the deep reefs, fishermen usually catch yellow tail, snapper, cobia, sailfish, and huge black grouper. Backwater fishing in the Everglades national Park includes the following species: Seatrout, tarpon, redish, barracuda, sheeps head, snook, and pompano.
People searching this region use the following keywords: Everglades national park, buttonwood sound, tarpon basic, largo sound, rock harbor, key largo charter fishing, sunset point, Thompson, gulf of mexico
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