Note: This article may contain outdated information. It was published on Tuesday, April 07, 2026.

Sebastian Inlet's 2.2-Foot Tidal Drop Fuels Morning Fishing Frenzy Tuesday

Anglers in Indian River County can target snook and jack crevalle as the ebb tide pulls baitfish through the jetty rocks by 7:10 a.m., dropping water levels from 2.7 feet to 0.5 feet.

· · ·
Drone aerial shot capturing unique patterns of sand and water at a coastal area in Victoria, Australia.
Colin Dixon

The water at Sebastian Inlet will be on its way out when most anglers are loading their trucks Tuesday morning — and that matters.

The night's first high tide peaked at 2.7 feet just before 1 a.m., sending a full flood through the inlet's famously productive jetty rocks. By 7:10 a.m., the ebb will have drawn the water down to just 0.5 feet, leaving a 2.2-foot drop that scours baitfish and nutrients out through the cut and into the nearshore Atlantic. That transitional pull — the outgoing draw tightening around the rocks — is when snook and jack crevalle tend to stack.

The afternoon tells a quieter story. A modest high of 2.1 feet arrives at 12:58 p.m., followed by the day's lowest mark: just 0.2 feet at 7:10 p.m. The shallow evening ebb matters for anyone navigating the shallower grass flats north of the inlet toward Wabasso, according to NOAA tide data. Water will be thin in the final hour before sunset.

The 2.5-foot tidal range Tuesday is typical for early April on the Indian River County coast, when mixed semi-diurnal tides produce two highs and two lows of unequal height each day.

For Indian River Lagoon guides working the inlet corridor, the morning window — roughly 5:30 to 8 a.m., as the ebb accelerates — is the play. Afternoon anglers will find slower current and flatter water, better suited for sight-fishing the flats than working the jetty structure.

Check local marine forecasts before launching. Wind and swell conditions can change inlet navigation rapidly, forecasters noted.

This article was generated with AI assistance using publicly available information. It was reviewed and approved by a human editor before publication. TC Sentinel uses AI writing tools in accordance with FTC guidelines.

Stay informed. Subscribe free.

Get the Treasure Coast's daily briefing in your inbox every morning.

Got a Tip?

See something newsworthy? Help us cover the Treasure Coast.

Your identity is never published without your permission.

Related Coverage

Tide Guide: Sebastian Inlet, Friday, May 8 May 09
Fort Pierce Tide Schedule: Friday, May 8, 2026 May 09
Tide Schedule for Stuart: Friday, May 8, 2026 May 09
Heat Building on the Treasure Coast This Weekend, With Storms Possible Sunday May 09
Hurricane Cone Gets Redesign to Flag Inland Flood Dangers Before 2026 Season May 09
View full timeline →

Reader Comments

Leave a Comment