Rockfish Fishing
San Diego
One of the most reliable bites in Southern California — multiple species, year-round structure fishing, and table fare that's hard to beat.
Meet the Rockfish
Sebastes is the genus name for the rockfish family, and California waters hold more than 60 species under that umbrella. Off our coast, five faces show up in the cooler most often:
- Vermillion. Deep orange body with bright red fins. A common keeper runs 2 to 6 pounds, and a hot bite can produce one over 10. Locals sometimes call them red snapper, even though they share no relation with the Atlantic snapper of the same nickname.
- Copper. Olive and bronze mottled pattern that blends into kelp-covered rock. Average 2 to 4 pounds and fights well above its weight class.
- Boccaccio. The bruisers of the family. Adults push past 30 inches and 20 pounds on a good day. Old-timers still call them salmon grouper.
- Starry. Pink body speckled with bright white dots, like a living reef painting.
- Mexican Rockfish. Brick-red scales, firm white fillets, and one of the best-eating species in the Pacific.
Each one hits a bait hard, fights with that classic bulldog pull, and cooks up beautifully on the grill, in a pan, or deep-fried in fish tacos.
What Makes Them So Special
This family holds one of the wildest life-history records in the entire ocean.
Many Pacific species live past 100 years old, making them some of the longest-lived fish in the sea.
The rougheye has been verified at 205 years old, placing it among the longest-living vertebrates on Earth.
Rockfish grow slowly — often taking 5 to 10 years just to reach legal keeper size.
Scientists determine age by counting growth rings in the ear bones — the same way foresters read tree rings.
Where to Find Them Off Our Coast
These fish love structure. Every day on the water is a hunt for rock, and Brothers Sport Fishing captains work three kinds of bottom.
Bottom Structure
- Rocky ledges & pinnacles — Drop-offs where current stacks bait into tight pockets.
- Submerged reefs — Natural stone structure that holds schools through every season.
- Wrecks & hard bottom — Natural and man-made hangouts that hold the biggest Vermillion and Boccaccio in our area.
Local Coastline
- Within 10 miles of Mission Bay
- 150 to 300 feet of water
- Fast action and short run
- Reliable numbers most of the year
The sandy edges also hold California halibut — a good captain pivots between species on a single drift.
Coronados Islands
- ~20 miles south in Mexican waters
- Bigger average fish size
- Lighter fishing pressure
- Cleaner currents & deeper structure
Appropriate ID required for international runs.
Tackle, Bait & Technique
Bottom fishing here lives and dies by the dropper-loop rig. Standard Brothers setup:
- RodSeeker medium-heavy, 6 to 7 feet
- ReelShimano conventional with 50–65 lb braid
- Leader30 lb fluorocarbon
- Hooks1/0 to 3/0 live-bait hooks
- BaitSquid strips all day. Shrimp flies tipped with squid on slow bites.
- Weight8–16 oz to punch through current and hold bottom
The Drop Technique
Drop the rig until you feel the lead tap bottom, crank up two turns, and wait. When one of these fish eats, the rod loads slow and heavy at first, then doubles over hard.
Fight them up steadily without pumping — extra fish often pick up the second hook on the way to the surface if you keep tension. That's how a quick double-header turns into a triple.
Season typically runs April 1 through December 31. The same drop often pulls up California sheephead and hungry lingcod on the same drift. Captains track CDFW groundfish regulations daily so the catch stays legal from the first drop.
Your Rockfish Charter Options
Two trip types put you on the right bottom, both leaving from Mission Bay.
3/4 Day Charter
The most popular pick for filling a cooler. Choose the local Coastline option for fast action close to home, or upgrade to the Coronados Islands option for a shot at trophy fish in Mexican waters.
View This CharterFull-Day Coronado Islands Charter
A 12-hour day across the international line, working bigger reefs, deeper structure, and longer drops than the local Coastline can offer. A real shot at the trophy fish of the season.
View This CharterFrequently Asked Questions
Season typically runs April 1 through December 31. The bite stays steady most months, though depth regulations shift through the year and the spring opener usually delivers the fastest action.
Yes. Anyone 16 or older fishing California state waters needs a valid CDFW sportfishing license. 1-day, 2-day, 10-day, and annual options are all available online before your trip.
Bag limits change year to year based on CDFW rules and the open zone. The current general limit is 10 fish per angler within the daily rockfish, lingcod, and cabezon group, with sub-limits on certain species. The captain reads the live regulations before each trip.
Most drops happen in 150 to 300 feet of water on the local Coastline and out to about 250 feet at the Coronados. Depth restrictions can shift mid-season, so the captain picks legal bottom every trip.
Absolutely. Dropper-loop bottom fishing is one of the easiest techniques to learn, and the bite usually happens within minutes of dropping. It is one of the best trips for first-timers and family groups.
Ready to Fill the Cooler?
Mission Bay, San Diego — private charters available year-round.
Text or Call +1 619-289-3352