Park | water type | boat rental* | launch** |
---|---|---|---|
Mountain parks | |||
Claytor Lake | lake | row, motor, pontoon | marina, launch |
Clinch River | fresh (river) | launch | |
Douthat | lake, stream | row, canoe, kayak | car-top |
Fairy Stone | lake | row, canoe, kayak | car-top |
Grayson Highlands | stream | ||
Hungry Mother | lake | row, canoe, kayak | car-top |
Natural Tunnel | stream | ||
New River Trail | river | canoe, kayak, raft, float trips | launch |
Pinnacle (preserve) | river | ||
Shenandoah River | river | car-top | |
Wilderness Road | stream | ||
Piedmont parks | |||
Bear Creek Lake | lake | row, elec., canoe, kayak | car-top |
Holliday Lake | lake | row, elec., canoe, kayak | car-top, launch |
Lake Anna | lake | (motor boats permitted) | launch |
Occoneechee | lake | pontoon, runabout (motor boats permitted) | launch |
Pocahontas | lake | canoe | car-top |
Powhatan | river | car-top | |
Seven Bends | river | car-top | |
Sky Meadows | pond | ||
Smith Mountain Lake | lake | (motor boats permitted) | launch |
Staunton River | lake | (motor boats permitted) | launch |
Twin Lakes | lake | canoe | car-top, launch |
Coastal parks | |||
Belle Isle | salt, fresh (river) | fishing, canoe, kayak | car-top, launch |
Chippokes | salt, fresh (river) | ||
False Cape | salt, fresh (ocean, bay) | ||
First Landing | salt (bay) | (motor boats permitted) | launch |
Kiptopeke | salt (bay) | kayak (motor boats permitted) | launch |
Leesylvania | fresh (river) | (motor boats permitted) | launch |
Machicomoco | fresh (river) | car-top | |
Mason Neck | fresh (river) | canoe, kayak | car-top |
Westmoreland | salt, brackish (river) | (motor boats permitted) | launch |
York River | fresh (pond), salt (river) | (motor boats permitted) | launch |
*Generally available Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day and on weekends during spring and fall. **Fees apply. See our prices and fees page. |
Fishing in Virginia State Parks
Virginia’s waters offer a wide variety of fish, from native brookies in the pristine Shenandoah waters, to schools of striped bass making their way up the James. Land a bull or brown trout in the Southwest Virginia tailwaters and try to spot the elusive tiger trout. Muskellunge lurk in the upper James while the lower James offers world-class small and largemouth habitat.
The early bird gets the worm so spend the night at a comfy cabin or lodge and hit the water first thing. Need a boat? No problem. Many parks rent boats. Plenty of parks also offer pier, dock and shoreline fishing.
Try your hand at native brookies or stocked fish in the creeks at Grayson Highlands, or fish for rainbow and brown trout in Indian Creek at Wilderness Road.
Base camp and fish the many trout streams in the national forest lands around Hungry Mother, Douthat, Natural Tunnel or Shenandoah River. Douthat has a great put-and-take fishery in its lake as well as more than three miles of stocked creek waters, including a special section just for kids.
There is at least one state park on each of Virginia’s four major impoundments: Claytor Lake, Lake Anna, Buggs Island Lake (home of both Staunton River and Occoneechee parks) and Smith Mountain Lake.
All of these lakes are famous for bass fishing, including striped bass, as well as their healthy populations of panfish. The big-lake parks offer camping, rental cabins, ample boat ramps and loads of family activities. They also have bank fishing, to one degree or another, and several have fishing piers and boat rentals.
Many of Virginia’s parks offer fishing opportunities in waters ranging from one-acre ponds to 150-acre lakes. You can find a big fish in a small pond. Former state record northern pike and chain pickerel came from state park lakes.
Most parks have plenty of fishing spots from the shore, and you can often rent a small boat or canoe during the summer and on weekends in spring and fall. For small lakes, check out Bear Creek Lake, Douthat, Fairy Stone, Holliday Lake, Hungry Mother, Pocahontas, Twin Lakes and York River state parks.
Virginia has some of the best smallmouth bass fishing rivers in America, and you can get to many of them in a Virginia State Park. James River, New River Trail and Shenandoah River state parks provide car-top launching (and sometimes areas for small trailers) and wading access to their namesake rivers, and they all have camping.
You can even get a cabin at James River State Park to fish hard by day and relax each night. The campground at Natural Tunnel State Park, while not next to the water, provides a great base camp for the nearby Clinch River.
Clinch River State Park lies along the Clinch River, which contains more fish species than any other river in Virginia. The river supports smallmouth bass, spotted bass, rock bass, sunfish, crappie, walleye, musky, freshwater drum, longnose gar, channel catfish, and more.
The North Fork of the Shenandoah River features unique geology and landscape that promotes productive fishing and provides pleasant scenery for floating at Seven Bends State Park.
The tides run all the way to the fall-line in Virginia, so you can find freshwater and saltwater tidal rivers. Mason Neck and Leesylvania state parks are on the freshwater portion of the Potomac River and provide boating access to some of the best largemouth bass fishing in the area. Leesylvania also has a small fishing pier. Caledon is on the brackish portion of the Potomac River and allows fishing on open sections of the shoreline.
Westmoreland (lower Potomac), Belle Isle (Rappahannock) and York River (York) are along the saltwater portions of their rivers. York River has a small public fishing pier (no fishing license required), but the best opportunities at these parks are for boaters using the parks’ boat ramps. The fishing changes by season but generally follows the pattern of striped bass in the spring, fall and early winter, and bottom-fishing for flounder, spot and croaker during warmer months.
Boaters love Kiptopeke and First Landing state parks because they offer direct access to the great fishing of the Chesapeake Bay and Atlantic Ocean… striped bass, flounder, spadefish, cobia and all the usual suspects. But the parks are also great for land-bound fishermen.
Kiptopeke has a large, lighted fishing pier (no fishing license required), and First Landing has almost a mile of bay beach along the park campground. Both parks have cabins or lodges and large, well-equipped campgrounds.
- Fishing licenses are required at all parks except at the Kiptopeke and York River piers where a fee is charged to fish.
- The Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources website has information about freshwater fishing licenses.
- Visit the Virginia Marine Resources Commission website for information about saltwater fishing. Saltwater fishing also requires an annual free registration as explained on the website.
- Check out the Fish Virginia First Trail.
For more information on fishing at a particular park, select a park and click “Recreation” in the left menu.
Recent blogs about Fishing
- 3 must-do activities at Clinch River State Park
- 5 must-do activities at Wilderness Road State Park
- 5 things to experience when visiting Holliday Lake State Park
- 5 must-do activities at Staunton River State Park
- 10 summer bucket list parks for family adventure
- 5 must-do activities at James River State Park
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- More recent blogs about Fishing.