2026 season · Private charters only

Trips & rates, in plain numbers

Every price below is for the whole boat with up to 4 guests — not per person. Add a 5th and 6th guest for a small fee. No booking-platform markup, no surprise charges at the dock.

Included on every trip

  • Fishing licenses for everyone aboard
  • Rods, reels, tackle & terminal gear
  • Live & cut bait
  • Ice for the fish box
  • Fish cleaning at the dock
  • Fuel — even at a mile a gallon

The rate sheet

2026 pricing

Rates reflect the new boat — twin Suzuki 300s get you to the fish faster and burn real fuel doing it. Deposit of 20% holds your date; the balance is due at the dock (cash preferred).

TripDurationWhole boat (up to 4)Guests 5 & 6
Nearshore & quick trips
Spanish Mackerel Troll3 hours$675+$50 each
Half Day4 hours$850+$50 each
Extended Half Day5 hours$995+$50 each
Offshore snapper & grouper
Three-Quarter Day6 hours$1,125+$50 each
Full Day8 hours$1,425+$50 each
Long range
Long Range10 hours$1,725+$75 each
The Extreme12 hours$1,975+$75 each
Summer nights
Night Trip summer specialty6 hours · evening departure$1,150+$50 each
Kids and adults fishing off the stern on a nearshore family trip

Nearshore · 3–5 hours · from $675

Quick hits

Short runs, fast action. Troll for Spanish and king mackerel or drop baits on nearshore structure — these are the trips where kids catch their first fish and nobody checks their watch. Travis's favorite guests are the young ones: he's built a decade of reviews around getting families on fish.

Spanish mackerelKing mackerelRed snapper (state season)Triggerfish (in season)Bonito
  • Easiest trip for first-timers and young kids
  • Calm-water options inside the bay when it's sporty outside
  • Morning and afternoon departures

Offshore · 6–8 hours · from $1,125

Snapper & grouper country

This is the bread and butter: run to live bottom and wrecks, drop big baits, and load the box. Red snapper when the season's open, vermilion snapper (the sweet-eating "beeliners"), red grouper, gags in the fall — whatever's biting best, Travis has been on them all week and knows where they went.

The twin 300s matter here: what used to be an hour-plus slog is a short hop, so you spend your trip fishing instead of riding.

Red snapper (in season)Vermilion snapperRed grouperGag grouper (fall)ScampAmberjack (fall)
  • The classic Panama City cooler-filler
  • Real shade and a cabin for breaks between spots
  • Seasons rotate — there's a reason to come back every month
Three anglers on deck each holding a red grouper, flat calm Gulf behind them
Angler holding a trophy-class vermilion snapper

Long range · 10–12 hours · from $1,725

Where the big ones still live

Fifty-plus miles out, the vermilion snapper aren't 12-inchers — they're 20-to-24-inch slabs, and the grouper haven't seen a bait all season. On a recent long-range run, six anglers boxed their 60-fish beeliner limit plus red grouper and gags: over 300 pounds iced down, and that's after throwing the out-of-season fish back.

These trips are for crews who want to put serious fish in the freezer and don't mind earning it. Electric reels aboard for the deep drops — and if you want to learn slow-pitch or vertical jigging, this is where Travis has the time to teach it. Chasing big fish on long days is his favorite kind of fishing.

Trophy vermilion snapperRed & gag grouperScampAmberjackMahi on the weed lines

Summer nights · 6 hours · $1,150

The night shift

"It's cooler, so you're not dying of heat stroke. Your big baits soak, the beeliners grab your cut baits, and you don't have to worry about the bait thieves — it's just the eating fish that are biting."

— Capt. Travis

July and August days in Panama City are brutal — and picked over. At night the pressure's off: the fish that got smart in daylight feed without looking, and you fish in a t-shirt instead of a sweat lodge. Almost nobody else in Panama City runs a real night program. Travis does, and he loves it.

  • Evening departure — watch the sunset on the run out
  • Snapper on cut bait, big baits out for the heavyweights
  • Cooler temps, calmer seas, zero crowds
Night-trip deck covered with vermilion snapper and grouper

You bring

The easy stuff

  • Food and drinks in a soft-sided cooler (a big fish cooler stays on the dock for your fillets)
  • Sunscreen, hat, polarized sunglasses
  • Non-marking shoes or bare feet — your call
  • Motion-sickness meds the night before if you're prone (ask Travis — he'll tell you straight if the forecast is sporty)
  • A camera. You'll want it.

Good to know

Dock rules & details

  • Departs St. Andrews Marina, 3151 W 10th St — Travis will text you exact slip and parking directions
  • 20% deposit holds your date; balance due at the dock
  • Cancel free 3+ days out; weather cancellations by the captain = full refund or reschedule, always
  • Tips for a hard-working deckhand run 18–20% by custom
  • Beer is fine aboard; glass bottles and liquor aren't

Timing your trip

What's biting when

Seasons below are the short version — exact dates shift year to year and can close early, so confirm with Travis when you book. There is no bad month; there's just different fish.

Summer

Red snapper season, mangrove snapper at night, kings and Spanish thick, mahi on the weed lines. Night trips at their best.

Fall

The everything season: September opens gag grouper and amberjack while snapper's still going. Triggerfish back on the menu.

Winter

Vermilion snapper, red grouper and scamp on the bottom, sheepshead inshore. Quiet water, hungry fish, easy dates.

Spring

Spanish arrive, the famous cobia run rolls down the beach, triggerfish and kings fire back up, and snapper season looms.

Pick a date. He'll find the fish.

Text Call the captain