Freshwater-only language matters
If an official page says freshwater, do not assume marine fishing is covered. This matters in states with separate marine, tidal, or saltwater registration systems.
Water type
Before assuming a free fishing day covers your trip, check whether the state source says freshwater, saltwater, marine, shellfish, crabbing, clamming, or all fishing.
Water scope examples
The announced waiver is for freshwater fishing; marine fishing rules should be checked separately.
The event is broad, but WDFW lists important species exceptions and endorsement requirements.
ODFW free fishing days commonly cover fishing, crabbing, and clamming without licenses or tags, but all regulations remain in force.
If an official page says freshwater, do not assume marine fishing is covered. This matters in states with separate marine, tidal, or saltwater registration systems.
Saltwater species, shellfish, crabbing, clamming, salmon, halibut, sturgeon, and similar fisheries often have separate rules. A family pier trip and a lake trip can fall under different requirements.
Our table summarizes the practical issue, but the state agency source is the final place to confirm what the waiver covers for a specific species and water.
This guide is informational and should be used with the state table and official source tracker. Free fishing dates and license-waiver rules can change, and this site does not provide legal, regulatory, or professional advice.
License waiver
A practical explanation of what the license waiver usually covers, who may be included, and what to check before fishing without a license.
5 min read
Beginner planning
A simple field checklist for first-time anglers planning a low-pressure free fishing day trip with kids or friends.
6 min read
Rules checklist
Free fishing days waive a license requirement, not the entire fishing rulebook. This guide explains the checks families should make before going.
6 min read