Fishing
Fishing license, MPA, and tide pool check
A simple starting point for fishing licenses, ocean rules, marine protected areas, tide pools, and harvest limits.
Why it matters
California's coast is beautiful, but the rules can change by species, season, size, gear, beach, pier, MPA, and tide pool. The safe move is to check the official map and rule page before you take anything.
Directory shelf
Outdoors
Parks, passes, campfires, fishing, tide pools, and trip checks.
First moves
- 1
Decide what you are doing: freshwater fishing, ocean fishing, pier fishing, shellfish, tide pooling, or just looking.
- 2
Check whether you need a fishing license, report card, validation, or other document.
- 3
Use the MPA map before fishing, collecting, or touching tide pool life on the coast.
- 4
Check the current season, size, bag limit, gear rule, and local closure for the species.
- 5
For shellfish, also check health advisories before eating anything you collect.
- 6
When in doubt, take photos and leave the animal, shell, rock, plant, or tide pool alone.
Watch for
- 1
A license does not mean every place, species, or method is open.
- 2
Piers, beaches, harbors, MPAs, state parks, refuges, and local beaches can have different rules.
- 3
Tide pools often protect more than fish. Touching, taking, or moving things can be a problem in protected areas.
- 4
Ocean and freshwater rules are not the same.
- 5
Shellfish can be legally open but unsafe to eat during some health advisories.
- 6
Screenshots get stale. Use current official maps and rule pages.
Go deeper
Fishing licenses and rules
Start with the exact water and fish, then check the license, report card, current rule, and safe-eating advice.
Tide pools and marine protected areas
How to enjoy tide pools, low tides, shellfish warnings, and marine protected areas without guessing what you can touch, take, or eat.
Beaches and coastal access
Find public access, check water quality, and look at surf or rip-current warnings before a beach day.