Where the Fish Are Holding & How to Catch Them Right Now
If you’re planning to fish Lake Lanier in January, this report will help you make better decisions before you launch — so you’re fishing with confidence instead of guessing.
January 2026 Lake Lanier Fishing Conditions (Quick Snapshot)
Water Level: ~1064.0 (≈6.8 ft below full pool)
Water Temperature: 49–51°F
Water Clarity: Clear on the main lake, slightly stained in backs of creeks
Primary Forage: Threadfin shad, blueback herring, small trout
The most consistent January striper bite on Lake Lanier is happening in the 40–60 ft range, especially where bait is concentrated along river channels and deeper creek arms.
The bite is solid — but only if you abandon shallow winter habits and fish deeper, more intentionally.
What Most Anglers Get Wrong in January
January is where many anglers struggle — not because the fish aren’t there, but because they fish it like late fall.
Common mistakes we’re seeing:
- Fishing too shallow after the early morning window
- Running familiar spots instead of following bait
- Marking fish on electronics but never triggering bites
Why this matters:
Stripers are holding deeper with the bait, and they’re moving. If you’re not adjusting depth and presentation, you’ll see fish but won’t hook up consistently.
What’s Actually Working on Lake Lanier Right Now
Best Depth Range
- 40–60 feet has been the most productive zone
- Fish are holding off bottom, suspended near bait
- Deeper water offers temperature stability and reliable feeding opportunities
Productive Techniques in January
Downlines
Downlines are producing steady action when bait is present.
- Focus on deep creek mouths and river channels
- Drop baits directly into bait schools
- Pay attention to subtle depth changes — even 5 feet matters
Planer Boards
The planer board bite has stayed productive, especially when covering water.
- Pull boards along channel edges and flats near deep water
- Smaller trout and lively bait have been key
- This is an excellent technique to locate active fish before switching to downlines
Winter Striper Tackle That’s Producing on Lake Lanier
When stripers are holding deep in cold water, presentation and gear matter more than ever. The following setups have been consistently reliable for winter conditions on Lake Lanier
- Okuma Coldwater 153 or 203, a Capt Mack’s Med Light Striper Rodwith 15-20# main line, a 1.25 or 1.75 oz Striper Tackle Pro Pencil Swivel Sinker, approximately 3′ of 10-12# Seagur Tatsu fluorocarbon leader, a #4 or #2 Gamakatsu circle hook, and a small herring or medium shiner for your downlines.
- Don’t forget that small or medium trout or small gizzard shad will also be great baits to put down. Remember to change out your hooks to a #1 or 1/0 hook if you are putting a shad or trout on your downline setup
- The Capt Mack’s Mini Mack with Striper Tackle 3/8 or ½ oz Ultra Pro Spin, Ultra Pro Swim or Pro Swim jig heads will be the artificial setup in January. Pull the Minis on a Capt Mack’s Power Reeling rod with 20# main line.
- After you find the bait and fish on your Humminbird APEX or XPLORE get your Capt Mack’s Mini Mack down. The “stealth” trolled Mini Mack pulled with your trolling motor should be put 25-35 feet down, attached to your Perfect Planer Board, and then let out another 30-50 feet away from the boat. Pull this setup around these schools at 1.2-1.5mph, so that you can cover more water quicker than with the downlines.
Where to Start Your Search
The most consistent areas have been upper-lake creeks and river sections, especially:
- Chattahoochee River arm
- Chestatee River arm
- Sardis Creek
- Ada Creek
- Wahoo Creek
Start by locating bait first, then adjust your approach based on fish position and activity.
What You Should Do Before Your Next Trip
If you’re fishing Lake Lanier this month:
- Let your electronics dictate your game plan
- Start deeper than you think — adjust shallower only if fish show up
- Be ready to mix planer boards and downlines
- Slow down — winter stripers respond better to deliberate presentations
Why January Can Be One of the Best Months to Catch Stripers
Winter stripers are predictable once you understand the patterns — but they punish anglers who rely on habits instead of conditions.
Most anglers quit early because it’s cold.
Prepared anglers catch fish because they know where to be and why.
Fish With Confidence — Or Fish With Us
If you want hands-on help putting this pattern together, The Striper Experience has January striper trips available now.
Book your Lake Lanier Striper Experience
Whether you want to learn the pattern or simply enjoy a productive day on the water, we’ll help you make the most of your trip.
As we enter 2026 we need to remember what we have learned in December throughout Advent and that the Hope, Peace, Joy, and Love that Christ shows is for all of us. Every time an act of kindness, integrity, or patience is shown it matters. Hope grows when these things are shared. No matter what happens in our lives, we can always have trust in Christ and experience Peace thru him. Joy doesn’t come from our things or circumstances; it comes from Christ leading our lives. Lastly, remember that we are known by God and fully Loved. He loves us all; the broken, the misfits, all of us!
Get out there and catch em up!
Call us today at 678-300-4865 or visit our booking page to book your Striper Experience!

