Yellowtail Kingfish
Scientific name: Seriola lalandi
Common names: Yellowtail kingfish, Kingfish, “Kingie”
Average size: 70–100 cm / 8–15 kg
Trophy size: 20–40 kg+
Activity pattern: Aggressive pelagic predator, highly mobile
Distribution & Key Locations (Australia)
Yellowtail kingfish are widespread throughout Australia and are one of the country’s premier sportfish. They thrive anywhere there is current, structure, and bait.
Prime Regions
- NSW: Offshore reefs, headlands, harbour markers
- VIC: Offshore reefs and island systems
- SA: Gulf structure, offshore reef edges
- WA: Islands, bommies and current lines
- QLD (south): Offshore reefs and deeper pressure edges
- Tasmania: Seasonal fish during warmer periods
High-Percentage Areas
- Offshore reefs and pinnacles
- Headlands and pressure points
- Islands and bommies
- Deep harbour markers and pylons
- Current lines and bait schools
- FADs and offshore structure
Kingfish rarely sit in empty water. If there is no bait, structure, or current, move to another location.
Habitat Features to Look For
Kingfish are built for speed and power. They use structure and current to trap baitfish.
Key Structure
- Reef edges and steep drop-offs
- Pressure edges around islands
- Washed whitewater zones near rocks
- Deep wrecks and artificial reefs
- Current seams and upwellings
Bait Indicators
- Surface “bust-ups”
- Diving birds
- Schools of slimy mackerel or yellowtail scad (“yakkas”)
- Sounder showing stacked bait mid-water
Water Conditions
- Prefer clean, oxygen-rich water
- Moderate to strong current flow
- Often associated with blue water pushing inshore
Find the bait first. The kingfish are usually nearby.
Seasonal Patterns
Kingfish can be caught year-round in many areas, but larger fish become more predictable during warmer water periods.
Best Seasons
- NSW / VIC: Spring through autumn
- SA: Late summer to autumn
- WA: Spring and summer peak
- Tasmania: Summer only in most areas
Seasonal Notes
- Warmer currents push fish southward
- Large spawning fish often appear offshore in spring/summer
- Cooler months generally push fish deeper
Water temperature matters. A few degrees can completely change fish activity.
Weather & Tides (Critical)
Ideal Conditions
- Stable weather patterns
- Moderate swell with moving water
- Early morning or late afternoon
- Clean current lines around structure
Tides
- Tide movement is more important than tide height
- Strong current around reefs and markers often fires fish up
- Bite periods commonly occur around tide changes
Avoid
- Dirty, stagnant water
- Completely dead current
- Heavy boat traffic in shallow systems
Kingfish feed aggressively, but they are highly current-oriented.
Bait – What Actually Works
Live bait is kingfish currency. Prioritise this over slab baits or frozen alternatives.
Top Natural Baits
- Live yellowtail scad (“yakkas”)
- Live slimy mackerel
- Live squid
- Live garfish
- Live bonito (large fish only)
- Fresh squid strips
- Tuna fillets or slab baits
Bait Rules
- Healthy live bait outfishes dead bait
- Larger baits will reduce your likelihood of catching smaller fish
- Nose-hooking improves live bait movement
A struggling live bait near structure rarely lasts long around kingfish.
Tackle & Rigs
Kingfish are brutally powerful and will destroy weak gear.
Rod & Reel
- Rod: 5’6”–7’ heavy spin or overhead
- Reel: 6000–14000 spin or PE overhead setups
- Line: 30–80 lb braid
- Leader: 50–100 lb fluorocarbon or mono
Terminal Gear
- Heavy-duty swivels and split rings
- Live bait hooks: 6/0–10/0
- Strong assist hooks for jigs
Common Rigs
- Live bait rig with minimal weight
- Balloon rigs for suspended baits
- Knife jigs and mechanical jigging setups
- Stickbait and popper setups for surface fish
If your drag is weak, your tackle is weak.
Lures (When & Why)
Kingfish are one of Australia’s best lure species because they are aggressive, competitive feeders.
Effective Lures
- Knife jigs
- Stickbaits
- Surface poppers
- Large soft plastics
- Heavy metal slugs
When to Use Lures
- Fish feeding on the surface
- Deep reef systems
- Areas with heavy current
- When actively searching for fish
Retrieval Style
- Fast retrieves trigger reaction bites
- Mechanical jigging excels in deep water
- Surface lures work best around active bait schools
Kingfish often hit lures out of aggression, as much as hunger.
Time of Day
- Best: Dawn and dusk
- Also productive: Overcast days with current movement
- Night: Possible around lights, harbour systems and deep structure
Low-light periods generally produce the most aggressive surface activity.
Common Mistakes
- Fishing without bait present
- Using gear too light
- Locking drags too tight near structure
- Fighting fish too gently
- Ignoring current direction
- Staying in dead water too long
Kingfish reward anglers who stay mobile and adapt quickly.
Final Rule of Kingfish Fishing
Find current, structure, and bait — then fish aggressively and stay ready.
Kingfish are fast-moving predators. Success usually comes from covering water, reading conditions, and reacting quickly when the bite window opens.


