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Cobia: The Complete Australian Fishing Guide

Photo courtesy of Oz Fish and Game

Cobia

Scientific name: Rachycentron canadum
Common names: Cobia, Black Kingfish, Black Salmon
Average size: 8–20 kg
Trophy size: 30–50 kg+
Activity pattern: Opportunistic pelagic predator


Distribution and key locations (Australia)

Cobia occur throughout tropical and subtropical Australia and are often encountered around offshore structure, reefs and floating objects.

Prime regions

  • QLD: Great Barrier Reef, offshore reefs, Moreton Bay region
  • NT: Coastal reefs, islands and offshore shoals
  • WA (north): Kimberley, Pilbara, Ningaloo
  • NSW (north): Seasonal captures around reefs and FADs

High-percentage areas

  • Offshore reefs
  • Navigation markers
  • Wrecks and artificial reefs
  • Buoys and FADs
  • Island headlands
  • Current lines and bait schools

If the water is warm, clear, and holding bait around structure, cobia are usually worth looking for.


Habitat features to look for

Cobia are curious, mobile fish that patrol structure and often follow larger marine animals.

Key structure

  • Reef edges
  • Wrecks
  • Artificial reefs
  • Channel markers
  • Floating debris
  • Current pressure points
  • Drop-offs adjacent to reefs

Water conditions

  • Clear oceanic water
  • Moderate current flow
  • Water temperatures above 22°C
  • Strong baitfish presence
  • Good water clarity

Cobia often appear unexpectedly. Always keep an eye on the water around the boat.


Seasonal patterns

Best seasons

  • QLD: Spring → autumn
  • NT: Dry season
  • WA (north): Autumn → spring
  • NSW (north): Summer → autumn

Why warmer months?

  • Higher water temperatures
  • Increased bait activity
  • Seasonal migrations
  • More fish around reefs and offshore structure

Cobia are highly temperature-dependent and become far less common when water cools.


Weather and tides (critical)

Ideal conditions

  • Stable weather
  • Moderate tidal flow
  • Clean blue water
  • Light to moderate winds
  • Periods of active bait movement

Avoid

  • Cold-water upwellings
  • Dirty runoff water
  • Slack tidal periods
  • Extended rough weather

Best bite windows:

  • Two hours before tide change
  • Two hours after tide change
  • Early morning
  • Late afternoon

Active bait schools often matter more than the actual tide stage.


Bait – what actually works

Cobia are aggressive feeders and rarely refuse a healthy live bait.

Top natural baits

  • Live yellowtail scad (‘yakkas’) gold standard
  • Live fusiliers
  • Live slimy mackerel
  • Live mullet
  • Live squid
  • Whole squid
  • Fresh fish fillets
  • Large pilchards

Bait rules

  • Live beats dead
  • Big baits attract big fish
  • Healthy bait swims naturally
  • Keep baits near structure

If a cobia appears beside the boat, have a pitch bait ready immediately.


Tackle and rigs

Rod and reel

  • Rod: 7–8 ft heavy spin rod
  • Reel: 6000–14000 size spin reel
  • Line: 30–80 lb braid
  • Leader: 60–120 lb fluorocarbon or mono

Terminal gear

  • Circle hooks: 7/0–10/0
  • Heavy live-bait hooks
  • Running sinker rigs
  • Balloon rigs

Common rigs

  • Unweighted live bait
  • Running sinker to swivel
  • Balloon-rigged live bait
  • Suspended live bait beside structure

Keep rigs simple. Cobia are rarely leader-shy.


Lures (when and why)

Cobia respond exceptionally well to lures when actively cruising around structure.

Effective lures

  • Large soft plastics (6–10 inch)
  • Stickbaits
  • Metal jigs
  • Slow-pitch jigs
  • Swimbaits
  • Large paddle tails

When to use lures

  • Fish visible near the surface
  • Around wrecks and reefs
  • Following rays or sharks
  • Working bait schools
  • When live bait is unavailable

Often the biggest mistake is retrieving too fast. Cobia will happily eat a slow-moving lure.


Time of day

  • Best: Dawn and dusk
  • Daytime: Excellent in clear offshore water
  • Night: Occasionally around lit structures

Unlike many reef species, cobia are often sight-fished during daylight hours.


Common mistakes

  • Fishing away from structure
  • Using undersized tackle
  • Ignoring floating objects
  • Retrieving lures too quickly
  • Failing to keep a pitch bait ready
  • Moving before giving fish time to appear

Many cobia are caught simply because an angler noticed a fish cruising past the boat.


Final rule of cobia fishing

Find warm water + structure + bait + current — then keep watching.

Cobia are notorious for appearing out of nowhere. If the conditions look right, stay alert. The next fish you see beside the boat could be the biggest fish of the day.

  • June 13, 2026

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