Lake Travis Bass Fishing

by Texas Bass Fishing Guide | May 11, 2026 | Texas Bass Fishing | 0 comments

Lake Travis Bass Fishing

A Texas SportsGuide style field journal for chasing green fish in the clear waters of the Highland Lakes

If you’ve spent enough years in Texas bass boats, there are certain lakes that earn your respect the hard way.

Lake Travis is one of them.

It doesn’t hand out bass like some East Texas grass lakes. It doesn’t always show its cards. And there are mornings on Travis when you’ll idle out under a pink Hill Country sunrise, stare across twenty miles of limestone cliffs and cedar-covered ridges, and wonder if you’ve lost your touch.

Then a four-pound largemouth blows up on a walking bait beside a bluff wall, and suddenly all is right with the world again.

I’ve always had a soft spot for the Highland Lakes. There’s something about the combination of deep clear water, rock structure, steep banks, marina docks, and those endless winding creek arms that keeps a bass fisherman thinking long after he’s loaded the boat.

For anglers searching online for Lake Travis bass fishing, this guide is designed to help you plan your trip, understand seasonal bass behavior, and put together a solid game plan whether you’re making a day trip from Austin or towing your bass boat across Texas for a week of spring fishing.


Understanding Lake Travis

Lake Travis lies on the Colorado River northwest of Austin and is one of the famed Highland Lakes managed by the Lower Colorado River Authority.

Created in 1942 by Mansfield Dam, Lake Travis is one of the most scenic reservoirs in Texas, but don’t let the postcard beauty fool you. This lake can fish downright stubborn.

According to Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Lake Travis covers approximately 18,622 surface acres with depths reaching nearly 190 feet near the dam. Water clarity ranges from clear to slightly stained depending on rainfall and seasonal inflow.

Major Water Sources

Lake Travis is fed primarily by:

  • Colorado River
  • Pedernales River
  • Sandy Creek
  • Cypress Creek
  • Cow Creek

These tributaries create a variety of fishing environments ranging from stained creek arms to gin-clear main-lake water.

Fish Species

Lake Travis supports:

  • Largemouth bass
  • Guadalupe bass
  • Smallmouth bass (limited population)
  • White bass
  • Striped bass
  • Catfish
  • Sunfish

For most bass fishermen, largemouth remain the primary target.


Current Water Levels

Lake Travis is famous for fluctuating water levels. Some years she’s near full pool. Other years she can look like Texas forgot how to rain.

Recent readings show the lake around 664 feet elevation, roughly 74% full, well below the conservation pool of 681 feet.

That matters because water levels shape:

  • Dock depth
  • Vegetation growth
  • Spawning pockets
  • Baitfish location
  • Boat ramp access

Always check lake levels before making the drive.


Lake Travis Weather

Central Texas weather keeps you honest.

Spring mornings often start in the upper 50s or low 60s, warming into the 70s or 80s.

Summer?

Bring sunscreen, a buff, and enough water to float another bass boat.

Typical seasonal ranges:

Season Air Temp
Winter 40 to 65°F
Spring 55 to 85°F
Summer 75 to 102°F
Fall 55 to 85°F

Wind can build quickly on the main lake. Those long open stretches near the dam can get sporty in a hurry.


Driving Distances to Lake Travis

From Austin

About 20 to 35 miles
Roughly 30 to 45 minutes depending on launch point.

Route:
US-183 or RM 620.


From San Antonio

About 95 miles

Route:
I-35 North to Austin, then RM 620.


From Houston

About 175 miles

Route:
I-10 West to Austin.


From Corpus Christi

About 225 miles

Route:
US-77 North, then I-35.


From Dallas

About 210 miles

Route:
I-35 South.


From Fort Worth

About 195 miles

Route:
I-35W South.


Marinas and Boat Launches

For serious Lake Travis bass fishing, these marinas are worth knowing.


Lake Travis Marina

4.5MarinaOpen

Phone: (512) 266-3290
Website: Lake Travis Marina

Private marina and launch area in the Hudson Bend area. Great central location for tournament anglers.


Riviera Marina

3.4BoatingOpen

Phone: (512) 250-8321
Website: Riviera Marina

Excellent for the lower lake and nearby bluff wall fishing.


Briarcliff Marina

4.2Marinas

Phone: (512) 264-2666
Website: Briarcliff Marina

Strong access to mid-lake structure.


Lodging Near Lake Travis

After a long day chunking jigs against limestone, a hot shower and a good steak can feel like church.


Lakeway Resort and Spa

3.0Venues & Event SpacesOpen

Phone: (512) 261-6600
Website: Lakeway Resort and Spa

Popular with traveling anglers and families.


Holiday Inn Express Lakeway

Phone: (512) 263-7070
Website: Holiday Inn Express

Reliable, clean, easy trailer parking.


Seasonal Lake Travis Bass Fishing Patterns

Now we get to the meat and potatoes.

Lake Travis bass behave differently than bass in Sam Rayburn or Toledo Bend. Clear water and deep structure dominate.


Winter Bass Fishing

December through February

Winter bass stack on:

  • Bluff walls
  • Deep points
  • Channel swings
  • Standing timber

Typical depth:

20 to 50 feet

Best Areas

  • Mansfield Dam area
  • Hudson Bend
  • Sandy Creek
  • Cypress Creek

Best Lures

Jigging Spoon

3/4 ounce chrome

Drop Shot

6-inch finesse worm

Colors:

  • Morning Dawn
  • Green Pumpkin
  • Watermelon Seed

Football Jig

1/2 ounce

Trailer:

Small craw trailer

TPWD reports consistently show winter bass relating to bluff walls and deeper vertical structure.


Spring Bass Fishing

March through May

This is prime Lake Travis bass fishing.

The water creeps into the 60s and bass push into:

  • Protected coves
  • Gravel pockets
  • Marina pockets
  • Secondary points

Depth

2 to 15 feet

Best Areas

  • Pedernales arm
  • Cow Creek
  • Sandy Creek
  • Briarcliff pockets

Lures

Suspending Jerkbait

Length:

4 to 5 inches

Colors:

  • Ghost Minnow
  • Pro Blue

Texas Rigged Lizard

6 inches

Colors:

  • Watermelon Red
  • Green Pumpkin

Spinnerbait

1/2 ounce

Blade:

Double willow

Bass often move shallow during warming trends and can be found around dock walkways and rocky transition banks.


Summer Bass Fishing

June through August

Summer on Travis means two patterns.

Pattern One: Early Schoolers

At first light, bass often chase shad around:

  • Bluff walls
  • Marina corners
  • Main lake points

Topwater Choices

Walking Bait

4 to 5 inches

Colors:

  • Bone
  • Chrome

Popper

Small profile

Schooling activity often ends quickly after sunrise according to guide reports.


Pattern Two: Deep Structure

After the sun climbs:

Bass slide into:

  • Ledges
  • Brush piles
  • Offshore humps

Depth:

18 to 35 feet

Best baits:

  • Drop Shot
  • Carolina Rig
  • Flutter Spoon
  • Deep crankbait

Fall Bass Fishing

September through November

Shad migration creates feeding opportunities.

Bass move into:

  • Creek arms
  • Marina slips
  • Windblown points

Best Lures

Squarebill Crankbait

2.5 size

Colors:

  • Sexy Shad
  • Citrus Shad

Spinnerbait

3/8 ounce

Swimbait

4 inches

Topwater can remain strong until the first real cold fronts.


Best Bass Habitat on Lake Travis

Unlike East Texas vegetation lakes, Travis is more structure-oriented.

Look for:

Rock

  • Chunk rock
  • Gravel banks
  • Limestone ledges

Docks

Floating docks are gold.

Especially when shad suspend underneath.

Bluff Walls

Some of the most productive water on the lake.

Timber

Flooded timber in creek arms can produce giants.


Lake Records

Lake Travis has produced largemouth bass pushing well into double digits, though it’s better known for quality numbers than ShareLunker headlines.

Guadalupe bass are also a prized bonus catch.


My Personal Advice

If I were launching on Travis tomorrow with a Skeeter and only one day to fish, here’s how I’d play it:

Daybreak

Topwater around bluff walls and marina slips.

Mid-Morning

Work jerkbaits and swimbaits on secondary points.

Afternoon

Slow down with a drop shot or football jig in 20 to 35 feet.

And above all...

Keep moving.

Lake Travis rewards fishermen who think like hunters, not farmers.

Some lakes you plow.

Lake Travis, you stalk.

And when that rod loads up beside a cedar-lined bluff somewhere in the Texas Hill Country, with the sun dropping behind limestone ridges and the livewell already sloshing...

You remember exactly why Lake Travis bass fishing keeps calling you back year after year.


For current fishing reports, visit Texas Parks and Wildlife Freshwater Fishing Reports and the official Lake Travis page from Texas Parks and Wildlife.

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