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2025 Fishing Year Limited Access General Category Individual Fishing Quota Allocations

April 15, 2025

New measures for Limited Access General Category (LAGC) vessels implemented through Framework Adjustment 39 to the Scallop Fishery Management Plan, and a summary of how they affect the 2025 fishing year. All measures will be effective on April 21, 2025.

Fishing Year 2025 IFQ Allocations

The table below includes the LAGC fleet fishing year 2025 IFQ allocations effective April 21, 2025, through March 31, 2026. We will upload your vessel’s updated 2025 IFQ and your IFQ letter to Fish Online based on the following allocations. Vessels can exchange IFQ via Fish Online or the IFQ Transfer Form.

**REMINDER** For IFQ vessels, all scallop harvest counts against your IFQ, regardless of where it is caught, including state waters.

Fleet

lb

Total IFQ Annual Allocation

991,799

LAGC IFQ-Only Annual Allocation

901,636

Limited Access with LAGC IFQ Annual Allocation

90,163

 

IFQ Overage Payback (accountability measure)

You are prohibited from exceeding your IFQ allocation at any time during the fishing year. If you have exceeded your IFQ, you must balance an overage through temporary IFQ leases and/or permanent allocation transfers prior to any additional fishing activity. However, balancing an IFQ overage does not negate any potential violation related to exceeding your IFQ. If you exceed your yearly IFQ allocation, we will deduct any overages that remain at the end of the fishing year from the following year’s IFQ allocation on a pound-for-pound basis.

In-shell (Shell Stock) Possession Limits

  • The in-shell (shell stock) possession limit of scallops is a weight conversion (8.33 lb of in-shell scallops = 1 lb of scallop meats).
  • For Access Area trips, vessels may not possess or land, per trip, more than 800 lb of shucked scallops, or possess more than 6,664 lb of in-shell scallops shoreward of the VMS Demarcation Line.
  • For open area trips, vessels may not possess or land, per trip, more than 600 lb of shucked scallops, or possess more than 4,998 lb of in-shell scallops shoreward of the VMS Demarcation Line.

Fishing Year 2025 Access Area Allocations

Framework 39 allocates LAGC IFQ vessels a fleet-wide number of trips for fishing year 2025 and no default trips for fishing year 2026. The scallop catch associated with the total number of trips for all areas combined (571 trips) for fishing year 2025 is equivalent to 5.5 percent of total projected catch from access areas.

LAGC Access Area trips can be taken in any of the available areas (Area I or Area II). Once the Regional Administrator has determined that the total number of LAGC IFQ access area trips have been or are projected to be taken, all of the access areas will then be closed to LAGC IFQ fishing.

Fishing Years 2025 LAGC IFQ Trip Allocations for Scallop Access Areas

Scallop access area

2025

Area I/Area II*

571

Total

571

* LAGC Access Area trips can be taken in any of the available areas until the Regional Administrator determines that the total number of LAGC IFQ trips have been or are projected to be taken.

Atlantic Sea Scallop Quota Monitoring Page

LAGC Incidental Scallop Target TAC: The incidental scallop target TAC for fishing year 2025 is 50,000 lb.  Vessels issued an LAGC Incidental Catch scallop permit may land up to 40 lb shucked or 333 lb of in-shell scallops per trip.

Fishing Year 2025 Rotational Area Coordinates

Access Areas for Fishing Year 2025

Area I Access Area 

Point

N Latitude

W Longitude

AI1

40° 55.0´ 

68° 53.4´ 

AI2

41° 30.0´ 

69° 23.0´ 

AI3

41° 30.0´ 

68° 30.0´

AI4

40° 58.0´ 

68° 30.0´

AI1

40° 55.0´ 

68° 53.4´ 

 

Area II Access Area

Point

N latitude

W longitude

Note

AII1

41°30′

67°20′

 

AII2

41°30′

        (1)

(2)

AII3

40°40′

        (3)

(2)

AII4

40°40′

67°20′

 

AII1

41°30′

67°20′

 

1 The intersection of 41°30′ N lat. and the U.S.-Canada Maritime Boundary, approximately 41°30′ N lat., 66°34.73′ W long.

2 From Point AII2 connected to Point AII3 along the U.S.-Canada Maritime Boundary.

3 The intersection of 40°40′ N lat. and the U.S.-Canada Maritime Boundary, approximately 40°40′ N lat. and 65°52.61′ W long.

Figure 1. Rotational management areas.  

Fishing Year 2025 Rotational Closure Coordinates

The following areas are closed for scallop fishing year 2025 (see map above and coordinates below):

Nantucket Lightship Scallop Rotational Area (Closed)

Point

N Latitude

W Longitude

NL1

40° 20.0´ 

69° 30.0´ 

NL2

40° 20.0´ 

68° 48.0´ 

NL3

40° 33.0´ 

68° 48.0´ 

NL4

40° 33.0´ 

69° 00.0´ 

NL5

40° 50.0´ 

69° 00.0´ 

NL6

40° 50.0´ 

69° 30.0´ 

NL1

40° 20.0´ 

69° 30.0´ 

 

Elephant Trunk Scallop Rotational Area (Closed) 

Point

N Latitude

W Longitude

ET1

38°50.0′ 

74°20.0′ 

ET2

38°50.0′ 

73°30′.0 

ET3

38°10.0′ 

73°30.0′ 

ET4

38°10.0′ 

74°20.0′ 

ET1

38°50.0′ 

74°20.0′ 

Fishing Year 2025 Flatfish ACLs in the Scallop Fishery:

Stock

Scallop sub-ACL

Georges Bank Yellowtail Flounder

32,849 lb*

SNE/MA Yellowtail Flounder

5,952 lb

Northern Windowpane Flounder

58,643 lb

Southern Windowpane Flounder

157,190 lb

*Proposed by the New England Fishery Management Council in Framework 69 to the Northeast Multispecies Fishery Management Plan

Important LAGC Program Reminders

Observer Program Updates

Set-Aside Compensation

LAGC IFQ vessels are eligible for additional compensation when carrying an observer on board and fishing trips longer than 1 day (24 hours). The daily compensation rate of 200 lb will be prorated at 12-hour increments for trips exceeding 24 hours. The amount of compensation a vessel could receive on 1 trip would be capped at 2 days (48 hours) and vessels fishing longer than 48 hours will not receive additional compensation allocation. For example, if the observer compensation rate is 200 lb/day and an LAGC IFQ vessel carrying an observer departs on July 1 at 2200 and lands on July 3 at 0100, the length of the trip would equal 27 hours, or 1 day and 3 hours. In this example, the LAGC IFQ vessel would be eligible for 1 day plus 12 hours of compensation allocation, i.e., 300 lb. An LAGC IFQ vessel will be able to harvest the trip limit and the daily compensation rate on the observed trip, or the vessel could harvest any unfished compensation on a subsequent trip while adhering to the commercial possession limit.

If NOAA Fisheries selects your IFQ vessel for an open area or access area observed trip, you will receive observer compensation credit as described above if the observer set-aside has not been fully harvested. You can fish those additional pounds on the observed IFQ trip above the regular possession limit or on a subsequent trip that fishing year. However, if you harvest the additional pounds on a subsequent trip, you must remain within the possession limits.

We monitor the compensation rates and observer set-aside use closely throughout the year. If information suggests that a different rate is necessary to account for unexpected fishery conditions, we will change the compensation rate as appropriate and necessary. 

LAGC Calendar Day Landing Restriction

LAGC vessels may not land scallops more than once per calendar day. For example, an LAGC vessel that lands scallops on Monday may depart on a second trip on the same day it landed scallops (Monday), but cannot land scallops again until Tuesday.

Scallop Pre-Landing Notification

LAGC IFQ vessels must send a Vessel Monitoring System (VMS) Scallop Pre-Landing Notification form at least 6 hours before arrival on the way back to port, or immediately after fishing ends if less than 6 hours before arrival. In addition, you must submit this form on trips that are not declared as scallop trips, but on which scallops are kept incidentally. 

Forms must include the:

  • Operator’s permit number;
  • Vessel trip report (VTR) serial number recorded from that trip's VTR;
  • Estimated amount of scallop meats and/or bushels to be landed;
  • Estimated time and date of arrival in port;
  • Port city and state at which the scallops will be landed; and
  • Whether any scallops were caught in the NGOM.

     

Daily Scallop Catch Reports

Scallop catch reports are required to be submitted daily for vessels that fish for, possess, or retain scallops and not also fishing under a Northeast multispecies DAS or sector allocation. These reports must be submitted in 24-hour intervals for each day of fishing that begins at 0000 hours and ends at 2400 hours. The reports must be submitted before 9:00 a.m. local time each day for the previous day’s catch. Each report must include the:

  • Operator’s permit number;
  • VTR serial number;
  • Date fish were caught;
  • Total pounds of scallop meets kept; and
  • Total pounds of all other fish kept.

     

Protected Species Reminders:

Commercial Fishing Reporting of Protected Species Takes

Protected Species Handling and Resuscitation Requirements and Guidelines

Stellwagen Bank Historic Shipwreck Avoidance

NOAA Fisheries, in conjunction with NOAA Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary Program, requests that vessels avoid shipwreck sites on southern Stellwagen Bank within the Sanctuary by keeping gear 400 feet away from each of the site locations listed below. For details on the location of the wrecks please visit the Stellwagen Bank Historic Shipwreck Avoidance Webpage.

Shell Stock Restrictions

  • LAGC IFQ vessels may possess no more than 4,998 lb of in-shell scallops shoreward of the VMS demarcation line on an open area trip.
  • A vessel declared into the Sea Scallop Area Access Program may not possess more than 6,664 lb of in-shell scallops outside of the access area.
  • Vessels issued an LAGC NGOM scallop permit and IFQ vessels fishing in the NGOM may possess no more than 1,666 lb in-shell scallops shoreward of the VMS demarcation line.

Last updated by Greater Atlantic Regional Fisheries Office on May 09, 2025