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Species Directory

Bluefish

Overview Seafood Management Recreational Fishing Commercial Fishing Science Resources
Learn about the fishing status and management of the Atlantic bluefish fishery.

Bluefish

Pomatomus saltatrix

Side-profile illustration of bluefish with shiny white and light blue body. Credit: NOAA Fisheries/Jack Hornady
Also Known As
Tailor, Snapper, Baby blues, Choppers, Elfs

Quick Facts

Region
New England/Mid-Atlantic, Southeast
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Multiple blue and silver bluefish swim in a rocky environment around other fish. Bluefish. Credit: Shutterstock

Bluefish. Credit: Shutterstock

About the Species

Multiple blue and silver bluefish swim in a rocky environment around other fish. Bluefish. Credit: Shutterstock

Bluefish. Credit: Shutterstock

The Atlantic bluefish fishery in the U.S. operates from Maine to Florida. Bluefish are highly migratory along the U.S. Atlantic coast and seasonally move. The bluefish fishery predominantly uses gillnets, but other gear includes hook and line, pound nets, seines, and trawls. The recreational fishery accounts for the majority of the bluefish total catch each year. The market for bluefish is for human consumption and is primarily sold fresh or smoked. U.S. wild-caught bluefish is a smart seafood choice because it is sustainably managed and responsibly harvested under U.S. regulations. Implementing regulations are found at 50 CFR part 648 subpart J.

Population Status Icon

Population

The stock is not overfished.

Fishing Status Icon

Fishing Rate

Not subject to overfishing.

Habitat Impacts Icon

Habitat Impact

Recreational fishermen use hook-and-line gear that has minimal impacts on habitat. Commercial fishermen use a variety of gears including trawls, gillnets, haul seines, and pound nets, and the impacts vary by gear type.

Bycatch Icon

Bycatch

Regulations are in place to minimize bycatch.

Population Status

  • According to the 2023 stock assessment, bluefish is not overfished - rebuilding and not subject to overfishing. Summary stock assessment information can be found on Stock SMART.

Appearance

  • Bluefish are blue-green on the back and silvery on the sides and belly.
  • They have a prominent jaw, with sharp, compressed teeth.

Biology

  • Bluefish live up to 12 years.
  • They grow fast, up to 31 pounds and 39 inches.
  • They are able to reproduce at age 2, when they’re 15 to 20 inches in length.
  • Depending on their size, females can have between 400,000 and 2 million eggs.
  • Bluefish spawn multiple times in spring and summer.
  • They exhibit feeding behavior called the “bluefish blitz,” where large schools of big fish attack bait fish near the surface, churning the water like a washing machine. They feed voraciously on their prey, eating almost anything they can catch and swallow.
  • Bluefish have razor-sharp teeth and shearing jaws that allow them to ingest large parts, increasing the maximum size of the prey they can eat.
  • They eat squid and fish, particularly menhaden and smaller fish such as silversides.
  • Sharks, tunas, and billfishes are typically the only fish predators large and fast enough to prey on adult bluefish.
  • Bluefish make up a major part of the diet of shortfin mako sharks and are also very important in the diets of swordfish.
  • Oceanic birds prey on juvenile bluefish.

Where They Live

Range

  • Along the East Coast from Maine to eastern Florida.

Habitat

  • Bluefish live in temperate and tropical coastal oceans around the world, except in the eastern Pacific.
  • They gather by size in schools that can cover tens of square miles of ocean, equivalent to 10,000 football fields.
  • Bluefish migrate seasonally, moving north in spring and summer as water temperatures rise and then south in autumn and winter to waters in the South Atlantic Bight.
  • Females release their eggs in the open ocean.
  • Larvae develop into juveniles near the surface in continental shelf waters and eventually move to estuarine and nearshore shelf habitats.
  • Juveniles prefer sandy ocean bottoms but will also inhabit mud, silt, or clay ocean bottoms or vegetated areas.
  • Adults live in both inshore and offshore areas and favor warmer water.

Fishery Management

  • NOAA Fisheries, the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council, and the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission manage the bluefish fishery.
  • Managed under the Bluefish Fishery Management Plan:
    • Commercial fishermen must have a permit to catch and sell bluefish.
    • Managers set an annual catch limit.
    • The majority of catch is allocated to the recreational fisheries.
    • The commercial catch limit is divided into state-specific allocations. Unused recreational catch can be re-allocated to commercial fisheries.
    • A rebuilding plan to rebuild the stock to the target population level is in place with a target date of 2029.

Harvest

  • In 2023, commercial landings of bluefish totaled 3.2 million pounds and were valued at $2.1 million, according to the NOAA Fisheries commercial fishing landings database.
  • In 2023, recreational anglers landed 11.4 million pounds of bluefish, according to the NOAA Fisheries recreational fishing landings database.
  • Florida, North Carolina, and New Jersey account for the largest percentage of the recreational bluefish harvest.
  • Peak recreational harvest occurs from May through October with over 70 percent of the catch in July and August.
  • Gear types, habitat impacts, and bycatch:
    • Recreational fishermen use hook-and-line gear that has minimal impacts on habitat.
    • Commercial fishermen use a variety of gears including trawls, gillnets, haul seines, and pound nets, and the impacts vary by gear type.
    • Gillnets can occasionally entangle marine mammals. However, the bluefish fishery uses nets with small mesh and sinking gillnets to reduce bycatch.
  • A rebuilding plan to rebuild the stock to the target population level is in place with a target date of 2029.

Scientific Classification

Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Class Actinopterygii
Order Perciformes
Family Pomatomidae
Genus Pomatomus
Species saltatrix

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/20/2025


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Recreational Fishing Regulations

Possession and Size Requirements

The federal possession limit (bag limit) in the recreational bluefish fishery is dependent on the type of trip/vessel:

Private recreational vessels - 3 fish per person, per day

For-Hire Vessels (Party/Charter-Permitted Vessels) - 5 fish per person, per day

There is no federal size limit requirement. Please also check with your local state agency for any state or regional measures and requirements that may also apply.

2025 Atlantic Bluefish Recreational Specifications (January 1-December 31, 2025)

Overfishing Limit (OFL)27.49 million lb
Acceptable Biological Catch (ABC)21.83 million lb
Annual Catch Limit (ACL)21.83 million lb
Recreational ACL 18.78 million lb
Recreational Accountability Measures0
Recreational Discards3.08 million lb
Recreational Total Allowable Landings (TAL) (pre-transfer)15.70 million lb
Sector Quota TransferN/A
Recreational Harvest Limit (RHL)15.70 million lb

 

Reporting A Recreational Catch

Catch Reporting and Vessel Trip Reports (VTR)

For all charter/party permit holders, VTRs must be maintained on board the vessel and submitted to NOAA Fisheries for all fishing trips, regardless of species retained. Instructions for completing the VTR can be found online on our reporting page.

eVTRs

Charter/Party vessel permit owners and operators with a federal charter/party (for-hire) permit to fish for bluefish (and other Mid-Atlantic species) must submit the required VTR by electronic means through a software application approved by NOAA Fisheries. These electronic log VTRs must be submitted within 48 hours after entering port at the conclusion of a trip. More information of the eVTR requirements and help with electronic reporting can be found online on our reporting page.

Other Reporting Information

The recreational (charter/party) bluefish fishery does not have any Interactive Voice Response (IVR), Vessel Monitoring System (VMS), or specific observer requirements. However, all federally permitted vessels are obligated to carry an observer if randomly selected by the National Observer Program.

Reporting is not required for the private recreational fishery, but the Marine Recreational Information Program (MRIP) is a system of voluntary coordinated data collection programs designed to estimate recreational catch and effort.

More Information

  • e-CFR for Bluefish Fishery Regulations
  • Greater Atlantic Recreational Fishing

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/20/2025

Commercial Fishing Regulations

Possession and Size Requirements

There are no federal possession or fish size limit requirements in the commercial bluefish fishery. Please check with your state agency for any state or regional measures and requirements that may apply.

2025 Atlantic Bluefish Commercial Specifications (January 1–December 31, 2025)

Overfishing Limit (OFL)27.49 million lb
Acceptable Biological Catch (ABC)21.83 million lb
Annual Catch Limit (ACL)21.83 million lb
Commercial ACL 3.06 million lb
Commercial Total Allowable Landings (TAL) (pre-transfer)3.03 million lb
Sector Quota TransferN/A
Commercial Quota3.03 million lb

 

2025 Bluefish State-by-State Commercial Quota Allocations

StatePercent ShareQuota (pounds)
Maine0.3510,582
New Hampshire0.309,123
Massachusetts8.66262,663
Rhode Island8.41255,061
Connecticut1.1635,309
New York15.74477,518
New Jersey14.26432,630
Delaware1.0932,990
Maryland2.3872,265
Virginia8.44256,125
North Carolina32.04972,012
South Carolina0.072,250
Georgia0.061,897
Florida7.04213,625
Total1003,033,561

*Quota may be transferred between states through in-season actions. These are the initial allocations and any changes may not be reflected in this table. Please check the quota monitoring page for updates.

Reporting A Commercial Catch

Catch Reporting and Vessel Trip Reports (VTR)

Owners/operators of vessels holding a federal bluefish permit must submit VTRs electronically. For more information about trip reporting, and to see a list of approved eVTR software applications, please visit the Greater Atlantic Region vessel trip reporting page.

Other Reporting Information

The commercial bluefish fishery does not have any Interactive Voice Response (IVR), Vessel Monitoring System (VMS), or specific observer requirements. However, all federally permitted vessels are obligated to carry an observer if randomly selected by the National Observer Program.

Commercial Gear Information

There are no federal gear requirements in the commercial bluefish fishery. Please check with your state agency for any state or regional measures and requirements that may apply.

More Information

  • e-CFR for Bluefish Fishery Regulations
  • Fishing Industry Home Page

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/20/2025

Seafood Facts

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Is Bluefish Sustainable?

U.S. wild-caught bluefish is a smart seafood choice because it is sustainably managed and responsibly harvested under U.S. regulations.

Environmental Impact Icon

Availability

Fresh year-round, but varies by area. Not available frozen. Buy in season, and plan to cook within a day of purchase.

Feeds Icon

Source

U.S. wild-caught from Massachusetts to Florida.

Farming Methods Icon

Taste

Rich, full flavor. The larger the fish, the more pronounced the taste. A strong-flavored, dark strip of meat on the fillet may be removed before cooking.

Human Health Icon

Texture

Coarse, moist meat with edible skin.

Human Health Icon

Color

The meat of raw bluefish is light putty to blue-gray in color with a brownish tinge. It becomes lighter when cooked.

Human Health Icon

Health Benefits

Bluefish are a good source of selenium, niacin, vitamin B12, magnesium, and potassium. As apex predators, bluefish can accumulate comparatively high levels of mercury and PCB contaminants. Limited consumption has been recommended in some states.

Nutrition Facts

Servings: 1; Serving Weight: 100 g; Calories: 124; Protein: 20.04 g; Total Fat: 4.24 g; Total Saturated Fatty Acids: 0.915 g; Carbohydrate: 0 g; Total Sugars: 0 g; Total Dietary Fiber: 0 g; Cholesterol: 59 mg; Selenium: 36.5 mcg; Sodium: 60 mcg

More Information

  • Sustainable Seafood
  • Sign Up for "Taste of the Tides" Newsletter

Bluefish Recipes

Need some cooking inspiration to incorporate bluefish into your rotation? Browse these recipes for baked bluefish, fresh bluefish corn chowder, and more!

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A blue and black speckled ceramic plate with a baked fish filet. The filet is topped with red, orange, and white cooked vegetables and seasoned with green herbs. Also on the plate is a lemon wedge.

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/20/2025


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Management Overview

Atlantic Bluefish is managed in state and federal waters by the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council, in conjunction with the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission. NOAA Fisheries serves as the implementing body for rules and regulations within the fishery.

The bluefish fishery is managed using a bag limit for the recreational fishery and an annual quota allocated to the states for the commercial fishery.

The fishing year runs from January 1 through December 31, and there are no specified management areas for the fishery; with NOAA Fisheries jurisdiction covering bluefish from Maine to Florida.

Control Date for the Bluefish Fishery: May 29, 1997


Management Plans

Specifications/Quotas

The Atlantic Bluefish Fishery Management Plan (FMP) requires the specification of catch and harvest limits for up to three years at a time. If specifications are not in place at the start of the fishing year, the fishery functions without a quota until the final specifications of the current year are finalized.

Sector Quota Transfer

The Bluefish FMP specifies that a transfer of quota is permitted between the commercial and recreational fisheries in either direction; based on a review and comparison of expected landings for each sector and the recreational harvest limit and commercial quota. The amount of quota transferred between fishery sectors may not exceed 10-percent of the Acceptable Biological Catch for that fishing year. No transfer may occur when the bluefish stock is overfished or subject to overfishing.

Inseason Actions

If a state's commercial bluefish quota is fully harvested, then that state’s bluefish fishery will be closed. Additionally, states can transfer commercial quota between other states to avoid exceeding state quotas or to address other contingencies in the fishery.

Accountability Measures (AM)

Commercial AMs

Any overages of the commercial quota in any state will be deducted from that state’s annual quota for the following year, irrespective of whether the fishery-level ACL is exceeded. If a state has increased or reduced quota through the transfer process, then any overage will be measured against that state’s final adjusted quota.

Recreational AMs

If the fishery-level ACL is exceeded, the total catch exceeds the ABC, or the total catch exceeds the OFL, and landings from the recreational fishery are determined to be the sole cause of the overage (and no sector transfer of allowable landings has occurred; see below), then a system of accountability measures will be used that are based on a combination of the amount of overage and the condition of the stock. In other words, the status of the stock determines what type of management response would be implemented, including adjustment of management measures, scaled payback of overage, or pound-for-pound overage payback. These adjustments will be made in the following fishing year, or as soon as possible, as a single year adjustment.

In the case of an overage in a year with a sector transfer...

If the fishery-level ACL is exceeded and landings from the recreational fishery and/or the commercial fishery are determined to have caused the overage, and a transfer between the commercial and recreational sector has occurred for the fishing year, then the amount transferred between the recreational and commercial sectors may be reduced by the ACL overage amount (pound-for-pound repayment) in a subsequent, single fishing year if the Bluefish Monitoring Committee determines that the ACL overage was the result of too liberal a landings transfer between the two sectors. If the Bluefish Monitoring Committee determines that the ACL overage was not the result of the landings transfer, the recreational system of accountability measures, described above, will be implemented.


Regulatory History

  • 2023 - Framework 6 established a new process for setting recreational bag, size, and season limits and modified the recreational accountability measures for summer flounder, scup, black sea bass, and bluefish.
  • 2021 – Amendment 7 implemented a comprehensive set of measures to update the fishery management plan by by responding to changes in stock health and distribution. This action revised the goals and objectives of the fishery management plan, reallocated quota between the commercial and recreational fisheries, reallocated commercial quota among the states, implemented a 7-year rebuilding plan to rebuild the overfished stock by 2029, revised the sector quota transfer measures, and revised how management uncertainty is applied during the specifications process.
  • 2018 – Framework 3 established a process for setting constant multi-year acceptable biological catch (ABC) limits. This action clarifies that the Atlantic Bluefish FMPs will now automatically incorporate the best available scientific information in calculating ABCs (as all other Mid-Atlantic plans do) rather than requiring a separate management action to adopt them. This action also clarifies the process for setting ABCs for each of the four types of ABC control rules.
  • 2017 – Framework 2 implemented a requirement for vessels that hold party/charter permits to submit vessel trip reports electronically (eVTRs) while on a trip carrying passengers for hire.
  • 2017 – Amendment 6 implemented management measures to prevent the development of new, and the expansion of existing, commercial fisheries on certain forage species in the Mid-Atlantic.
  • 2015 – Amendment 5 implemented Standardized Bycatch Reporting Methodology.
  • 2014 – Amendment 4 changed recreational accountability measures.
  • 2011 – Amendment 3 established annual catch limits and accountability measures.
  • 2009 – Atlantic bluefish declared rebuilt.
  • 2007 – Amendment 2 standardized bycatch reporting methodology.
  • 2001 – Framework 1 created a quota set-aside for the purpose of conducting scientific research.
  • 2000 – Managers implement Amendment 1 to the management plan which included a 9-year rebuilding plan, requiring the bluefish stock to be rebuilt by December 31, 2009; also reduced the commercial share to 17 percent of the total catch.
  • 1989-1990 – Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council and the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission complete current Bluefish Fishery Management Plan; Council adopts plan in 1989, NOAA Fisheries adopts plan in 1990; management measures include a permit to catch and sell bluefish and limits on the amount of bluefish an angler or vessel can possess; allocates no more than 20 percent of total catch to commercial fishery.
  • 1984 – Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council completes Bluefish Fishery Management Plan, in cooperation with NOAA Fisheries, the New England and South Atlantic Fishery Management Councils, and the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission; Secretary of Commerce rejects plan, but concern for the resource remains.
  • 1980s – Bluefish is one of top three recreational species along the Atlantic coast; from 1979 to 1987, more bluefish (by weight) were landed by anglers coastwide than any other fish.
  • Late 1970s – Potential markets for bluefish in Africa and South America stimulate tuna purse seiners to consider harvesting bluefish; this interest prompts concerned recreational anglers to petition Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council to develop a management plan for bluefish.

More Information

  • Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council Bluefish Page
  • Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission Bluefish Page
  • e-CFR for Bluefish Fishery Regulations
  • Atlantic Bluefish Permits
  • Bluefish Fishery Management Plan
  • Quota Monitoring
  • Fishing Industry Home Page

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/20/2025

Science Overview

NOAA Fisheries conducts various research activities on the biology, behavior, and population health of bluefish. The results of this research are used to inform management decisions for this species.

For detailed information about stock status, management, assessments, and resource trends, you can search for bluefish, and any other species of interest, using NOAA’s StockSMART web tool.

Addressing Bluefish Data and Research Needs

The bluefish management plan allows managers to set aside a small percentage of the annual catch limit for research. Proceeds from the sale of this set-aside catch are used to fund research on the fishery.

In 2012, managers established a coast-wide sampling program designed to improve the quantity and quality of information used in bluefish stock assessments. The program resulted in a significant increase in the amount of age-length keys and catch-at-age data that was used in future benchmark assessments.

Several key scientific gaps still need to be addressed to better inform bluefish management. For example, more research is needed on how much bluefish is caught and discarded in the commercial fisheries for bluefish and other species, the resulting impacts, and general population trends. There is also uncertainty in the methods used by scientists to monitor bluefish abundance and in estimating recreational catch along the Atlantic coast.

Research & Data

Ecosystem and Socioeconomic Profile Development and Reports

Status of Ecosystem and Socioeconomic Profiles for Northeast fishery stock assessments.
New England/Mid-Atlantic

Fisheries Ecology in the Northeast

We study the relationship between marine life and their environment to support sustainable wild and farmed fisheries on the Northeast shelf, creating opportunities and benefits for the economy and ecosystem.
New England/Mid-Atlantic
View More

More Information

  • Bluefish Stock Assessment
  • Bluefish Management
  • Research Track Working Group: 2022 Improving Assessments for Bluefish

Recent Science Blogs

Survey

60 Species of Fish to Celebrate 60 Years of the Bottom Trawl Survey

Survey
Two scientists stand in a lab taking photos of fish in a tank. There is a camera and lighting system set up. One scientist is adjusting the lighting on one side of the lab while the other scientist is on the other side of the lab in front of a laptop. Both scientists are looking at the laptop screen. National Systematics Lab team photographing fish during the fall Bottom Trawl Survey. Fish are placed in a phototank and images are taken using a camera controlled from a laptop. Credit: NOAA Fisheries/Sabrina Dahl
Research

Sampling Is In Full Swing On The Spring 2018 Bottom Trawl Survey

Research
Sunrise from the survey boat..
View More

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/20/2025

Research

Ecosystem and Socioeconomic Profile Development and Reports

Status of Ecosystem and Socioeconomic Profiles for Northeast fishery stock assessments.

New England/Mid-Atlantic

Fisheries Ecology in the Northeast

We study the relationship between marine life and their environment to support sustainable wild and farmed fisheries on the Northeast shelf, creating opportunities and benefits for the economy and ecosystem.

New England/Mid-Atlantic
More Research

Outreach & Education

Outreach Materials

Fisheries of the Northeast

More than 100 species, including finfish, shellfish, urchins, and seaweeds, are landed in the…

New England/Mid-Atlantic
Outreach Materials

South Atlantic Saltwater Recreational Fisheries Snapshot

South Atlantic saltwater recreational fisheries fact sheets highlighting recent regional trends,…

Southeast
More Outreach Materials
More Educational Materials

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/20/2025

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