Fallfish
The fallfish is the largest native minnow in eastern North America, a silvery, hard-hitting stream fish that surprises anglers with its size and fight.
๐๏ธ Last reviewed: July 2026
Overview
The fallfish is the largest native minnow in eastern North America, a silvery, hard-hitting stream fish that surprises anglers with its size and fight. Often caught by trout fishers, it is a fun, accessible light-tackle and fly-rod target in clean flowing water.
Identification
Fallfish are streamlined and silvery with large scales that give a chain-mail look, a big mouth for a minnow, and can reach well over a foot. Adults are far larger than most minnows, resembling a small chub.
Range & Habitat
They live in the clear streams, rivers and lakes of the northeastern US and eastern Canada, holding in pools and runs of cool flowing water.
Behavior & Diet
Fallfish feed on insects, small fish and invertebrates in current, rising freely to surface bugs and striking small lures. Males build large gravel spawning mounds in spring.
Best Seasons
Best fishing is spring through fall in flowing water, with excellent dry-fly and light-lure action in warm weather.
How to Catch Them
Small spinners, spoons, flies and bait drifted and worked through pools and runs; they hit readily on light gear meant for trout.
Tackle & Rigs
Ultralight spinning or fly gear, 2-6 lb line, small lures and flies.
Landing, Handling & Release
Easy to land and hardy; most are released, though larger ones fight surprisingly well.
Table Quality
Fallfish are edible but bony and soft-fleshed, so most anglers release them for the sport.
Common Mistakes
Dismissing them as "just a chub" and missing a genuinely fun light-tackle fish.
Regulations & Conservation
Generally unregulated or panfish-managed; confirm current state rules before keeping fish. We do not give legal advice.
FAQ
Is it really a minnow? Yes - the largest native minnow in the East, reaching over a foot.
Good sport? Surprisingly fun on ultralight gear and flies.