Roosterfish
The roosterfish is the iconic gamefish of the eastern Pacific surf and one of the most sought-after inshore trophies, famous for the towering "comb" of dorsal spines it raises when excited.
๐๏ธ Last reviewed: July 2026
Overview
The roosterfish is the iconic gamefish of the eastern Pacific surf and one of the most sought-after inshore trophies, famous for the towering "comb" of dorsal spines it raises when excited. Blistering runs and dramatic surface chases make hooking a big rooster a bucket-list thrill.
Identification
Roosterfish are silvery with two dark curved bands sweeping down the body and a spectacular set of seven long, thread-like dorsal spines that fold down or rise like a rooster's comb. Nothing else looks like them.
Range & Habitat
They range the eastern Pacific from Baja and mainland Mexico south to Peru, cruising sandy beaches, points and inshore reefs, often right in the surf.
Behavior & Diet
Roosterfish are fast inshore predators that chase mullet, sardines and other baitfish, often crashing bait in the wash and raising the comb as they hunt. Hooked fish make long, powerful runs.
Best Seasons
Best fishing is the warm months when bait is thick along the beaches, varying by region from spring through fall.
How to Catch Them
Live-baiting mullet and sardines from beach or boat, casting large poppers and swimbaits to cruising fish, and fly-fishing the surf; sight-casting to roosters in the wash is the classic method.
Tackle & Rigs
Medium-heavy inshore spinning or conventional gear, 30-50 lb line, fluorocarbon leaders, and live-bait or big-lure rigs for a hard-running fish.
Landing, Handling & Release
Roosterfish are almost universally released as a treasured sport fish; revive them well and keep handling brief.
Table Quality
Roosterfish are considered poor eating and are a catch-and-release sport fish, not a table target.
Common Mistakes
Fishing too light for their long runs and keeping a fish that is meant for release.
Regulations & Conservation
A prized release-only sport fish across most of its range; confirm local rules and outfitter practices. This is a reading guide, not legal advice.
FAQ
Why the comb? The long dorsal spines raise like a rooster's comb when the fish is excited.
Do people keep them? No - they are a treasured catch-and-release gamefish.