How To Find Bass In The Fall

Finding Bass in the Fall in Northern Michigan

When fall settles in north of Cadillac, Michigan, the lakes transform quickly. Green weeds thin out, baitfish push deeper, and water clarity sharpens under cooler nights. For bass anglers, these changes mean opportunity. Northern Michigan is home to some of the best fall bass fishing in the country — with smallmouth that rank among the nation’s heaviest and largemouth that feed aggressively before winter.

But success doesn’t come from luck. Fall bass fishing requires knowing what bass are keying on, where they hold, how they move, and in what progression as temperatures drop.

This guide covers the fall migration of largemouth and smallmouth across key northern lakes: Charlevoix, Burt, Mullett, Walloon, Black, Big Platte, and Grand Traverse Bay.

The Fall Framework: Temperature and Progression

Northern Michigan’s fall season is condensed compared to more southern regions. Bass don’t gradually transition for months; they move in bursts as water temps hit specific ranges.

What Bass Are Keying On

Bass don’t just move randomly — their location is tied directly to forage availability and seasonal changes in cover.

Primary Forage in Northern Michigan Lakes

Why This Matters

What Holds Bass in the Fall

Bass don’t just roam open water without purpose. They’re tied to structural elements and cover that offer both ambush potential and food.

Key Holding Areas

  1. Weedlines: Healthy green weeds are magnets early fall.
  2. Rock Points and Humps: Transition zones that attract both crayfish and baitfish.
  3. Steep Breaks: Where shallow flats drop to deep basins, especially late fall.
  4. Timber and Docks: Residual cover for largemouth once weeds die off.
  5. Bait Schools: In lakes with smelt or shiners, bass will suspend below or alongside bait clouds.

Migration Progression: How Fast and How Far

Fall bass don’t vanish overnight — they move in stages. The pace depends on lake type, forage type, and temperature drop speed.

Largemouth Migration

Pace: In lakes with fast weed die-off, largemouth vacate shallow water quickly. In lakes with deeper, still-green cabbage or coontail, they may linger longer.

Smallmouth Migration

Pace: Smallmouth move faster than largemouth, often shifting 15–20 feet deeper in a week if cold fronts hit.

Lake-by-Lake Breakdown

Lake Charlevoix

Burt and Mullett Lakes

Walloon Lake

Black Lake

Big Platte Lake

Grand Traverse Bay

Tools and Presentations by Stage

Early Fall (65–70°F)

Mid Fall (55–65°F)

Late Fall (45–55°F)

Electronics and Fall Bass

Forward-facing sonar (Garmin LiveScope, Humminbird MEGA Live, Lowrance ActiveTarget) has changed fall fishing but doesn’t do the work for you. It helps track:

But:

Mapping and side imaging remain critical for finding humps, breaks, and weed edges before ever casting.

Final Thoughts

Fall in northern Michigan is a time of movement. Bass key on forage first, structure second, and temperature shifts drive their progression from shallow weeds and flats to deeper breaks and basins.

For anglers willing to follow the migration, lakes like Charlevoix, Burt, Mullett, Walloon, Black, Big Platte, and Grand Traverse Bay reward with some of the best smallmouth fishing in the country and largemouth that feed aggressively before winter.

The key is knowing what they’re eating, where they’re holding, and how fast they’re moving — then matching your tactics to that exact stage.