Species guide

Giant Trevally in Australia — The Complete Fishing Guide

How to find + catch giant trevally in Australian waters. SST 22–30°C. Typical depth 0–50 m. Lures, baits, seasonality, and BiteCast layer mapping.

Giant Trevally is iconic in tropical Australian waters. Reef + atoll specialist. Premium tropical surface target. This guide covers the systems they hold in, seasonal timing (wet vs dry), and how to plan trips around tide + flood cycles.

At a glance

  • Scientific name: Caranx ignobilis
  • Also known as: GT
  • Segment: Tropical north
  • AU regions: QLD, NT, WA
  • Preferred SST: 2230 °C
  • Typical depth: 050 m
  • Top lures: Large stickbaits (Halco Slidog), Large poppers, Large soft plastics
  • Top baits: Live mullet, Live tuna

Where they live

Giant Trevally is a tropical Australian species. AU distribution: Queensland, Northern Territory, Western Australia. Typical depth 0–50 m. Wet vs dry season drives availability + behaviour.

Conditions to find them

Conditions to focus on:

SST

Filter for 2230 °C surface water on the BiteCast map. Sharp temperature fronts (1–2 °C breaks over 5–10 km) within that range are where bait pins up — your best-confidence zones. See SST layer explainer.

Best techniques + tackle

Lures

Hardbody minnows + suspending jerkbaits for barra + jacks. Vibes for threadfin + jewfish. Surface walkers + poppers for queenfish + GTs.

Baits

Top baits in AU: Live mullet, Live tuna. Live bait (mullet, prawn) is hard to beat for tropical species, particularly for big jewfish + barra in murky water.

Local knowledge

Reef + atoll specialist. Premium tropical surface target.

Seasonality by AU region

Tropical seasons are dry (May–Oct) vs wet (Nov–Apr). Giant Trevally availability changes dramatically across the cycle.

  • Queensland: Pre-wet (Sep–Nov) + run-off (Mar–May) are lure peaks. Wet season (Dec–Feb) is dangerous + flooded.
  • Northern Territory: Pre-wet (Sep–Nov) + run-off (Mar–May) are lure peaks. Wet season (Dec–Feb) is dangerous + flooded.
  • Western Australia: Pre-wet (Sep–Nov) + run-off (Mar–May) are lure peaks. Wet season (Dec–Feb) is dangerous + flooded.

Common mistakes

  • Not matching technique to conditions — generic approaches under-perform local-knowledge-driven ones.
  • Ignoring weather forecasts — water + safety conditions matter more than your trip plan.
  • Failing to verify current size + bag limits before keeping fish.

Compliance + regulations

Recreational size + bag limits vary by state and change regularly. Always verify current rules before keeping a fish. The giant trevally is regulated under each state's recreational fishing rules:

  • Queensland: verify on Queensland Fisheries recreational rules
  • Northern Territory: verify on NT Fisheries recreational rules
  • Western Australia: verify on WA Department of Primary Industries + Regional Development recreational rules

Marine park zoning may also apply — verify against current state rules. The above is descriptive reference, not legal advice.

Related

Frequently asked

What's the best SST band for giant trevally in Australia?

22–30 °C. The temperature itself isn't the find — sharp fronts within that range concentrate bait, and that's where to fish.

When is the best time of year to fish for giant trevally?

Tropical seasons are dry (May–Oct) vs wet (Nov–Apr). Giant Trevally availability changes dramatically across the cycle.

What's the best lure for giant trevally?

Top AU choices: Large stickbaits (Halco Slidog), Large poppers, Large soft plastics. Hardbody minnows + suspending jerkbaits for barra + jacks. Vibes for threadfin + jewfish. Surface walkers + poppers for queenfish + GTs.

What depth do giant trevally hold at?

Typical fishing depth 0–50 m. Use the BiteCast subsurface-temp layer at your fishing depth to confirm thermal structure.

What baits work for giant trevally?

Top AU baits: Live mullet, Live tuna. Live bait (mullet, prawn) is hard to beat for tropical species, particularly for big jewfish + barra in murky water.

Where in Australia is giant trevally commonly caught?

Queensland, Northern Territory, Western Australia.