Learn more about Lake Murray below
April 15
Lake Murray water levels are down to 355.96 (full pool is 360.00) and water clarity is above average. Morning surface water temperatures are in the upper 60s.
The Lake Murray catfish spawn seems to be getting underway for blues and perhaps channel catfish, but Captain William Attaway with Slick Willie’s Guide Service (803-924-0857) reports that the flatheads are on a pre-spawn feeding binge.
April 3
Lake Murray water levels are at 356.25 (full pool is 360.00), and without much rain, clarity is clear in most areas. Morning surface water temperatures are rising, but are currently 65 degrees.
March 25
Lake Murray water levels are at 356.39 (full pool is 360.00) and without much rain clarity is normal or better. Morning surface water temperatures are in the high 50s.
March 19
Lake Murray water levels are at 356.38 (full pool is 360.00) and the lake is mostly still clear. Morning surface water temperatures are down to about 56 degrees.
March 11
Lake Murray water levels are at 356.13 (full pool is 360.00) and down the lake is extremely clear while there is a little stain up the lake and in some of the backs. Morning surface water temperatures are about 61-66 degrees.
Read more fishing reports from Lake Murray and other popular places at the AHQ Report!
Now owned and operated by Dominion Energy South Carolina, Lake Murray was built in the 1920s and 30s to provide hydroelectric power for Midlands residents. The approximately 48,000-acre lake with roughly 650 miles of shoreline lies just to the northwest of South Carolina’s capital city of Columbia in the four counties of Richland, Lexington, Saluda and Newberry. Today it is difficult to imagine the area without this important source of recreation for a region known as “Lake Murray Country.” The lake is oriented in an east-west direction, with the town of Lexington on the southern side of the lake and the town of Chapin on the northern side. To the west the lake is fed by the Big and Little Saluda Rivers, and on the east side of the lake is the Lake Murray Dam. Below the dam the Lower Saluda River is formed from the depths of Lake Murray and flows into the city of Columbia. The full-pool elevation of Lake Murray is 360 feet above sea level, and at the deepest points near the iconic intake towers the lake is approximately 190 feet deep at full pool.
Fishermen target Lake Murray’s populations of striped bass, largemouth bass, crappie, bream, catfish, and more. Unlike the other species, striped bass cannot reproduce naturally in Lake Murray and so they are entirely stocked (at fingerling size) by the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources. In terms of its forage base, Lake Murray has both gizzard and threadfin shad, but the baitfish that may have the most effect on large predator species are non-native blueback herring. Lake Murray is a popular fishing destination 365 days per year.
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