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  Buy Your License
RECIPROCAL FISHING ON LAKE CHAMPLAIN

Click here >> for a map of the Reciprocal Fishing Areas on Lake Champlain. (Map provided courtesy of the Lake Champlain Basin Program)

Anglers who hold a fishing license from either state will be able to fish in most of the big lake.

A person holding a New York fishing license may take fish from the Vermont portion of Lake Champlain as far east as a line starting on the north shore of the Poultney River where it empties into East Bay, proceeding generally northerly along the shore to the old Rutland Railroad fill on Colchester Point, then following the western side of the old Rutland Railroad fill to Allen Point on Grand Isle, continuing northerly following the western shore of Grand Isle to Tromp Point, then across The Gut to Bow and Arrow Point, then continuing generally northerly along the western shore of North Hero to Pelots Point, then across the Alburg passage to the Point of the Tongue, and then along the western shore of the Alburg peninsula to the United States Border with Canada. When this line crosses a tributary to Lake Champlain, the line shall proceed from the downstream most point of land on one side of the tributary to the downstream most point of land on the other side of the tributary.

An angler with a Vermont fishing license may fish Lake Champlain west of the Vermont/New York border to the New York shore, but may not fish in South Bay or New York tributaries to Lake Champlain.

Some fishing season dates, length limits and daily creel limits are different in New York and Vermont. When fishing in Vermont, anglers must observe Vermont laws. When fishing in New York, anglers must follow the laws that apply in New York. Be sure to obtain copies of state's fishing regulations if you are going to fish Lake Champlain.

With a surface area of over 435 square miles and a length of over 100 miles, Lake Champlain offers a tremendous amount of high quality fishing for Vermonters, New Yorkers and visitors to the region. In fact, the May issue of Field & Stream Magazine recently named Lake Champlain one of America?s Top 25 Hottest Fishing Spots.




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