Body Type: The largest of the char family — a long, heavy-bodied fish with a deeply forked tail (more forked than any other trout). The body is gray-green to steel gray with light yellow or cream spots covering the entire body, back, and head. No red or orange spots present. The lower fins often show faint orange tinting on large fish.
Preferred Water Temperature: 45°F–55°F. They seek the coldest available water year-round, often holding at 80–200 feet depth in summer. Come shallow in spring (April–June) and fall (September–November) when surface temperatures drop to their preferred range.
Habitat: Deep, cold, oxygen-rich lakes — primarily the Great Lakes, large glacial lakes of the northern Rocky Mountains, and remote Canadian shield lakes. In spring and fall they inhabit rocky shallows and reefs. In summer they suspend over deep water near the thermocline, often directly above the deepest basins.
Best Lures: Large jigging spoons (Swedish Pimple, Hopkins) in chrome or gold are the top producer for deep fish — drop to bottom and jig aggressively. Large tube jigs (4–5 inch) in white or chartreuse work near bottom. Trolling with large silver or chrome spoons and stickbaits covers water effectively at speed. Jigging Rapala in large sizes (size 7–9) produce consistent action at depth. Blade baits like the Swedish Pimple excel through the ice and in winter.
Best Baits: Large live sucker minnows (6–10 inches) are the premier trophy bait, fished near bottom on a quick-strike rig. Frozen smelt are outstanding in Great Lakes fisheries. Lake chubs and large shiners work well. Cut cisco and whitefish produce on deep bottom rigs. Dead smelt on a tip-up is the classic ice fishing setup.
Size & Weight: Typical sport catch is 3–10 lbs. Trophy fish regularly reach 20–35 lbs. World record: 102 lbs from the Northwest Territories, Canada. Great Lakes fish run 10–30 lbs commonly.
Top 5 Places to Catch Mackinaw Trout:
1. Great Bear Lake, Northwest Territories — world-class remote trophy fishing
2. Lake Superior — massive cold-water lake with large fish
3. Lake Tahoe, California/Nevada — deep, clear Western fishery to 30+ lbs
4. Flathead Lake, Montana — outstanding accessible Western destination
5. Flaming Gorge Reservoir, Utah/Wyoming — excellent numbers and trophy potential
The largest of the char family — a long, heavy-bodied fish with a deeply forked tail (more forked than any other trout). The body is gray-green to steel gray with light yellow or cream spots covering the entire body, back, and head. No red or orange spots present. The lower fins often show faint orange tinting on large fish.
Habitat
4 of 10
Deep, cold, oxygen-rich lakes — primarily the Great Lakes, large glacial lakes of the northern Rocky Mountains, and remote Canadian shield lakes. In spring and fall they inhabit rocky shallows and reefs. In summer they suspend over deep water near the thermocline, often directly above the deepest basins.
Water Conditions
5 of 10
45°F–55°F. They seek the coldest available water year-round, often holding at 80–200 feet depth in summer. Come shallow in spring (April–June) and fall (September–November) when surface temperatures drop to their preferred range.
Tackle & Bait
6 of 10
Best Lures:
Large jigging spoons (Swedish Pimple, Hopkins) in chrome or gold are the top producer for deep fish — drop to bottom and jig aggressively. Large tube jigs (4–5 inch) in white or chartreuse work near bottom. Trolling with large silver or chrome spoons and stickbaits covers water effectively at speed. Jigging Rapala in large sizes (size 7–9) produce consistent action at depth. Blade baits like the Swedish Pimple excel through the ice and in winter.
Best Baits:
Large live sucker minnows (6–10 inches) are the premier trophy bait, fished near bottom on a quick-strike rig. Frozen smelt are outstanding in Great Lakes fisheries. Lake chubs and large shiners work well. Cut cisco and whitefish produce on deep bottom rigs. Dead smelt on a tip-up is the classic ice fishing setup.
Top Fishing Locations
7 of 10
Filter by State:
60 fishing locations where you can catch Mackinaw Trout
1. Great Bear Lake, Northwest Territories — world-class remote trophy fishing
2. Lake Superior — massive cold-water lake with large fish
3. Lake Tahoe, California/Nevada — deep, clear Western fishery to 30+ lbs
4. Flathead Lake, Montana — outstanding accessible Western destination
5. Flaming Gorge Reservoir, Utah/Wyoming — excellent numbers and trophy potential
Size & Sport
8 of 10
Typical sport catch is 3–10 lbs. Trophy fish regularly reach 20–35 lbs. World record: 102 lbs from the Northwest Territories, Canada. Great Lakes fish run 10–30 lbs commonly.
Whoppers — Biggest Catches
9 of 10
🥇
25.00 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
🥈
22.00 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
🥉
20.00 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#4
20.00 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#5
18.70 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#6
18.50 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#7
18.00 lbs
Lake TahoeMay 22, 2025
#8
18.00 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#9
18.00 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#10
17.00 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#11
17.00 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#12
17.00 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#13
17.00 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#14
17.00 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#15
17.00 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#16
16.50 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#17
16.40 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#18
16.00 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CADec 30, 2025
#19
16.00 lbs
Lake TahoeMay 15, 2023
#20
15.70 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#21
15.60 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#22
15.20 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#23
15.00 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#24
15.00 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAMay 15, 2020
#25
15.00 lbs
Donner Lake, Truckee, CAJul 14, 2025
State & Agency Records
10 of 10
9 official records on file for Mackinaw Trout
🥇
57 lbs. 8 oz.
L: 49.0" · G: 32.5"
Lyle McClure
Priest Lake, Priest Lake, IdahoNov 14, 1971Freshwater AnglingIDFG
#2
53 lbs. 15 oz.
L: 44.1" · G: 34.9"
Chance Scott
Flaming Gorge Reservoir (UT & WY)Jan 1, 2020Freshwater AnglingUT DWR
#3
50 lbs. 0 oz.
L: 48.0" · G: 32.0"
Randy Calkins
Flaming Gorge Reservoir (UT & WY)Mar 11, 1995Freshwater AnglingWYGF
#4
50 lbs. 0 oz.
L: 45.0"
Doris Budge
Jackson Lake, Natrona County, WyomingDec 31, 1969Freshwater AnglingWYGF
#5
40 lbs. 8 oz.
Ken Erickson
Odell Lake, Crescent Lake, ORJan 1, 1984Freshwater AnglingODFW
#6
37 lbs. 6 oz.
L: 44.0"
Robert Aronsen
Lake TahoeJul 1, 1974Freshwater AnglingNDOW
#7
37 lbs. 6 oz.
Robert Aronsen South Lake Tahoe
Lake TahoeJun 21, 1974Freshwater AnglingCDFW
#8
35 lbs. 10 oz.
Phil Colyar
Lake Chelan, Chelan, WAFeb 4, 2013Freshwater AnglingWDFW
#9
31 lbs. 6 oz.
Paul Casias
Heron Lake, Los Ojos, New MexicoDec 31, 1969Freshwater AnglingNMGF