Artificial Lure reporting in from Lake of the Ozarks, and folks, it’s a classic late fall bite out here this Tuesday, November 18th, 2025. The air’s crisp: temps started in the low 40s this morning and we’re pushing toward the mid-50s by afternoon, with mostly clear skies and mild winds—perfect conditions for bass and crappie to move up and feed. Sunrise hit at 6:53 a.m., and sunset’s coming at 4:53 p.m., so if you’re thinking of a dock-light bite, better time it right.
Now, Lake of the Ozarks doesn’t do the ocean thing, so forget tidal cycles—but water levels are stable, and clarity’s moderate thanks to a steady November without heavy rains, according to Missouri Department of Conservation and this week’s angler talk around Osage Beach.
Bass fishing’s been hot—especially for locals running brush piles and rocky points with umbrella rigs. Major League Fishing’s latest tournament saw heavy bags coming from YUM YUMbrella Flash Mob Jrs, rigged with anywhere from 3.25 to 3.8-inch swimbaits like the Keitech Swing Impact FAT or Strike King Rage Swimmer. Color matters right now: pro blue, light hitch, and a dab of chartreuse on the center bait have all been putting fish in the boat. Folks working jerkbaits like the Megabass Vision 110 in Kameyama ghost pearl and Table Rock SP are also reporting some big bites near deeper docks and brush.
Local guides and YouTube regulars are still raving about custom square bill crankbaits—especially Those Old Guy Custom Lure models, in shad and bluegill tones. Last Tuesday, anglers were “crushing them” along the chunky rock banks leading toward Gravois Arm and the Niangua River, with a few bonus bigs showing on finesse jigs tipped with a green pumpkin craw.
Crappie are steady in the brush at 18 to 25 feet, but look for action between 10 and 15 feet if the sun’s out and those dock pillars warm up. Minnows and small plastics—think chartreuse or white Bobby Garland Baby Shad—are doing damage. Reports around Little Niangua say some slabs coming over the rails in the early morning.
Best baits right now:
- **Umbrella rigs** with 3-4” swimbaits (Keitech, Rage Swimmer, Speed Shad)
- **Megabass Vision 110 jerkbaits** (French pearl, Missouri shad)
- **Square bill crankbaits** (shad/bluegill colors)
- **Weighted finesse jigs** with a craw trailer (green pumpkin candy, cold water color)
- **Live minnows** and **Bobby Garland plastics** for crappie
Recent catches have included bass up to 5 pounds, with 18–22 lb tournament bags not uncommon, especially around the Gravois and lower Osage arms. Crappie are running chunky, with many keepers over 12 inches taken from main lake brush. Catfish are slow but steady—cut shad just off the bluff holes is your best bet if you’re looking for a blue or channel cat.
Hot spots as of today:
- **Gravois Arm:** Big bass on umbrella rigs and jerkbaits near new brush piles and rocky ledges.
- **Niangua River (Little Niangua):** Early morning crappie slabs and bonus largemouth around the docks and deeper laydowns.
Pro tip: forward-facing sonar’s still the rage for finding suspended fish, but don’t sleep on traditional techniques. Plenty of locals are catching just as many working visible cover and keeping their sonar to a minimum.
Thanks for tuning in to your daily Lake of the Ozarks fishing report—be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss tomorrow’s scoop! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.
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