REVIEW · FORT LAUDERDALE
6 hour trip
Book on Viator →Operated by Good Hit Sportfishing · Bookable on Viator
Tuna stories start fast here. This 6-hour Fort Lauderdale fishing charter with Good Hit Sportfishing is all about getting you on the water at a tight group size and letting the crew work the day hard, with hands-on guidance from captains like Ransom and Adam. I like the way the captains actively coach you while they hunt fish, not just hand you a rod, and I also like the variety of tactics they use so the day stays moving.
One drawback to plan for: this trip needs good weather, and it’s geared to folks with a moderate fitness level for life on a working boat.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Fort Lauderdale fishing with a small-group feel (Good Hit Sportfishing)
- Meeting at 801 Seabreeze Blvd and timing that actually matters
- The 6-hour game plan: not just one method, but one moving day
- Technique days: why trolling, wrecks, and kite fishing pay off
- What you could catch: species highlights from real trips
- Captain spotlights: Ransom, Adam, Mike, Chad, Dylan, and Richard
- Price and value: $1,100 per group up to 6
- Weather, boat time, and the fitness reality check
- What to do to maximize your chances (and your fun)
- Should you book this 6-hour charter?
- FAQ
- How long is the Good Hit Sportfishing trip?
- Where do we meet for the tour?
- How much does it cost, and how many people can be in the group?
- What are the posted operating hours?
- What should I know about tickets?
- Is service provided for travelers with moderate physical fitness only?
- What happens if poor weather cancels the experience?
Key things to know before you go
- Up to 6 people for $1,100 per group means you’re not jammed into a mega-boat crowd.
- Six hours on the water lets the crew try different approaches when fishing is slow.
- Multiple techniques are part of the plan (trolling, wreck fishing, kite fishing in particular).
- Captains with different styles still share the same goal: put you on fish and teach you along the way.
- Success can happen even on tough days, because they keep searching instead of calling it early.
Fort Lauderdale fishing with a small-group feel (Good Hit Sportfishing)

If you want Fort Lauderdale fishing without the big-boat chaos, this is the kind of charter that fits. The price is set per group (up to 6 people), and that alone changes the vibe. With fewer people onboard, it’s easier to pay attention, learn what’s happening, and adjust quickly when the bite changes.
Good Hit Sportfishing runs a 6-hour outing, and that length matters. Too-short charters can feel like you spend half the time just finding your sea legs. Too-long ones can get tiring. Six hours is usually long enough for the captain to rotate methods and still give you time at the spots that actually produce.
The other thing I like is that the crew shows up focused. Multiple captains are described as working hard to get action, including changing locations and trying different fishing patterns until the day turns.
If you're still narrowing it down, here are other tours in Fort Lauderdale we've reviewed.
Meeting at 801 Seabreeze Blvd and timing that actually matters
Your meeting point is listed as 801 Seabreeze Blvd. The operation window shown runs from 12:00 PM to 6:00 PM, Monday through Sunday, during the posted dates (01/25/2026–02/13/2027). That afternoon start can be great if you’re already in Fort Lauderdale and don’t want to wake up super early on vacation.
What this means for your day:
- Plan on arriving early enough to check in, get settled, and be ready when the crew pulls you into the flow.
- Because it’s a boat outing, the schedule lives and dies by conditions. If the weather is off, expect the captain to shift plans or the operator to reschedule you.
You’ll also receive a confirmation at booking, and you’ll use a mobile ticket. If you’re the kind of traveler who likes cutting down printed stuff, that’s a plus.
The 6-hour game plan: not just one method, but one moving day

Even though your only listed address stop is the meeting point, the fishing portion of the day typically feels like a sequence of different hunting strategies. That’s where the 6-hour format earns its keep.
From the experience reports, you can expect the crew to use combinations that may include:
- Trolling to cover water and trigger hits from moving fish.
- Wreck fishing when structure helps concentrate game fish.
- Kite fishing especially when the conditions line up for surface action (and sailfish show up).
The big practical value here: when the bite slows down, you’re not stuck doing the same thing for the full day. One captain is specifically credited with rotating through trolling, wreck fishing, kite fishing, and other approaches to turn a tough day into a productive one.
And if you’re picky about how your charter is run, pay attention to how they adapt. One review notes that when other boats were reporting no hits and heading back, the captain kept working until fish appeared. That kind of persistence is what turns a charter into a real story.
Technique days: why trolling, wrecks, and kite fishing pay off

Fort Lauderdale waters can be hit-or-miss depending on time of day, currents, and what the fish decide to do. The reason these crews keep changing tactics is simple: fish don’t read your itinerary.
Here’s what each style tends to do for you:
Trolling
Trolling is a way to keep lines working while you move through likely areas. It’s especially helpful when you want consistent chances rather than waiting for a spot to cooperate.
Wreck fishing
Structure can matter a lot in saltwater. Wreck fishing is usually about putting your bait or lure where fish naturally look for cover. It also tends to create dramatic moments because the action can happen fast once you’re set.
Kite fishing
Kite fishing is where you might get the kind of visual, high-energy strikes that make people talk about a trip for years. One report specifically highlights sailfish kite fishing and the captain’s instruction during the process.
If you like learning as you fish, these method switches give you more to understand. You’re not just repeating one motion for hours—you’re watching how the day changes and how the captain responds.
What you could catch: species highlights from real trips

Let’s talk reality: no charter can promise a specific catch. But this operation has a track record of landing a wide range of game fish.
Here are some of the species and memorable catches mentioned:
- Mahi mahi, including a trip with 8 mahi mahi
- Sailfish, including a kite fishing day with multiple sailfish
- Wahoo
- Tuna, including a catch described as the biggest tuna the reviewer had ever seen and another report featuring black tuna
- Almaco jack and amber jack
- Several shark encounters, including reports of a 7-foot shark, a 9-foot hammerhead, and nurse shark action
- Kingfish and other mixed catches (one trip notes king fish plus tuna and sailfish)
If big predators are your goal, you’ll appreciate that the captains aren’t only chasing one thing. One report includes a family being guided through different approaches across the day, leading to a mix of species rather than a single-note outcome.
- Jungle Queen Riverboat 90-Minute Narrated Sightseeing Cruise in Fort Lauderdale
★ 4.5 · 1,753 reviews
Captain spotlights: Ransom, Adam, Mike, Chad, Dylan, and Richard
One of the strongest signals here is that the captains are described as teaching while they work. That matters because it changes you from spectator to participant.
A few names show up repeatedly:
- Captain Ransom is praised for being on time, greeting guests at the boat slip, and guiding guests to impressive tuna action—plus multiple sharks and lots of photos.
- Captain Adam is highlighted for getting a guest catching fish quickly, then into larger game like a 30+ pound almaco jack. He’s also credited with education that helps a 13-year-old play an active role.
- Captain Mike appears in multiple positive reports, including a strong day with mahi mahi, sailfish, and wahoo, and another day with hammerhead and nurse sharks. One note also calls out that he knew regulations and ran a by-the-book operation.
- Captain Chad and Dylan are praised together as a hard-working team focused on maximizing hooking opportunities, especially during sailfish kite fishing.
- Captain Richard is specifically called out for salvaging a tough fishing day by switching tactics until action came.
If you care about a guide’s style, this is a good thing to look for when booking: you want someone who’s both persistent and clear with instructions.
Price and value: $1,100 per group up to 6
The headline number is $1,100 per group for up to 6 people for about 6 hours. The value depends on how you book.
Here’s the practical math:
- If you fill all 6 spots, that’s roughly $183 per person for the charter time (before any extras not listed here).
- If you’re a smaller group, the per-person cost rises, but you still get the advantage of having the boat time focused on fewer people.
Where this feels like a “good deal” is when you treat it as group entertainment plus guided instruction. You’re paying for captain decisions, gear handling by the crew, time on the water, and the ability to switch tactics when the bite changes.
Also, the operator’s track record of hard work is part of why the price lands well. Reports repeatedly emphasize the crew’s effort on slow mornings and tough conditions, not just the result.
Weather, boat time, and the fitness reality check

This is fishing off Fort Lauderdale, so expect real open-water time. The operator notes a requirement of moderate physical fitness. That’s a fair way to describe what boat days can feel like—standing, shifting your balance, and moving around as the captain works the day.
You should also know the trip is weather dependent. If it’s canceled because of poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
In other words: if you’re booking as a one-day-only plan, try to keep scheduling flexibility. Fishing is fun, but it’s still the ocean.
One more small consideration: comfort. One review describes a boat as super lame. That doesn’t mean your experience will match it, but it’s a reminder that you’re booking for fishing and effort first. If you’re very picky about vessel comfort, consider asking what kind of boat you’ll be on before you pay.
What to do to maximize your chances (and your fun)
You can’t control where fish swim. You can control how you show up and what you pay attention to.
Here are practical ways to have a stronger day:
- Listen closely when they coach you. Several reports call out education during kite fishing and other techniques, and that coaching is what helps younger anglers participate.
- Stay flexible when the pace changes. Slow periods happen. The best outcomes in these reports come from crews who keep adjusting rather than giving up.
- Aim for a group mindset. This is a small-group charter. Take advantage of the chance to get your questions answered while action happens.
Also, if you’re coming for the experience, not just the fish, you’re in the right place. One report includes a fun, upbeat vibe with music and a focus on doing things by the rules, not cutting corners.
Should you book this 6-hour charter?
Book it if:
- You want a guided fishing day with real instruction, not a silent, seat-warming experience.
- You’re traveling with a group (up to 6) and want better odds of personal attention.
- You’re okay with the ocean being unpredictable and you’d rather have a crew that keeps working when the day is tough.
Consider a different option if:
- You need a guaranteed catch, any catch. No charter can promise that.
- You’re sensitive to boat conditions and struggle with moderate physical activity.
- Your schedule is fixed with no room for weather-related changes.
If you want the kind of day where the captain switches tactics, keeps pushing for action, and teaches you what matters, this is a strong pick for Fort Lauderdale.
FAQ
How long is the Good Hit Sportfishing trip?
The trip is listed as about 6 hours.
Where do we meet for the tour?
The meeting point is 801 Seabreeze Blvd in Fort Lauderdale.
How much does it cost, and how many people can be in the group?
It costs $1,100.00 per group and the group size is up to 6 people.
What are the posted operating hours?
During 01/25/2026 to 02/13/2027, the listed opening hours are Monday to Sunday, 12:00 PM to 6:00 PM.
What should I know about tickets?
You’ll use a mobile ticket.
Is service provided for travelers with moderate physical fitness only?
The listing says travelers should have a moderate physical fitness level.
What happens if poor weather cancels the experience?
The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
More Tour Reviews in Fort Lauderdale
- Jungle Queen Riverboat 90-Minute Narrated Sightseeing Cruise in Fort Lauderdale
★ 4.5 · 1,753 reviews






















