There is a stretch of water just below Denison Dam where the Red River runs cold, clear, and absolutely electric with fish — and most people drive right past it without a second glance. That is their loss, and frankly, your gain. The tailwater fishery below Denison Dam on the Texas-Oklahoma border is one of the most productive, accessible, and genuinely thrilling fishing destinations in the entire region, and it deserves far more fanfare than it gets.
The setup is remarkable when you think about it. Water released from Lake Texoma through the dam stays consistently cool year-round, which creates ideal conditions for fish that you would not normally expect to find this far south. Striped bass, white bass, catfish, and even the occasional walleye all congregate in these fast-moving tailwaters, drawn by the oxygen-rich current and the abundant baitfish that tumble through the spillway. Serious anglers come from across Texas and Oklahoma knowing exactly what this place offers. First-timers tend to show up once out of curiosity and then come back every chance they get.
Access is straightforward. The fishing area sits just off U.S. Highway 75A on the Oklahoma side of the dam, roughly five miles north of downtown Denison. There are designated pull-offs and a well-worn path down to the rocky shoreline where bank fishermen set up their rods, lawn chairs, and coolers with the easy confidence of people who have done this many times before. If you have a small boat or kayak, you can launch from nearby access points and work the deeper channels where the big stripers tend to hold. Wading is popular too, though the current can be surprisingly strong depending on release schedules, so check with the Army Corps of Engineers before you step in.
The social atmosphere along the bank is half the appeal. On a Saturday morning you will find retired gentlemen who have been fishing this exact spot for thirty years, teenagers learning to cast for the first time, and everyone in between. People share tips freely, celebrate each other’s catches, and generally carry on with the kind of easy camaraderie that only seems to happen around moving water and a good bite.
Spring and early summer bring the most intense action, when white bass make their spawning runs upstream and the fishing borders on ridiculous — multiple fish per cast is not an exaggeration on the right morning. But honestly, this spot produces through the fall and well into winter. There is almost no bad time to show up with a rod in hand.
Bring a Texas or Oklahoma fishing license depending on which bank you plan to fish from, pack a cooler with water and snacks, and give yourself at least half a day. The Red River tailwaters below Denison Dam are the kind of place that reminds you why fishing became a passion in the first place.