Orange Beach Marina is the deepest-water of the three big marinas, with a slip count that runs to the bigger sportfishers — the boats doing 24-hour and 36-hour trips offshore, the tournament fleet, the names you’ve seen on the cover of fishing magazines.
The charter offering here trends heavier-tackle and longer-trip. If you want a quick four-hour bay trip, Zeke’s or Sportsman is the easier match. If you want overnight, two-day, “go for everything that swims” — this is the dock.
Fisher’s at Orange Beach Marina is the restaurant on-site and one of the better sit-down meals at any marina in the country. Local seafood, real wine list, the deck overlooks the boats coming in. Walk-ins fine at the bar; dining room is reservation-friendly in season.
This is also where the Blue Marlin Grand Championship has historically based and where the big-fish weigh-in happens. If you’re around in mid-July and want to watch million-dollar billfish get craned onto the scale, the schedule is public.
What kind of fishing
The fleet here leans long-trip and heavy-tackle — 24- and 36-hour offshore runs, two-day “everything that swims” trips, and the tournament boats. If your group wants a quick four-hour bay outing with the kids, Zeke’s or Sportsman is the easier match. If you want to chase tuna and billfish well past the horizon, this is the dock to start at.
Fisher’s on-site
Fisher’s at Orange Beach Marina is one of the better sit-down meals at any marina in the country — local seafood, a real wine list, and a deck that overlooks the boats easing back in. The bar takes walk-ins; the dining room is reservation-friendly in season. Even if you’re not fishing, it’s worth the drive on its own.
Getting there
On Marina Road in the Pass-marina cluster in Orange Beach. The deepest water of the three big marinas, which is why the biggest boats live here — and why the tournament weigh-ins draw a crowd to the public scale.