| Search or situation | Best for | Next action |
|---|---|---|
| Fish NB 2026, fishing NB 2026, Fish NB 2026 2027, free fishing weekend, February or June licence waiver | The main question is whether the listed Fish NB Days waive the ordinary angling licence and guide requirement. | Stay on this Fish NB Days guide. |
| New Brunswick licence price, Outdoors Card, angling versus salmon, 3-day, or 7-day visitor product | The trip is outside the free window or needs the normal licence class. | Open the New Brunswick price and season guide. |
| Non-resident salmon trip, guide-required water, Crown Reserve, private water, or special access rule | The free date is not enough to settle access or salmon planning. | Check guide-required waters. |
| Atlantic salmon, tidal water, inland-tidal boundary, or no provincial licence in tidal water | The water or species changes the licence system. | Open the salmon and tidal rules guide. |
| Compare New Brunswick with other free fishing dates | The province is not final yet or you want a national date view. | Open the Canada free fishing guide or free fishing finder. |
| Season date, open water, closed water, or regulation question | A waiver does not reopen water or remove catch and gear rules. | Open the season calendar or regulations hub. |
Fish NB Days 2026 Dates and Licence Waiver
Fish NB 2026, fishing NB 2026, and Fish NB 2026 2027 searches usually point to the same practical question: when New Brunswick waives the angling licence and what rules still apply. For Fish NB Days 2026, the province lists February 14 to 16, 2026 and June 6 to 7, 2026.
During Fish NB Days, residents and non-residents may fish without an angling licence. New Brunswick also says non-residents may fish regular guide-required waters without a guide on those dates.
The useful part is the licence waiver. The part to handle carefully is everything else: catch limits, closures, winter-only water rules, Crown Reserve waters, Crown Angling Leases, private waters, and other restrictions still apply.
Choose The Fish NB Question First
Short Fish NB searches can mean the free-date waiver, the normal licence setup, salmon access, or a season/regulation check. Split those before you rely on the free day.
What the February and June Dates Mean
The February Fish NB Days fall on the Family Day long weekend. That makes them more relevant for winter fishing than for a normal open-water trip.
The June Fish NB Days fall on the first full weekend of June. That weekend is usually the more useful option for a first warm-weather trip, a family outing, or a visitor who wants to try inland fishing before buying a longer licence.
The two periods are not interchangeable. In winter, Fish NB Days include only waters that are open for winter fishing. In June, the local season, waterbody, species, and access rules still decide where you can actually fish.
What You Do Not Need During Fish NB Days
On Fish NB Days, the basic angling licence is not required for residents or non-residents. That is why the dates are useful for beginners, families, and short visitors who are testing whether a longer New Brunswick fishing trip makes sense.
The waiver also matters for visitors looking at guide-required waters. New Brunswick’s guide-requirements page says Fish NB Days are one of the situations where residents and non-residents can fish without a licence or guide.
For a normal trip outside those dates, go back to the New Brunswick fishing licence page and choose the right angling or salmon licence before you fish.
What Still Applies on Fish NB Days
Fish NB Days are not a blanket rule holiday. The province keeps catch limits, closures, access limits, and other restrictions in place.
Treat these items as the minimum last check before you go: whether the water is open, which species are open, what you can keep, whether the water is Crown Reserve or leased, whether winter rules apply, and whether your planned access crosses private land.
If the trip involves Atlantic salmon, guide-required waters, or tidal water, use the more specific New Brunswick guides after this page. The free date answers the licence question for the listed period; it does not settle every access or species rule.
If your question is broader than Fish NB Days and really about open dates, use the 2026 season calendar or the Canada seasons and regulations hub before you lock in the trip.
Simple Planning Flow for Fish NB Days
| Step | Question | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Are your dates February 14-16 or June 6-7, 2026? | Those are the listed Fish NB Days for 2026. |
| 2 | Is the water open for that season? | A free licence day does not reopen closed water. |
| 3 | Is the water Crown Reserve, leased, private, or otherwise restricted? | Access restrictions still apply. |
| 4 | Are you targeting salmon or fishing tidal water? | Those trips need a more specific rule path. |
| 5 | Do you need a licence after the free period? | Normal New Brunswick licence rules return after Fish NB Days end. |
This sequence keeps the page useful without making the free day sound broader than it is. The free period is a good opening, not the final rule for every trip.
Where To Go Next
If you only need the broad New Brunswick licence setup, use the New Brunswick fishing licence page. That page covers the wider licence, price, Outdoors Card, and province overview.
If you are a non-resident planning salmon water, use the guide-required waters guide. If the trip crosses inland and tidal water, use the salmon and tidal rules guide.
If you are still comparing free fishing dates across provinces, use the Canada free fishing days guide or the 2026 season calendar.