NSW · REGULATIONS · JUNE 2026

Yellowfin Tuna NSW legal size & bag limits.

Yellowfin Tuna (also known as Yellowfin) in New South Wales. Minimum legal size, daily bag limit, possession limit — verified against the NSW DPIRD guide, 2026.

In New South Wales, Yellowfin Tuna has no minimum legal size and the daily bag limit is 5 (only 2 if the fish is 90 cm or longer) — combined limit across yellowfin, bigeye, longtail and albacore tuna, with a possession limit of 5. There is no closed season in NSW.

The numbers

Minimum size
No min
Daily bag
5 (only 2 if the fish is 90 cm or longer) — combined limit across yellowfin, bigeye, longtail and albacore tuna
Possession
5
Check the live Yellowfin Tuna bite forecast for your spot →

Closed season

No closed season

Why these rules exist

No minimum legal length. The bag is a combined limit across yellowfin, bigeye, longtail and albacore tuna: 5 fish if under 90 cm, but only 2 in total if 90 cm or longer. Southern bluefin tuna is separate (bag 1).

Source & verification

These limits are pulled from the NSW DPIRD Recreational Saltwater Fishing Guide. Last verified June 2026.

Always check the official guide before keeping any fish. Regulations change. New South Wales Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development updates its guide annually and occasionally mid-year. Fines for over-bag or undersized fish are significant.

You also need a current NSW Recreational Fishing Fee receipt to fish in NSW waters unless exempt. Buy online from Service NSW.

See related

Common questions

What is the minimum legal size for Yellowfin Tuna in NSW?
In New South Wales, there is no minimum legal size for Yellowfin Tuna (also known as Yellowfin) — you can keep fish of any size, up to the daily bag limit of 5 (only 2 if the fish is 90 cm or longer) — combined limit across yellowfin, bigeye, longtail and albacore tuna. Verified against the NSW DPIRD Recreational Saltwater Fishing Guide (June 2026).
What is the bag limit for Yellowfin Tuna in NSW?
In New South Wales, the daily bag limit for Yellowfin Tuna is 5 (only 2 if the fish is 90 cm or longer) — combined limit across yellowfin, bigeye, longtail and albacore tuna. Verified against the NSW DPIRD Recreational Saltwater Fishing Guide (June 2026).
Is there a closed season for Yellowfin Tuna in NSW?
No — there is no closed season for Yellowfin Tuna in New South Wales. You can fish for it year-round, subject to the size and bag limits. Verified against the NSW DPIRD guide (June 2026).
What is the possession limit for Yellowfin Tuna in NSW?
In New South Wales, the possession limit for Yellowfin Tuna is 5. Verified against the NSW DPIRD Recreational Saltwater Fishing Guide (June 2026).
Do you need a fishing licence to fish in New South Wales?
You also need a current NSW Recreational Fishing Fee receipt to fish in NSW waters unless exempt.
Written by
Olli-Mikael Vaittinen, founder of Fishare, holding a yellowfin tuna boatside
Olli-Mikael Vaittinen

Olli-Mikael Vaittinen has fished his whole life. Fifteen years of fly fishing, guiding seasons on Norway's Lakselva — his favourite Atlantic salmon river — and a blue marlin landed in Vava'u, Tonga. Founder of Fishare — the app that puts the data behind the decisions every angler makes on the water.

Instagram ↗X ↗Facebook ↗
Free · No card · 30 seconds

SAVE THIS SPOT. GET PUSHED WHEN THE BITE TURNS ON.

Fishare tracks your home spots and pings you when the next 3-hour peak window opens. Log catches and blanks to teach the model your local patterns. Free forever for everyone who joins now.

Open Fishare