Lac la Croix
A 29,597-acre lake near Ely in St. Louis County — best known for pike and trout. Last surveyed 2025.
Fish Species (10)
Northern Pike
Typical numbers · average-size fish
Gill-net survey · surveyed Aug 1984
Last surveyed 1984 — treat with caution
Catch rate: 0.78 per gill net · typical 0.3–1 for a lake like this
Size from the Jun 2025 survey
Survey History
| Date | Catch Rate | Avg Length | Avg Weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 23, 2025 | 5.57 | 22.1" | 2.45 lbs |
| Jun 23, 2025 | 0.48 | 22.1" | 4.04 lbs |
| Jul 7, 2014 | 3.71 | 21.9" | 2.52 lbs |
Lake Trout
Typical numbers · large fish
Gill-net survey · surveyed Aug 1984
Last surveyed 1984 — treat with caution
Catch rate: 2.0 per gill net · typical 0.8–4.3 for a lake like this
Size from the Jun 2025 survey
Survey History
| Date | Catch Rate | Avg Length | Avg Weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 23, 2025 | 1.90 | 20.4" | 4.75 lbs |
| Jun 23, 2025 | 0.12 | 20.4" | 0.04 lbs |
| Jul 7, 2014 | 0.50 | 19.7" | 0.55 lbs |
Smallmouth Bass
Large fish
Gill-net survey · surveyed Jun 2025
Catch rate: 0.43 per gill net
Survey History
| Date | Catch Rate | Avg Length | Avg Weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 23, 2025 | 0.43 | 14.5" | 1.83 lbs |
| Jul 7, 2014 | 0.36 | 11.8" | 1.48 lbs |
| Jul 12, 2004 | 0.21 | 11.2" | 0.98 lbs |
Walleye
Large fish
Gill-net survey · surveyed Jun 2025
Catch rate: 9.1 per gill net
Survey History
| Date | Catch Rate | Avg Length | Avg Weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 23, 2025 | 0.48 | 16.0" | 3.52 lbs |
| Jun 23, 2025 | 9.07 | 16.0" | 1.68 lbs |
| Jul 7, 2014 | 6.29 | 14.3" | 1.34 lbs |
Rock Bass
Small fish
Gill-net survey · surveyed Jun 2025
Catch rate: 1.6 per gill net
Survey History
| Date | Catch Rate | Avg Length | Avg Weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 23, 2025 | 1.57 | 5.2" | 0.16 lbs |
| Jul 7, 2014 | 1.14 | 5.4" | 0.17 lbs |
| Jul 12, 2004 | 0.42 | 5.3" | 0.16 lbs |
Black Crappie
Gill-net survey · surveyed Jul 1994
Last surveyed 1994 — treat with caution
Catch rate: 0.14 per gill net
Survey History
| Date | Catch Rate | Avg Length | Avg Weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jul 11, 1994 | 0.14 | 9.5" | 0.65 lbs |
Yellow Perch
Gill-net survey · surveyed Jun 2025
Catch rate: 0.21 per gill net
Survey History
| Date | Catch Rate | Avg Length | Avg Weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 23, 2025 | 0.21 | 6.0" | 0.13 lbs |
| Jul 7, 2014 | 0.14 | 5.5" | 0.09 lbs |
| Jul 12, 2004 | 0.06 | 4.0" | 0.01 lbs |
Pumpkinseed
Gill-net survey · surveyed Jul 1994
Last surveyed 1994 — treat with caution
Catch rate: 0.14 per gill net
Survey History
| Date | Catch Rate | Avg Length | Avg Weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jul 11, 1994 | 0.14 | 3.5" | 0.07 lbs |
Other species in this lake (2)
Rough fish, bullheads, and baitfish recorded in DNR surveys — present in the lake, but not typical angling targets.
Shorthead Redhorse
Gill-net survey · surveyed Jul 1999
Last surveyed 1999 — treat with caution
Catch rate: 0.08 per gill net
Survey History
| Date | Catch Rate | Avg Length | Avg Weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jul 12, 1999 | 0.08 | 18.0" | 2.52 lbs |
| Jul 11, 1994 | 0.29 | 21.3" | 8.71 lbs |
White Sucker
Gill-net survey · surveyed Jun 2025
Catch rate: 1.4 per gill net
Survey History
| Date | Catch Rate | Avg Length | Avg Weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 23, 2025 | 1.43 | 16.8" | 2.48 lbs |
| Jul 7, 2014 | 2.64 | 15.8" | 2.27 lbs |
| Jul 12, 2004 | 0.03 | 17.3" | 2.40 lbs |
Biologist Notes
July 31, 2025Temperature and dissolved oxygen (DO) measurements were collected from the deepest basin in Lac la Croix on July 31st, 2025, to evaluate the quantity…
Temperature and dissolved oxygen (DO) measurements were collected from the deepest basin in Lac la Croix on July 31st, 2025, to evaluate the quantity and quality of cold, oxygenated water (i.e., oxythermal habitat) available to Lake Trout, the most sensitive coldwater species present in this lake (Lake Whitefish and Cisco, also known as 'Tullibee', are also present). During the summer, Lake Trout require a layer of oxythermal habitat that contains water temperatures below 8.8 degrees C (47.8 degrees F) and dissolved oxygen concentrations above 3.0 mg/L. Based on the profile from the deepest basin (maximum sampled depth 127.9 feet), the water temperature decreased below 8.8 degrees C (47.8 degrees F) at 36.5 feet and the dissolved oxygen concentration stayed greater than 3.0 mg/L at 127.9 feet at the time of sampling. The thickness of this layer of water in the water column was 91.4 feet, indicating that oxythermal habitat was present for Lake Trout. Further, the temperature at which dissolved oxygen decreased to 3.0 mg/L (i.e., TDO3, a single variable to characterize oxythermal habitat) was never reached because dissolved oxygen remained above 3.0 mg/L throughout the sampled depths. In this case, the minimum temperature, 4.4 degrees C (39.9 degrees F), was substituted as TDO3. TDO3 values cooler than 8.8 degrees C (47.8 degrees F) indicate that oxythermal conditions were suitable for Lake Trout at the time of the survey. Data collected by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources during the late summer period of maximum oxythermal stress (July 26th to Aug 24th) in 2024 also indicates suitable oxythermal habitat, with the least favorable conditions recorded in 2024 when the suitable oxythermal habitat layer was 56.6 feet thick. When inadequate oxythermal habitat is available, Lake Trout are squeezed into unfavorable, warmer water conditions and experience higher levels of stress.
July 31, 2025Temperature and dissolved oxygen (DO) measurements were collected from the deepest basin in Lac la Croix on July 31st, 2025, to evaluate the quantity…
Temperature and dissolved oxygen (DO) measurements were collected from the deepest basin in Lac la Croix on July 31st, 2025, to evaluate the quantity and quality of cold, oxygenated water (i.e., oxythermal habitat) available to Lake Trout, the most sensitive coldwater species present in this lake (Lake Whitefish and Cisco, also known as 'Tullibee', are also present). During the summer, Lake Trout require a layer of oxythermal habitat that contains water temperatures below 8.8 degrees C (47.8 degrees F) and dissolved oxygen concentrations above 3.0 mg/L. Based on the profile from the deepest basin (maximum sampled depth 127.9 feet), the water temperature decreased below 8.8 degrees C (47.8 degrees F) at 36.5 feet and the dissolved oxygen concentration stayed greater than 3.0 mg/L at 127.9 feet at the time of sampling. The thickness of this layer of water in the water column was 91.4 feet, indicating that oxythermal habitat was present for Lake Trout. Further, the temperature at which dissolved oxygen decreased to 3.0 mg/L (i.e., TDO3, a single variable to characterize oxythermal habitat) was never reached because dissolved oxygen remained above 3.0 mg/L throughout the sampled depths. In this case, the minimum temperature, 4.4 degrees C (39.9 degrees F), was substituted as TDO3. TDO3 values cooler than 8.8 degrees C (47.8 degrees F) indicate that oxythermal conditions were suitable for Lake Trout at the time of the survey. Data collected by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources during the late summer period of maximum oxythermal stress (July 26th to Aug 24th) in 2024 also indicates suitable oxythermal habitat, with the least favorable conditions recorded in 2024 when the suitable oxythermal habitat layer was 56.6 feet thick. When inadequate oxythermal habitat is available, Lake Trout are squeezed into unfavorable, warmer water conditions and experience higher levels of stress.
July 31, 2025Temperature and dissolved oxygen (DO) measurements were collected from the deepest basin in Lac la Croix on July 31st, 2025, to evaluate the quantity…
Temperature and dissolved oxygen (DO) measurements were collected from the deepest basin in Lac la Croix on July 31st, 2025, to evaluate the quantity and quality of cold, oxygenated water (i.e., oxythermal habitat) available to Lake Trout, the most sensitive coldwater species present in this lake (Lake Whitefish and Cisco, also known as 'Tullibee', are also present). During the summer, Lake Trout require a layer of oxythermal habitat that contains water temperatures below 8.8 degrees C (47.8 degrees F) and dissolved oxygen concentrations above 3.0 mg/L. Based on the profile from the deepest basin (maximum sampled depth 127.9 feet), the water temperature decreased below 8.8 degrees C (47.8 degrees F) at 36.5 feet and the dissolved oxygen concentration stayed greater than 3.0 mg/L at 127.9 feet at the time of sampling. The thickness of this layer of water in the water column was 91.4 feet, indicating that oxythermal habitat was present for Lake Trout. Further, the temperature at which dissolved oxygen decreased to 3.0 mg/L (i.e., TDO3, a single variable to characterize oxythermal habitat) was never reached because dissolved oxygen remained above 3.0 mg/L throughout the sampled depths. In this case, the minimum temperature, 4.4 degrees C (39.9 degrees F), was substituted as TDO3. TDO3 values cooler than 8.8 degrees C (47.8 degrees F) indicate that oxythermal conditions were suitable for Lake Trout at the time of the survey. Data collected by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources during the late summer period of maximum oxythermal stress (July 26th to Aug 24th) in 2024 also indicates suitable oxythermal habitat, with the least favorable conditions recorded in 2024 when the suitable oxythermal habitat layer was 56.6 feet thick. When inadequate oxythermal habitat is available, Lake Trout are squeezed into unfavorable, warmer water conditions and experience higher levels of stress.
Frequently Asked Questions
What fish can you catch in Lac la Croix?
Based on Minnesota DNR survey data, anglers target Northern Pike, Lake Trout, Smallmouth Bass, Walleye, and Rock Bass in Lac la Croix. See the full species list above for catch rates, size structure, and quality scores.
Is there public access at Lac la Croix?
We don't have a confirmed public access point on record for Lac la Croix. Check the DNR LakeFinder page for current access details before you go.
How deep is Lac la Croix?
Lac la Croix has a maximum depth of 168 feet, per Minnesota DNR data.
When were the main sport fish in Lac la Croix last surveyed?
The most recent Minnesota DNR survey data for the main sport fish in Lac la Croix is from 2025.
Does Lac la Croix have any invasive species?
Yes — Lac la Croix has confirmed spiny waterflea. Clean, drain, and dry your equipment to avoid spreading invasives to other waters.
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Lake Details
- Surface Area
- 29,596.66 acres
- Max Depth
- 168 ft
- Shoreline
- 482.36 mi
- Public Access
- Not confirmed
Invasive Species Alert
- spiny waterflea
Clean, drain, and dry your equipment to prevent spread.