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LakeQuality

Fishing Regulations · 2026 season

Cloverdale Lake Fishing Regulations

Cloverdale Lake follows Minnesota statewide fishing regulations — no lake-specific special rules in DNR records.

Grade C

The LakeGrade rubric puts Cloverdale Lake at a C: clarity at 5.0 ft, 30 µg/L of phosphorus, and a TSI of 55 signal an intermediate trophic state. The three sub-grades — clarity, phosphorus, and chlorophyll-a — track close together, so no single parameter is dragging the average.

Eutrophic conditions are the baseline here: clarity drops noticeably in late summer, and dissolved oxygen near the bottom can become a concern. Cloverdale Lake reaches 28 ft at its deepest point — typical for Minnesota mid-sized lakes, with seasonal stratification but limited cold-water refuge. At 45 acres, Cloverdale Lake sits below the Minnesota median: a small water where shoreline activity has an outsized effect on water quality. Cloverdale Lake sits at rank 51 of 83 in Washington County, in the lower half of the local distribution.

Full water-quality breakdown: Cloverdale Lake water-quality report.

Minnesota Statewide Regulations

These apply to Cloverdale Lake (no lake-specific overrides found).

  • Walleye

    Statewide bag limit: 6 walleye, only 1 over 20 inches. Possession limit 6 (varies on border waters). Open season typically May 9 — Feb 28.

  • Sauger

    Statewide bag limit: 6 sauger or walleye-sauger combined. Open season typically May 9 — Feb 28.

  • Northern Pike

    Statewide three-zone northern pike regs: north zone (10 fish, all sizes); central (2 fish 22–26", plus 8 under 22"); south (2 fish over 24"). See MN DNR for zone map.

  • Largemouth Bass · Smallmouth Bass

    Statewide bag limit: 6 in combination. Catch-and-release only in late season for some lakes; harvest typically opens late May. Some lakes have special slot or season rules.

  • Muskellunge

    Statewide minimum 54 inches, daily limit 1. Catch-and-release strongly encouraged due to high mercury and slow growth.

  • Lake Trout · Brook Trout · Brown Trout · Rainbow Trout · Splake

    Stream trout limit 5 per day; lake trout limit varies by lake (often 2). Designated Trout Lakes have special regulations and require trout stamp.

  • Sunfish · Bluegill · Crappie · Yellow Perch

    Statewide combined bag limit: 20 sunfish, 10 crappies, 20 yellow perch (some lakes have reduced panfish limits to protect quality).

Always Verify with the Official Source

Fishing regulations change annually. Before you fish Cloverdale Lake, check the official Minnesota DNRfor the most current rules — including border-water exceptions, emergency closures, and 2026 season dates.

Official MN DNR LakeFinder

Frequently Asked Questions

Are there special fishing regulations on Cloverdale Lake?

Cloverdale Lake appears to follow Minnesota statewide fishing regulations — DNR records do not show lake-specific special rules. Always confirm with current DNR regulations before fishing, since rules can change annually.

What is the walleye limit on Cloverdale Lake?

Statewide MN walleye limit: 6 fish, only 1 over 20 inches. Open season May 9 — Feb 28. Cloverdale Lake appears to follow this statewide rule.

When does the Minnesota fishing season open at Cloverdale Lake?

Minnesota's general fishing opener for walleye, northern pike, and lake trout falls on the Saturday closest to May 12 each year — for 2026, that's typically the second weekend of May. Bass season opens later (late May for catch-and-release, mid-June for harvest in many lakes). Panfish are open year-round on most waters.

Do I need a fishing license at Cloverdale Lake?

Yes. Anyone 16 or older needs a current Minnesota fishing license to fish Cloverdale Lake. Some species require additional stamps (trout, salmon, musky in WI). Buy online at the MN DNR website or at any authorized retailer.

Related

Regulations sourced from Minnesota DNR LakeFinder (DOW 82000900), 2026 season. Last updated: 2026-07-06. This site is not affiliated with any government agency. Always confirm rules with the official DNR before fishing.

Source: EPA National Aquatic Resource Surveys, 2026.