How to Raise Catfish at Home

Starting your own catfish stock is easier than you might think.

By Joseph Neel
Updated on October 20, 2023
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by Joseph Neel
Belly view of a healthy channel catfish.

Starting your own catfish stock is easier than you might think. Learn how to raise catfish at home in a pond to harvest for the dinner table.

Raising channel catfish can be rewarding. Whether you’re looking to sell them commercially or raise them for fishing yourself, watching them grow is therapeutic. Initially, you can stock your pond or lake with channel catfish at a ratio of around 100 fingerlings per acre if you also have bass and sunfish, or you can use more catfish per acre if that’s all you’re raising. Whether you stock with purchased catfish fingerlings or have the conservation department stock them, raising them takes a little bit of care.

Though catfish are hardy, fingerlings are still babies. Carefully transfer your fingerlings into their habitat by gradually replacing the water they came in with water from your habitat before finally releasing them into the water, which will often be warmer than the water they’re transported in. This process is to avoid shock and can take 45 minutes to an hour. Channel catfish thrive in warm water. Once the fingerlings are well-adjusted to your water temperature, feed them with floating or sinking fish food.

If you’ve stocked your pond on your own, consider putting up “no trespassing” signs to avoid someone accidentally finding your pond and fishing it. Here in Missouri, the conservation department will stock your pond for free; however, if it does, you’re required to allow the public to fish in your pond.

You can buy catfish fingerlings in southeast Missouri at about 50 cents each – nearly the same price they were 25 years ago. Some distributors want to get rid of them quickly, as many people prefer to buy bass and sunfish.

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