How to Catch Carp in Winter: What a Cold January Session Taught Me

There is always one winter session each year that reminds me how different carp become once the cold truly settles in.
It is not always the first frost or the coldest morning. Sometimes it is simply the first day when the lake looks completely lifeless, and every instinct tells you to pack up before you even cast a rod.
One January morning on a small lake in the United Kingdom, I arrived just after sunrise and immediately felt that doubt. The grass was white with frost, the edges of the landing net were stiff from the cold, and the water looked dark and still beneath a flat grey sky.
In summer, I would have started by looking for showing fish. In winter, there was nothing. No bubbles, no rolling carp, not even a single patch of coloured water.
It looked empty, but I had learned over the years that winter carp are often still there — just hidden far better than we expect.
Why Carp Change in Winter
As the water cools, carp become far less active than they are in autumn. Their metabolism slows down, and they stop wasting energy moving around the lake unless there is a clear reason to do so.
This is why winter carp fishing often feels so difficult. The fish are not necessarily impossible to catch, but their feeding windows become shorter, quieter, and far more specific.
I have noticed that winter carp can remain in one area for hours without showing any visible sign at all. They may not roll, bubble, or crash in the way they do during warmer months.
Many anglers mistake that silence for a lack of fish. In reality, the carp are often simply conserving energy and feeding only when the conditions feel stable enough.

Where to Find Carp in Winter
Instead of setting up straight away, I walked the lake for almost an hour. In winter, I rarely rush.
That day, the shallow bays where I had caught carp in autumn looked completely dead. A cold north wind had pushed straight into them overnight, and the water near the edges felt noticeably colder.
Eventually, I stopped at a sheltered corner near a deeper shelf on the far bank. Overhanging trees blocked most of the wind, and the shelf dropped sharply into the main basin only a rod length out.
There were no obvious signs of carp, but the area felt more stable than the rest of the lake.
That is where I placed both rods.
In winter, I often find carp near deeper basins, sheltered margins, and drop-offs close to snags or cover. They are not always feeding there, but they often hold in these areas between short feeding spells.

My Winter Carp Fishing Approach
I kept everything quiet.
One rod went at the base of the shelf, and the second was placed just off the sheltered margin where dead leaves had gathered in the water.
After that, I did almost nothing.
Winter carp often punish unnecessary movement. Repeated recasting can easily ruin the only chance of the day, especially when the fish are already cautious and inactive.
For most of the session, nothing happened. By midday, the frost had melted, but the sky stayed dull and cold. I sat behind the rods, drinking tea and watching the still surface, wondering whether the carp were even in front of me.
Then, just before dark, the rod nearest the shelf slowly tightened.
There was no screaming run. Just steady pressure as the fish moved away from the shelf. It stayed deep through the entire fight, using weight rather than speed.
When it finally rolled over the net cord, it was one of the broadest winter commons I had landed that year.






Respect the Fish and the Water