European Commission - Directorate-General for Maritime Affairs and Fisheries

10/28/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/28/2025 04:11

Agreement reached on 2026 fishing opportunities for the Baltic Sea

The Council of the European Union reached a political agreement on the fishing opportunities in the Baltic Sea for 2026, following the Commission proposal made in August this year.

  • For eastern cod and western cod, the Council has decided to set by-catch total allowable catch (TACs) only, so fishing will remain limited to accidental catches while targeting other species.
  • Western Baltic herring will, in principle, also have a bycatch-only TAC, but the Council maintained an exception for small-scale coastal fishers.
  • Catches of salmon in the main basin are also limited to by-catches, except during the summer in the coastal areas of the Aland Sea and the Gulf of Bothnia.
  • The agreement allows increases in catches of sprat (+45%), central Baltic herring (+15%) and Gulf of Finland salmon (+1%).
  • On the other hand, main basin salmon (-27%), Riga herring (-17%) and plaice (-3%) decrease, and for Bothnian herring the Council set a prudent provisional TAC until the end of October 2026.

The Council followed the Commission's proposal on some elements. However, the Commission is concerned that some elements of the agreement are less likely to contribute to the rebuilding of the fisheries that rely on the recovery of certain stocks for their economic activities than the Commission proposal. This is the case for the total allowable catches (TACs) for Bothnian herring and central herring, as well as continued targeted commercial fisheries for western Baltic herring and recreational fisheries for main basin salmon.

Overall, the dire environmental state of the Baltic Sea leads to the pressing need to fully implement the EU legislation at all levels in an effective manner and to allow a rebuilding trajectory. The commitment by the Commission and the Baltic Member States to ask for a specific scientific advice on rebuilding trajectories will start a systematic approach in this direction.

More information

Council agreement on 2026 catch limits in the Baltic Sea

Commission proposal for the fishing opportunities for 2026 in the Baltic Sea

Total allowable catches and quotas

Overview of TAC changes 2025-2026

COMMISSION proposal

COUNCIL

agreement

Name

Latin name

ICES FISHING ZONES

TACs 2025

2026

2026

TACs 2026

variation

in tonnes in tonnes variation in tonnes in %

Bothnian herring

Clupeaharengus

Baltic Sea subdivisions 30-31

66,446

25,560

-62%

39,108*

-41%

Western herring

Clupeaharengus

Baltic Sea subdivisions 22-24

788 (by-

catch only)

394 (by-catch only)

-50%

788 (by-catch only) 0%

Centralherring

Clupeaharengus

Baltic Sea subdivisions 25-27,

28.2, 29, 32

83,881 83,881

0%

96,463 +15%

Riga herring

Clupeaharengus

Baltic Sea subdivision 28.1 41,635 34,367 -17% 34,367 -17%

Eastern cod

Gadus morhua

Baltic Sea subdivisions 25-32

430 (by-

catch only)

159 (by-catch only) -63% 430 (by-catch only) 0%

Western cod

Gadus morhua

Baltic Sea subdivisions 22-24

266 (by-

catch only)

42 (by-catch only) -84% 266 (by-catch only) 0%

Plaice

Pleuronectes platessa

Baltic Sea subdivisions 22-32 11,313 10,973 -3% 10,973 -3%

Main basin salmon

Salmo salar

Baltic Sea subdivisions 22-31

34,787

specimens

25,537 specimens (by-catch only) -27%

25,537

specimens (by-catch only)

-27%

Gulf of Finland salmon

Salmo salar

Baltic Sea subdivision 32

8,117

specimens

10,232

specimens

+1%

10,232

specimens

+1%

Sprat

Sprattus sprattus

Baltic Sea subdivisions 22-32 139,500 139,500 0% 201,975 +45%

* May only be fished from 1 January to 31 October 2026

Details

Publication date
28 October 2025
AuthorDirectorate-General for Maritime Affairs and Fisheries
European Commission - Directorate-General for Maritime Affairs and Fisheries published this content on October 28, 2025, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on October 28, 2025 at 10:12 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]