Skip to main content

How to fish in Valheim

There’s nothing stopping you from building your perfect Nordic paradise in Valheim (well, technically there are lots of things, but that’s part of the fun), right down to the little details. One of those details allows you to spend all day quietly fishing at a lake or pier, then cook your catch back at your cozy Viking hall. But many players spend dozens of hours in Valheim without even realizing fishing is an option for them.

Difficulty

Easy

Duration

30 minutes

What You Need

  • Fishing rod

  • As much bait as possible

If you have your eye on some fishy waters, our guide will show you exactly how to start fishing in Valheim and what to know about the process.

How to start fishing in Valheim

Step 1: Start collecting coins. If you’re new to the game or don’t have much money, you’ll need to get some currency in preparation. About 400 to 500 coins should suffice to get equipped for fishing. You can find coins through exploration and trade.

Step 2: Find Haldor the merchant. The one merchant in Valheim that reliably sells fishing rods and bait is Haldor. The problem is that Haldor isn’t easy to find, especially for newcomers. He appears randomly in the Black Forest biomes in Valheim, so the best way to find him is to search every Black Forest you come across.

This part can take some time if you don't get lucky, so you may need to be patient. Combine searching for Haldor with gathering coins and you’ll easily have enough by the time you find him, as Black Forests are filled with ores to mine, Burial Chambers to explore, and more.

Haldor in Valheim.

Step 3: Buy your fishing rod and as much bait as you want to get started.

Step 4: Find some water. You can fish any notable body of water, so an ocean or a river will work fine. Ideally, you should be close to the water, not too high above it, as this can interfere with pathing while you’re fishing. Equip your fishing rod and bait.

Fishing in Valheim.

Step 5: Experiment with casting your line using Left click. The longer you hold down before you click, the longer you’ll cast. You don’t actually need to cast very far to start fishing, but find a length that works for you.

Step 6: Now use your Right click to start slowly reeling in the line. The goal is to keep the line and its bait active without reeling it in too quickly, so Click-pause-click tends to work best.

Step 7: When the water around the line starts splashing and the bobber disappears, you’ve got a bite. Quickly hit Right click again. If you time it right, then you will see a small “hooked” notification. Now comes the tricky part: You have to carefully reel in the fish with Right click, but avoid right-clicking too much when the fish is struggling or you'll to rip out the hook.

Campfire in Valheim.

Step 8: Once you’ve landed the fish, you can collect it to receive raw fish in your inventory. Small fish like perch will give you one raw fish. Larger fish will give you two, and the largest fish like tuna will give you four raw fish.

You can collect as much raw fish as you want … but it’s not very useful unless you do some crafting with it. You can find or make a cooking station at a campfire or hearth and cook the fish to produce cooked fish. Don’t let the fish overcook or you’ll just get coal. Around 25 seconds will cook all kinds of meat properly, including fish.

On its own, cooked fish will give you health, stamina, and health regeneration for an extended period of time. But you if also have barley flour and a cauldron for cooking, you can combine four barley flour and two cooked fish to make fish wraps, which are significantly more powerful.

Step 9: Note that if you aren’t getting any bites in a particular body of water, you may have maxed out the number of fish you can catch there. Fish will eventually respawn, but it’s a good idea to rotate your fishing spots if you’re in it for the long haul.

Editors' Recommendations

Tyler Lacoma
If it can be streamed, voice-activated, made better with an app, or beaten by mashing buttons, Tyler's into it. When he's not…
How to respec your character in Baldur’s Gate 3
The player asking to respec their skills in Baldur's Gate 3.

Despite your best intentions when starting out in Baldur's Gate 3, even if you're following a guide, you might realize early on that the class or race you picked just isn't what you thought it would be. This is a long game – potentially hundreds of hours long – so having a character you enjoy playing is very important since you'll be spending so much time with them. But are you forced to restart if you changed your mind a few hours in? Thankfully Larian has offered you a way to respec your character, but it isn't in any menu. In fact, you can easily miss it, so here's how you can unlock the ability to respec your character in Baldur's Gate 3.

Read more
How long is Baldur’s Gate 3?
A party of heroes stands on a cliff in Baldur's Gate 3.

CRPGs are notorious for being very lengthy investments, and Baldur's Gate 3 is no exception. Even in its early access days, players were spending hundreds of hours on just the first act of the game, though just doing the main story would be significantly less. Some people may spend hours just in the character creator choosing their race and speccing out their class, while others may dive in and only do the main quests. In a game this large, your playtime will vary quite a bit, but no matter how much, or little, of a completionist you are, we can give you a good idea of just how long Baldur's Gate 3 will take to beat.
How long is Baldur's Gate 3?
Oh boy, this is going to be a somewhat complicated and intimidating answer. Baldur's Gate 3 is a massive CRPG that is all about giving you a unique and tailored experience. Everything from your race, stats, and skills to choices, dialogue choices, and successful or failed skill checks can alter your playtime in some way. There's also the vast number of optional activities and objectives you can choose to engage with or ignore, as well as your difficulty level, to consider. Prior to launch, Larian Studios developer Swen Vincke said that an average playthrough of the game would take "between 75 to 100 hours, that's what we're seeing. That's not doing everything, that is just going to be a playthrough. There will be people who will be way over that, the ones who want to do everything. They will probably hit 200 hours, I think. On average, we're seeing people who are going through take about 75 to 100 hours."

From our experience, we would say that figure is accurate if you're playing on the normal difficulty and taking time to do some sidequests and diversions to explore and engage in a decent amount of the optional content. Normally, a 25-hour range would be a bit wide as an average, but when you consider how your class comes into play, how much combat you encounter, to what degree you are role-playing, and whether or not you're playing alone or in co-op, it starts to make more sense.

Read more
How to use non-lethal attacks in Baldur’s Gate 3
A halfling playing an instrument to a large badger.

If there's one thing you'll never be at a loss for while playing Baldur's Gate 3, it's ways to kill your opponents. From swords, axes, and maces to bows, magic, and poison, your potential arsenal is essentially limitless. While that's great for when you're faced with irredeemable monsters and forces of pure evil, sometimes a fight can break out with people you'd rather not kill. This could be due to a failed skill check starting a fight you didn't intend, to a misunderstanding, or because the people attacking you are connected to a group you want to stay on the good side of. When combat breaks out, you're not resigned to either killing your enemy or reloading a save thanks to a handy ability to non-lethally attack enemies, but how to activate it isn't clear. Here's how to knock out an enemy in Baldur's Gate 3.

Read more