SpearfishingMap

Bangladesh

Asia · Southern Asia

Bangladesh has no dedicated recreational spearfishing regime, and the practice is effectively prohibited by general fisheries law. The Protection and Conservation of Fish Act, 1950 (as amended) empowers the Government to prohibit the destruction of fish by 'explosives, electrofishing device, gun, bow and arrow' in inland water, coastal territorial waters and Bangladesh marine fisheries waters — wording that covers spearguns, harpoons and similar projectile gear. The Marine Fisheries Act, 2020 (which repealed the Marine Fisheries Ordinance, 1983) regulates commercial and artisanal fishing through licences and permits and contains no provision authorising recreational or sport spearfishing; legal scholars note recreational fishing is simply not covered by the marine law. Large Marine Protected Areas (St Martin's Island, Swatch of No Ground) and Ecologically Critical Areas further restrict or ban fishing activity. There is no licence pathway under which a recreational diver could lawfully spearfish, so the activity is treated as not allowed.

Prohibited
Data confidenceMedium confidence

Last updated June 14, 2026

Governing framework

  • §Protection and Conservation of Fish Act, 1950 (East Bengal Act No. XVIII of 1950), as amended (esp. amendment empowering prohibition of destruction of fish by gun, bow and arrow in marine fisheries waters)
  • §Marine Fisheries Act, 2020 (Act No. XIX of 2020)
  • §Marine Fisheries Ordinance, 1983 (repealed by the Marine Fisheries Act, 2020) — historical sport-fishing rule-making power
  • §Wildlife (Conservation and Security) Act, 2012 (basis for Marine Protected Area declarations)
Speargun
Prohibited
Foreigners
Not allowed

The law, verbatim

Legal texts

The exact statutory and regulatory provisions that govern spearfishing here, quoted as published, with a link to each official source.

01Section 3(b)Bangladesh · national

Power to prohibit destruction of fish by gun, bow and arrow, explosives and electrofishing

Protection and Conservation of Fish Act, 1950 (East Bengal Act No. XVIII of 1950), as amended

ENOriginal

[(b) prohibit the destruction of, or any attempt to destroy, fishes by explosives, electrofishing device, gun, bow and arrow in inland water or within coastal territorial waters or Bangladesh marine fisheries waters; Explanation.- For the purposes of this clause, “Bangladesh marine fisheries waters” means “Bangladesh marine fisheries waters” defined by clause (10) of section 2 of the Marine Fisheries Act, 2020 (Act No XIX of 2020).]

02Section 5(1)Bangladesh · national

Penalties for breach of fisheries prohibitions

Protection and Conservation of Fish Act, 1950 (East Bengal Act No. XVIII of 1950), as amended

ENOriginal

[5. (1) The breach of any rule made under section 3 or of any prohibition notified under section 4 shall be punishable with rigorous imprisonment for a term which [may extend to 2 (two) years, or with fine which may extend to 5 (five) lakh] Taka, or with both.]

03Part VII, Section 26(1)Bangladesh · national

Prohibited fishing methods — use of explosives, poison and prohibited gear (repealed 1983 Ordinance, indicative of marine regime)

Marine Fisheries Ordinance, 1983 (repealed by Marine Fisheries Act, 2020)

ENOriginal

Use of explosives, etc. 26. (1) Any person, other than a person authorised in writing by the Director, who in the Bangladesh fisheries waters,- (a) uses, or attempts to use, any explosive, poison or other noxious substances for the purpose of killing, stunning, disabling or catching fish, or in any other way rendering such fish more easily caught; or (b) carries, or has in his possession or control, any explosive, poison or other noxious substances with the intention of using such explosive, poison or other noxious substance for any of the purposes referred to in clause (a); or (c) uses, or attempts to use, any prohibited methods of fishing as may be prescribed, or carries, or has in his possession or control, on board any vessel, any fishing gear prohibited under any rule made under this Ordinance; ... shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable to a fine not exceeding Taka one lakh or fifteen times the value of the fish, whichever is greater.

04Section 39(k) (rule-making powers)Bangladesh · national

Rule-making power to organise and regulate sport fishing (never implemented; not carried into the 2020 Act)

Marine Fisheries Ordinance, 1983 (repealed by Marine Fisheries Act, 2020)

ENOriginal

(k) organising and regulating sport fishing in the Bangladesh fisheries waters;

When you can dive

Seasons & time restrictions

Closed, open and restricted periods across the year. Always confirm species-specific closures locally.

Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
ClosedRestrictedOpen
  • ClosedAll marine fishing in the Bay of Bengal (commercial and artisanal); enforced annually by the Department of FisheriesMay 20 – Jul 23

    Annual 65-day marine fishing ban in the Bay of Bengal to protect spawning fish stocks. Dates are set by Government notification and vary slightly year to year; the 2024 ban ran 20 May to 23 July. While framed for commercial/artisanal fishing, it reflects a general prohibition on extracting marine fish during this period.

Permission to fish

License

What you need to be allowed in the water, what it costs, and how to get it.

License: unknown — verify locallyvia Department of Fisheries, Ministry of Fisheries and Livestock

There is no licensing pathway for recreational spearfishing. Marine fishing licences and permits under the Marine Fisheries Act, 2020 are for commercial industrial vessels and artisanal fishing vessels, not for recreational divers. Killing fish with a gun, bow and arrow (covering spearguns/harpoons) may be prohibited under section 3(b) of the Protection and Conservation of Fish Act, 1950.

Get your license

Opens the official portal · fisheries.portal.gov.bd

Type
No recreational spearfishing licence exists
Cost
unknown
Validity
unknown
How to obtain
There is no licensing pathway for recreational spearfishing. Marine fishing licences and permits under the Marine Fisheries Act, 2020 are for commercial industrial vessels and artisanal fishing vessels, not for recreational divers. Killing fish with a gun, bow and arrow (covering spearguns/harpoons) may be prohibited under section 3(b) of the Protection and Conservation of Fish Act, 1950.
Authority
Department of Fisheries, Ministry of Fisheries and Livestock

Gear & technique

Equipment rules

What gear is permitted, how it may be used, and the conditions attached.

SpeargunProhibited

Restrictions

  • Destruction of fish by 'gun, bow and arrow' (covering spearguns and harpoons) may be prohibited in inland, coastal and marine waters under section 3(b) of the Protection and Conservation of Fish Act, 1950 (as amended)
  • Destruction of fish by explosives, electrofishing devices and poison is prohibited under fisheries law (Protection and Conservation of Fish Act, 1950 s.3; Marine Fisheries regime)

No statute or rule positively authorises spearguns for recreational use. The 'gun, bow and arrow' prohibition is read to encompass projectile underwater hunting gear, so speargun use is treated as not allowed.

What you may take

Catch limits & protected species

Daily quotas, minimum sizes, and species that must never be taken.

Daily limit

unknown

Protected species — do not take

  • ProtectedSharks (protected in Marine Protected Areas; whale sharks)
  • ProtectedMarine mammals — Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins, porpoises, whales (Wildlife (Conservation and Security) Act, 2012; MPA protections)
  • ProtectedMarine turtles — olive ridley, green, loggerhead
  • ProtectedCorals (St Martin's Island)
  • ProtectedRays — white-spotted whipray, long-tailed butterfly ray

No recreational spearfishing catch limits exist because the activity is not provided for. Many high-value reef and pelagic species in the accessible St Martin's / coral-reef area are protected under MPA and wildlife law.

Who may fish

Visitors & residents

How the rules differ for foreign visitors and local residents.

Foreign visitors

Not allowed

Restrictions

  • No recreational spearfishing licence is available to anyone, resident or foreign
  • Marine Protected Areas (St Martin's Island, Swatch of No Ground) restrict fishing activity
  • St Martin's Island access for tourists is itself increasingly restricted by the Government for conservation reasons

Foreign visitors have no lawful route to recreational spearfishing; the general prohibitions and lack of any permit regime apply equally to them.

Residents

No recreational spearfishing licence type exists

Residents likewise have no recreational spearfishing licence pathway. Commercial/artisanal marine fishing requires a licence or permit under the Marine Fisheries Act, 2020, which is unrelated to recreational underwater hunting.

Where on the coast

Allowed & prohibited zones

Named areas that are open to or closed for spearfishing. See the full picture on the interactive map.

Prohibited areas

  • Approximately 1,743 km2 of the Bay of Bengal around St Martin's Island, declared a Marine Protected Area in 2022 under sections 13(1) and 13(2) of the Wildlife (Conservation and Security) Act, 2012. Bangladesh's only coral reef and ~230 finfish species. Coral destruction and uncontrolled/overfishing are restricted; the area is the prime location any diver might attempt spearfishing, and it is protected. A 590-hectare part of the island was also declared an Ecologically Critical Area in 1999.

  • Bangladesh's first Marine Protected Area (declared 2014), a submarine canyon in the Bay of Bengal south of Dublar Char, roughly 1,738 km2, declared under the Wildlife (Conservation and Security) Act, 2012. A hotspot for cetaceans (dolphins, porpoises, whales) and sharks; fishing and unauthorised activities are restricted.

Conditions on the water

Live conditions

Live marine and weather snapshot near a coastal reference point in Bangladesh, from Open-Meteo. Conditions vary along the coast — treat as indicative.

Live marine & weather near St Martin's Island Marine Protected Area.

Conditions

Who to ask

Authorities

The official bodies responsible for fisheries and licensing.

  • Department of Fisheries (DoF), Ministry of Fisheries and Livestock

    fisheries authority

    fisheries.portal.gov.bdMatshya Bhaban, Ramna, Dhaka, Bangladesh
  • Marine Fisheries Office / Marine Fisheries Department, Chattogram

    marine fisheries authority

    marine.fisheries.gov.bdChattogram (Chittagong), Bangladesh
  • Department of Environment (Ecologically Critical Areas) / Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (Marine Protected Areas under Wildlife Act 2012)

    environment ministry

    doe.gov.bdDhaka, Bangladesh

Where this comes from

Sources

Every claim on this page traces back to one of these references.

  1. [01]

    Protection and Conservation of Fish Act, 1950 (Act No. XVIII of 1950) — full text, Laws of Bangladesh

    Official
    bdlaws.minlaw.gov.bdAccessed Jun 14
  2. [02]

    Marine Fisheries Ordinance, 1983 (repealed) — full text including Part VII prohibited methods and sport-fishing rule-making power, Laws of Bangladesh

    Official
    bdlaws.minlaw.gov.bdAccessed Jun 14
  3. [03]

    The Marine Fisheries Act 2020: An Appraisal (notes that marine fisheries law does not cover recreational fishing)

    Secondary
    bsmrmu.edu.bdAccessed Jun 14
  4. [04]

    Marine Fisheries Act 2020 of Bangladesh: A Missed Opportunity — The International Journal of Marine and Coastal Law (Brill)

    Secondary
    brill.comAccessed Jun 14
  5. [05]

    Conservation and Protection of Fisheries Resources of Bangladesh — BdFISH Feature

    Secondary
    en.bdfish.orgAccessed Jun 14
  6. [06]

    St Martin's Island declared marine protected area — The Daily Star

    Secondary
    thedailystar.netAccessed Jun 14
  7. [07]

    Swatch of No Ground Marine Protected Area — Wikipedia

    Secondary
    en.wikipedia.orgAccessed Jun 14
  8. [08]

    Overfishing leads to decline in Bangladesh marine fish stocks & diversity (65-day marine fishing ban) — Mongabay

    Secondary
    news.mongabay.comAccessed Jun 14

Researcher notes

Bangladesh has no specific spearfishing or recreational-fishing legislation. The operative restriction is section 3(b) of the Protection and Conservation of Fish Act, 1950 (as amended), which empowers prohibition of destroying fish by 'gun, bow and arrow' (covering spearguns/harpoons), plus explosives and electrofishing, in inland, coastal and marine fisheries waters, with penalties up to 2 years imprisonment and/or a 5 lakh Taka fine under section 5(1). The Marine Fisheries Act, 2020 (Act No. XIX of 2020) repealed the Marine Fisheries Ordinance, 1983 and governs commercial/artisanal fishing via licences and permits; legal scholarship confirms it does not cover recreational fishing. The earlier 1983 Ordinance contained an unused rule-making power to 'organise and regulate sport fishing', but no sport-fishing rules were ever made and the power was not retained in the 2020 Act. Verbatim provisions for the Marine Fisheries Act 2020 itself could not be retrieved in clean text (the bdlaws act-print-646 page serves the predecessor 1983 Ordinance, and the official 2020 Act PDF was not machine-readable), so the 1983 Ordinance text is included as indicative of the marine prohibited-methods regime rather than as currently-in-force marine law. Confidence is medium: the inland/coastal prohibition (PCFA 1950 s.3(b)) is verbatim from the official portal and clearly covers spear-type gear, but the absence of an explicit, named 'spearfishing' ban means the 'no' status is an interpretation of general gear prohibitions plus the absence of any authorising licence regime. Coordinates for the two MPAs are approximate (St Martin's from island location ~20.63N 92.32E; Swatch of No Ground from Wikipedia ~21.25N 89.47E).

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