GREENLAND HALIBUT
Reinhardtius hippoglossoides

Advice 2026/2027

21 079

tonnes

Advice 2025/2026

20 992

tonnes

Advice change

0 %

Note: The advice is for the area East-Greenland / Iceland / the Faroe Islands

Publication of Advice: 12th June 2026. Published by Marine and Freshwater Research Institute.


Advice

MFRI and ICES advise that when the MSY approach is applied, catches in the 2026/2027 fishing year in the East Greenland / Iceland / Faroe Islands area should be no more than 21 079 tonnes.

Stock development

Fishing pressure is above FMSY and below Fpa; spawning stock size is above MSY Btrigger, Bpa and Blim.

Greenland halibut. Catch by areas, recruitment (age 5), fishing mortality (ages 9–14), and spawning stock biomass (SSB). Shaded areas and error bars show 90% confidence intervals.

Basis of the assessment and reference points

Basis of the advice

MSY approach

Management plan

There is no management plan for this stock

Assessment type

Analytical assessment (Gadget) that uses catches in the model and in the forecast

Input data

Commercial catches (international landings), length composition by gear, one combined survey biomass index (Greenland Deepwater survey 1998-2016 & 2022 onwards, and the Icelandic autumn bottom trawl survey (SMH) since 1996) and age and length distributions from the Icelandic bottom trawl survey (SMH). Natural mortality is set at 0.15. Maturity and stock weights from the Icelandic bottom trawl survey (SMH). Catch weights from commercial sampling

Approach

Reference point

Value

Basis

MSY approach

FMSY

0.22

Fishing mortality that leads to MSY; estimated using stochastic simulations

MSY Btrigger

24 895

Bpa

Precautionary approach

Blim

18 213

Bloss (SSB in 2010)

Bpa

24 895

Blim × e1.645σ, σ = 0.19.

Fpa

0.29

FP05, maximum F at which the probability of SSB falling below Blim is < 5%

Flim

0.41

Fishing mortality which, in stochastic simulations, results in median SSB at Blim

Prospects

Greenland halibut. Assumptions made for the interim year and in the forecast.

Variable

Value

Notes

Fages 9-14 (2026)

0.25

F that corresponds to assumed catch in 2026.

SSB (2027)

27 769

From the assessment; in tonnes

Recruitment age 5 (2027)

27 132

From the assessment; in thousands.

Recruitment age 5 (2028)

25 690

From the assessment; in thousands.

Catch (2026)

20 992

Advised catch for 2026; in tonnes

Greenland halibut. Projection of SSB (tonnes) based on the MSY approach.

Basis

Catch (2027)

F (ages 9-14) (2027)

SSB (2028)

% SSB change1)

% advice change2)

MSY approach: FMSY

21 079

0.22

30 820

11

0

1) SSB in 2028 relative to SSB in 2027

2) Advice value for 2026/2027 relative to advice value for 2025/2026 (20992 t)

Quality of the assessment

This year’s assessment is in line with previous assessments.

Connectivity to the adjacent Greenland halibut stocks (Northeast Arctic stocks in ICES subareas 1 and 2 and NAFO subarea 0 and 1) is known but still unquantified (Albert and Vollen, 2015; Westgaard et al., 2017; Vihtakari et al., 2022). Therefore, the current assessment trend may be influenced by more than one population. This issue adds to the uncertainty in the assessment.

Lack of consistency in age readings between relevant fishing nations prevents the full use of age information in the assessment.

Greenland halibut. Historical assessment results. Current assessment (red line) compared with the previous estimates.

Other information

No formal agreement on the management of fisheries on Greenland halibut exists among the three principal coastal states of Greenland, Iceland, and the Faroe Islands. An agreement exists between Iceland and Greenland since 2021 on the management of the Greenland halibut fishery based on the ICES MSY approach.

Advice, TAC and catch

Greenland halibut. Recommended TAC to East Greenland / Iceland / Faroes, national TAC, and catches (tonnes). Note that catch in Icelandic waters is by fishing year whereas catch in other areas and total catch is by calendar year.

Fishing year

Recommended TAC

Icelandic TAC1)

Catches Iceland

East Greenland TAC2)

Catches Greenland3)

Catches other nations3)

Total catch4)

1984

25  000

30  000

30  067

15

3  954

34  038

1985

25  000

30  000

29  210

81

2  789

32  116

1986

25  000

30  000

31  063

177

1  770

33  027

1987

25  000

30  000

44  775

154

1  600

46  665

1988

30  000

30  000

48  630

37

2  067

50  774

1989

30  000

30  000

58  332

11

2  859

61  202

1990

30  000

30  000

36  573

40

2  290

38  903

1991

27  000

33  000

31  187

65

1  989

36  869

1991/1992

25  000

25  000

30  221

437

2  885

35  326

1992/1993

30  000

30  000

39  796

288

6  634

40  909

1993/1994

25  000

30  000

28  420

867

8  776

37  640

1994/1995

30  000

30  000

26  499

533

9  153

37  177

1995/1996

20  000

20  000

22  292

1  162

14  041

37  105

1996/1997

15  000

15  000

17  351

1  129

11  777

31  086

1997/1998

10  000

10  000

10  312

747

10  123

20  598

1998/1999

10  000

10  000

10  578

200

9  911

21  304

1999/2000

10  000

10  000

11  560

1  740

11  830

28  106

2000/2001

20  000

20  000

20  195

1  553

11  504

43  934

2001/2002

20  000

20  000

19  262

1  887

8  871

46  965

2002/2003

23  000

23  000

20  266

1  459

11  773

33  590

2003/2004

20  000

23  000

15  784

16  008

31  485

2004/2005

15  000

15  000

13  028

2  943

9  227

25  185

2005/2006

15  000

15  000

12  670

1  974

7  754

21  526

2006/2007

15  000

15  000

9  968

2  656

9  216

21  452

2007/2008

15  000

15  000

9  750

11  700

7  974

10  346

29  991

2008/2009

5  000

15  000

15  581

21  000

10  607

9  762

36  144

2009/2010

5  000

12  000

14  079

12  000

1  854

11  379

26  954

2010/2011

5  000

13  000

12  231

12  000

3  415

9  311

32  295

2011/2012

12  000

13  000

13  145

13  000

4  972

10  540

36  253

2012/2013

20  000

15  000

14  092

10  000

3  316

8  804

33  381

2013/2014

20  000

12  500

11  942

8  300

1  895

8  525

24  490

2014/2015

25  000

14  100

11  852

9  500

3  743

8  877

25  020

2015/2016

22  000

12  400

13  408

8  300

1  506

11  161

25  320

2016/2017

24  000

13  500

12  152

9  000

2  556

7  610

22  092

2017/2018

24  000

13  535

14  873

9  024

2  970

8  466

26  650

2018/2019

24  150

13  621

12  654

9  080

2  798

7  752

22  595

2019/2020

21  360

12  047

12  367

8  031

1  882

7  777

22  195

2020/2021

23  530

13  271

12  876

8  847

2  693

7  114

22  643

2021/2022

26  650

15  031

10  164

10  020

2  640

7  546

21  326

2022/2023

26  710

15  064

14  885

10  043

3  408

7  857

25  450

2023/2024

19  703

13  463

12  580

8  099

1  902

7  180

23  012

2024/2025

17  890

10  090

11  563

6  727

1  565

6  159

18  101

2025/2026

20  992

11  773

7  893

2026/2027

21  079

1) National TAC

2) TAC by calendar year

3) Catches are given by calendar year

4) Total catch per calendar year

References and further reading

Albert, O. T., and Vollen, T. 2015. A major nursery area around the Svalbard archipelago provides recruits for the stocks in both Greenland halibut management areas in the Northeast Atlantic. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 72: 872–879. https://doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsu191.

ICES. 2023a. Benchmark workshop on Greenland halibut and redfish stocks (WKBNORTH). ICES Scientific Reports. 5:33. https://doi.org/10.17895/ices.pub.22304638.

Vihtakari, M, Elvarsson, B., Treble, M, Nogueira, M., Hedges, K., Hussey, N.E., Wheeland, L., Roy, D., Ofstad, L.H., Hallfredsson, E.H., Barkley, A., Estévez-Barcia, D., Nygaard, R., Healey, B., Steingrund, P., Johansen, T., Albert, O-T., and Boje, J. 2022. Migration patterns of Greenland halibut in the North Atlantic revealed by a compiled mark-recapture dataset. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 79: 1902-1917.

Westgaard, J. I., Saha, A., Kent, M., Hansen, H. H., Knutsen, H., Hauser, L., Cadrin, S. X., et al. 2017. Genetic population structure in Greenland halibut (Reinhardtius hippoglossoides) and its relevance to fishery management. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 74: 475–485. https://doi.org/10.1139/cjfas-2015-0430.

MFRI Assessment Reports 2026. Greenland halibut. Marine and Freshwater Research Institute, 12 June 2026.