Oyster

Oyster

A prized bivalve known for producing pearls. Has a rough, irregular shell.

Spring Summer Fall Winter Very Easy (0)
Base Price
40g

Quick answer

Where to catch Oyster in Stardew Valley

Catch Oyster at Ocean during Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter from Any in any weather. It sells for 40g at normal quality and 80g when smoked.

Oyster
Where to catch

Ocean

Season

Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter

Time

Any, any weather

Sell price

40g base, 80g iridium

Fish pond value

50g Roe -> 100g Aged Roe

Best tackle

Spinner or Barbed Hook

Keep or sell

Keep only if needed for bundles, gifts, cooking, or ponds

Is Oyster worth keeping?

Keep Oyster if it fills a bundle, recipe, gift, Fish Pond, or collection goal.

When to sell or smoke it

Sell or smoke extra Oyster when you need gold and do not have a specific use for it.

Fish Pond and Roe

A Oyster Fish Pond can produce Roe, but output depends on pond population and daily rolls. Formula value: 50g Roe, then 100g Aged Roe.

Where & When to Find Oyster

Location

  • Ocean

Caught in Crab Pots placed in ocean water.

Time & Conditions

Any
Any weather

Difficulty & Catching Strategy

Difficulty: 0

Very Easy

Perfect for beginners

EasyHardLegend (110)

Crab Pot Behavior

Expert Tips for Oyster

Ocean Crab Pot catch. Medium value shellfish.

Recommended Tackle

Spinner

Faster bite rate

Best for: Farming XP quickly

Barbed Hook

Clinging to fish

Best for: Smooth/mixed behavior fish

Tackle requires an Iridium Rod. Purchase from Willy's shop at Fishing Level 6.

Sell Prices by Quality

Angler: Inactive
QualityPrice
Normal40g
Silver50g
Gold60g
Iridium80g

Smoked Fish Value

Artisan: Inactive

The Fish Smoker uses 1 Coal and doubles the fish sell price while preserving quality. Fisher or Angler changes the fish value first; Artisan then increases the smoked product.

Input QualityFish ValueSmoked Value
Normal40g80g
Silver50g100g
Gold60g120g
Iridium80g160g

Formula: fish sell price x 2. See the formula audit for source notes.

Uses for Oyster

  • Fish Pond
  • Sashimi

Did You Know?

Only certain oyster species produce pearls—the ones we eat typically don't.