Herein, the fluid flow pattern in a continuous casting slab strand with varied degree of clogging of the submerged entry nozzle is measured using nail boards in industrial trials. The influence of clogging on meniscus velocity, top surface position, surface level fluctuation, and slag entrainment of the strand is investigated. The number density and area fraction of nonmetallic inclusions including Na 2 O and K 2 O‐bearing entrained slag ones within the subsurface of steel slabs are inspected using an automatic scanning electron microscope (SEM). The flow pattern in the strand periodically transforms from a double roll flow to a complex flow and/or a single roll flow. The fluid field in the continuous casting mold is unstable and asymmetric under the condition of varied degree of clogging with time. The variation of the meniscus velocity and the surface level fluctuation with time is stochastic. The percentage of >3 mm level fluctuation increases from 4.7% to 10.6% with a serious clogging of the submerged entry nozzle. The amount of entrained slag inclusions with serious clogging is approximately 1.6 times than that with slight clogging. In addition, slag entrainment mechanisms of the shear‐layer instability and the vortex formation are discussed.