
11 January 2026
Coastal NC Winter Report: Sea Mullet, Puffers, Reds & Trout Biting Near Beaches, Inlets
Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report Today
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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina fishing report.
We’re on a classic mid‑winter pattern along the coast this morning. According to Surfline’s Oceanana Pier tide table, around Atlantic Beach we’ve got a predawn high just after 1 a.m. and a morning low right around 7:30 a.m., with the second high early afternoon. That gives you moving water at first light and again toward lunchtime, perfect windows to work the inlets and nearshore structure. Tide-Forecast’s Atlantic Beach table lines up with that and puts sunrise about 7:15 and sunset around 5:15, so your prime bites are lining up with that falling morning tide and the afternoon push.
NOAA’s Wilmington marine forecast has us in a stable winter setup: cool air, seasonably cold water, light to moderate northwest to north winds early, easing and swinging more northerly, with seas mostly 2 to 4 feet. That’s very doable for nearshore reefs and the first few miles off the beach, but as always, watch the afternoon gusts and keep one ear on the VHF.
Fish activity is what you’d expect for January, but there’s life out there. According to the Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report Today podcast, boats working just off the beach are finding scattered **sea mullet**, **puffers**, and a few **black drum** on bait near the bars, with better numbers where that tide breaks over hard bottom. Near the inlets and back along the jetties, there are still some **slot redfish** and winter **speckled trout** hanging tight to deeper seams and eddies, feeding short but steady around the moving water.
Best baits and lures right now are all about subtle profiles and scent. The local report out of Wilmington has shrimp and **fresh cut mullet** doing the heavy lifting for reds, black drum, and sea mullet on double-drop rigs with 2–3 oz of lead, fished just outside the breakers. For artificials, think winter:
- 3–4 inch **paddle‑tail swimbaits** on 1/4–3/8 oz jigheads in natural trout or mullet colors
- Slow‑worked **MirrOlure MR17s** and soft jerkbaits for specks along channel edges
- Small **Gulp! shrimp** in new penny or pearl, dragged slow on the bottom for mixed bag action
Most reports from the last couple days have folks picking 6–12 fish per half‑day nearshore when they stay on the bait: handfuls of sea mullet and puffers, a couple of reds or drum, plus bonus trout or bluefish when birds give away a quick feed. Offshore, when boats sneak out between fronts, there’ve been some winter **black sea bass** and a few **king mackerel** on the deeper wrecks, but that’s a longer run and very weather‑dependent.
Couple of hot spots to circle on your chart:
- **Cape Lookout Shoals / East Side of the Cape**: Work the edges of the shoals and the sloughs just inside the hook on that falling tide. Bottom rigs with shrimp for sea mullet and drum, then switch to a slow‑rolled paddle‑tail for reds sliding up onto the warmer sand pockets.
- **Around Atlantic Beach – Oceanana Pier to AR‑315**: The nearshore artificial reefs off Atlantic Beach are holding winter sea bass and occasional kings when temps line up. Jig small metal (1–2 oz) right over the structure, or drop squid-tipped bottom rigs for a steady pick of bass and grunts.
If you’re shore‑bound, try the **Fort Fisher and Carolina Beach surf** on that afternoon push with shrimp or Fishbites for sea mullet and drum; move every 20–30 minutes until you find a cut with some life.
That’s your North Carolina Atlantic update from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss tomorrow’s report.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
We’re on a classic mid‑winter pattern along the coast this morning. According to Surfline’s Oceanana Pier tide table, around Atlantic Beach we’ve got a predawn high just after 1 a.m. and a morning low right around 7:30 a.m., with the second high early afternoon. That gives you moving water at first light and again toward lunchtime, perfect windows to work the inlets and nearshore structure. Tide-Forecast’s Atlantic Beach table lines up with that and puts sunrise about 7:15 and sunset around 5:15, so your prime bites are lining up with that falling morning tide and the afternoon push.
NOAA’s Wilmington marine forecast has us in a stable winter setup: cool air, seasonably cold water, light to moderate northwest to north winds early, easing and swinging more northerly, with seas mostly 2 to 4 feet. That’s very doable for nearshore reefs and the first few miles off the beach, but as always, watch the afternoon gusts and keep one ear on the VHF.
Fish activity is what you’d expect for January, but there’s life out there. According to the Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report Today podcast, boats working just off the beach are finding scattered **sea mullet**, **puffers**, and a few **black drum** on bait near the bars, with better numbers where that tide breaks over hard bottom. Near the inlets and back along the jetties, there are still some **slot redfish** and winter **speckled trout** hanging tight to deeper seams and eddies, feeding short but steady around the moving water.
Best baits and lures right now are all about subtle profiles and scent. The local report out of Wilmington has shrimp and **fresh cut mullet** doing the heavy lifting for reds, black drum, and sea mullet on double-drop rigs with 2–3 oz of lead, fished just outside the breakers. For artificials, think winter:
- 3–4 inch **paddle‑tail swimbaits** on 1/4–3/8 oz jigheads in natural trout or mullet colors
- Slow‑worked **MirrOlure MR17s** and soft jerkbaits for specks along channel edges
- Small **Gulp! shrimp** in new penny or pearl, dragged slow on the bottom for mixed bag action
Most reports from the last couple days have folks picking 6–12 fish per half‑day nearshore when they stay on the bait: handfuls of sea mullet and puffers, a couple of reds or drum, plus bonus trout or bluefish when birds give away a quick feed. Offshore, when boats sneak out between fronts, there’ve been some winter **black sea bass** and a few **king mackerel** on the deeper wrecks, but that’s a longer run and very weather‑dependent.
Couple of hot spots to circle on your chart:
- **Cape Lookout Shoals / East Side of the Cape**: Work the edges of the shoals and the sloughs just inside the hook on that falling tide. Bottom rigs with shrimp for sea mullet and drum, then switch to a slow‑rolled paddle‑tail for reds sliding up onto the warmer sand pockets.
- **Around Atlantic Beach – Oceanana Pier to AR‑315**: The nearshore artificial reefs off Atlantic Beach are holding winter sea bass and occasional kings when temps line up. Jig small metal (1–2 oz) right over the structure, or drop squid-tipped bottom rigs for a steady pick of bass and grunts.
If you’re shore‑bound, try the **Fort Fisher and Carolina Beach surf** on that afternoon push with shrimp or Fishbites for sea mullet and drum; move every 20–30 minutes until you find a cut with some life.
That’s your North Carolina Atlantic update from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss tomorrow’s report.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI