Fall Fishing on the NC Coast - A Brisk, Bountiful Bite Awaits
04 October 2025

Fall Fishing on the NC Coast - A Brisk, Bountiful Bite Awaits

Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report - Daily

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Artificial Lure here with your Atlantic Coast North Carolina fishing report for Saturday, October 4, 2025. It’s early October and we’re waking up to the kind of classic coastal morning where the air’s brisk, the wind’s got some bite, and the fall bite is shaping up strong.

Let’s talk weather first. According to the NOAA forecast, we’ve got northeast winds around 15 knots today, dialing back from some rough days earlier this week. Seas are running 4 to 6 feet offshore, with a moderate chop inshore. It’s still breezy out there—so for folks in smaller boats, stick close to shore or the sounds until conditions lay down a bit more.

Sunrise hit at 6:58am, and sunset will close in at 6:42pm. Prime time for fishing in October means low and incoming tides, especially around the early morning bite. Tide-Forecast.com shows high tide at Cape Hatteras this morning around 4:38am, with low tide set for 10:39am—a classic window for flounder, drum, and specks working the marsh grass edges.

Fish activity’s been on the upswing. Recent charter reports out of Ocean Isle Beach have seen solid inshore catches—black drum, speckled and grey trout, flounder, big whiting, and a good run of puffers and pigfish. Offshore waters picked up king mackerel action; multiple trips pulled in three to five king macks apiece, with some big red snapper released and cobia landed just outside the ledges. Shark and bluefish bites remain consistent, and pinfish have been coming in by the bucketful—great for bait right now.

For tackle, Strike King Lures recommends switching gears to more natural fall presentations. With water temps dropping and fish feeding up, live and fresh cut bait have taken center stage: menhaden, mullet strips, and shrimp are top picks for drums, trout, and flounder. Artificial lures should mimic the season’s forage; think gold spoons, white or chartreuse paddle tails, and MirrOlure suspending twitch baits for specks. If you’re heading for kings, slow-troll live menhaden or blue runners on wire; dusters in pink or chartreuse are the ticket when the water’s got some color.

Now, for the local hot spots—if you’re shore-bound, head over to the South Jetty at Atlantic Beach or try the Mobro Marine East Bulkhead Wharf; jetties are seeing good fall runs and plenty of company for swapping stories. Inshore, the points and creek mouths north of Surf City and south past Cape Lookout are producing; look for irregularities in the surf, holes, and sandbars where bait congregates. Those working harbors, the marina entrances at Browns Creek and Chicopit Bay are great bets in a moderate chop.

If you can get outside, the Christina Ledge and drop-offs near Cape Hatteras are holding king mackerel and red snapper. Keep an eye out for birds working and bait balls pushing in the afternoons, and remember—the offshore bite’s hot but the chop is no joke.

That’s all from Artificial Lure—thanks for tuning in. Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report.

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