Coastal Carolina Saltwater Fishing Report: Winter Patterns and Hotspots
10 December 2025

Coastal Carolina Saltwater Fishing Report: Winter Patterns and Hotspots

Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report Today

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This is Artificial Lure with your coastal Carolina saltwater report.

Up and down the North Carolina Atlantic side, we’re sitting on a cool, settled early‑winter pattern. According to the National Weather Service marine forecasts out of Morehead City and Wilmington, high pressure is draped over the coast, giving us light north to northeast winds in the morning, picking up a bit by afternoon, with seas generally 3 to 5 feet offshore and a light chop inside. Skies are mixed sun and clouds, and the cool air has pushed water temps down into that mid‑50s to low‑60s band nearshore.

Tides are running mid‑range. Tide-Forecast for Cape Hatteras shows a predawn low around 5 a.m. and a late‑morning high near 11:30, similar timing for Atlantic Beach and the Oceanana Pier. That gives you a nice moving‑water window from first light through late morning, then again on the afternoon fall.

Sunrise along the central and northern beaches is right around 7 a.m., with sunset close to 4:55–5:00 p.m., so your prime bite windows are that dawn high‑incoming and the last two hours of daylight on the outgoing.

Fish activity has shifted to classic winter patterns. Coastal Angler Magazine’s winter East Coast outlook notes that by December the big striped bass are sliding through the Mid‑Atlantic and into the Carolinas, and that Cape Lookout can see excellent winter blitzes of stripers and mixed bait. Inshore, they call this a “sleeper” season for redfish and speckled trout from the Outer Banks down through Wilmington, with fish schooled tight on mud flats and deep creek bends.

Reports from local shops and docks this week have been steady, not crazy:
- Speckled trout limits and near‑limits inside Bogue and Core sounds, with a mix of 14‑ to 20‑inch fish and a few gators.
- Red drum schooled up in the skinny water behind Emerald Isle and around the marshes of Wrightsville and Masonboro, mostly slot fish with a few over.
- Nearshore, boats working just off the beach from Hatteras down to Topsail are finding small false albacore, sea mullet, and some gray trout on the reefs and hard bottom.
- Offshore out of Hatteras and Oregon Inlet, the usual handful of hardy crews have picked at yellowfin tuna and the odd wahoo on those temperature breaks.

Best baits and lures right now:

- For **speckled trout**:
Soft‑plastic paddletails and flukes on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads, in natural or electric chicken colors, are putting numbers in the boat. MirrOlure suspending plugs in 808 or chartreuse patterns are drawing the bigger bites on the slower tide. Live shrimp and mud minnows under a popping cork are still money anywhere you can find clean, moving water.

- For **red drum**:
Gold spoons and 3–4 inch shrimp or gulp‑style plastics on light jigheads. On the flats at mid‑day, a simple Carolina‑rigged cut mullet or fresh shrimp set quietly on the edge of a school will out‑fish flashier stuff.

- For **stripers** around bridges and inlets:
One‑ounce bucktails with a soft‑plastic trailer, small metal jigs yo‑yoed through the marks, and shallow‑running plugs around light lines at night.

- **Nearshore bottom** action:
Two‑hook dropper rigs with small strips of squid or fishbites are taking sea mullet and gray trout on the nearshore reefs and livebottom.

Couple of hot spots to circle on your map:

- **Cape Lookout Bight and the Shoals**: On a clean incoming tide, the bars and sloughs off the point can stack with trout, drum, and the odd striper. Work the edges of the breakers with soft plastics and keep an eye out for birds on small bait balls.

- **Masonboro Inlet and the backside marsh**: From the jetties back into the creeks, this stretch is classic winter redfish and trout water. Fish the rocks with MirrOlures on the falling tide, then slide into the creeks with jigheads and live bait as the water drains off the flats.

If you’re heading out, dress for that damp northeast chill, watch those afternoon winds, and keep an eye on the tide so you don’t trap yourself in the backwaters on the low.

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