Early Fall Bite on the NC Coast - Wahoo, Reds, and Bluefish Abound
20 September 2025

Early Fall Bite on the NC Coast - Wahoo, Reds, and Bluefish Abound

Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report - Daily

About
Artificial Lure here, checking in from the North Carolina coast with your Atlantic fishing report for Saturday, September 20, 2025—a classic early fall morning with a little patchy fog hugging the marshes and sound. The air is sitting crisp, the water temps cooling off a bit, and we’ve got that northeast breeze that usually spells hot fishing along our stretch of the Atlantic.

We’ve got a high tide rolling around 7:01 a.m. and another low at 12:44 p.m., according to the Cape Lookout ocean chart, and the solunar tables are pegging today for high fish activity. Sunrise this morning hit at 6:53 a.m., with sunset falling at 7:05 p.m.—plenty of daylight to get your lines wet.

Weather-wise, the National Weather Service out of Morehead City forecasts northeast winds starting out light this morning, building to 10–15 knots by afternoon. Nearshore, you’re looking at 1–3 footers, but wave action will build behind tonight’s cold front—so plan your offshore trip with an early start, and keep your eyes on the forecast for changing seas.

Now, let’s talk fish: Hatteras Harbor’s latest report says the offshore fleet is bringing in good numbers of **wahoo** again—Griffin Shields snagged a 47-pounder this week, and there’s blackfin tuna in the mix. Midweek, there was even a sailfish released. Nearshore, it’s steady action on **red drum, bluefish**, and **trout**, especially on the falling tides. Reports from Atlantic Beach to the Outer Banks echo this—it’s been “all the bluefish you want” up and down the sandbars lately, and the surf trout bite is showing up right on schedule.

As for baits and lures: Offshore, you want to pull deep-diving plugs (blue/white or chartreuse) and skirted ballyhoo for wahoo. Tuna are still hitting cedar plugs and small feathers. Inshore, you can’t go wrong with fresh-cut mullet or live shrimp under popping corks for drum and trout. Gulp! Swimming mullets and MirrOlure MR17s are both producing inside the sounds and along surf points for specks. For bluefish, silver spoons and Got-Cha plugs fished fast will keep your rod bent.

Hot spots today:
- **Cape Lookout Shoals**—work the sloughs for trout and drum on the incoming
- **Oregon Inlet**—solid numbers of bluefish and good flounder action on jigged soft plastics
- **Hatteras Inlet**—mix of slot drum and bluefish, with the chance of big wahoo just a few miles offshore

Tides are running high this morning, pushing bait up along the grass lines, so work those edges early. Once that water starts dropping after lunch, fish the deeper holes and runouts—those predators will be waiting. Offshore, get out early and plan to be back in before seas kick up tonight behind the front.

Thanks for tuning in to your local Atlantic fishing report—remember to subscribe so you never miss a bite! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI