
08 October 2025
Early Fall Fishing Bonanza on the NC Coast - Your Oct 8th Fishing Report
Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report - Daily
About
Good morning, anglers—Artificial Lure here with your October 8th, 2025, fishing report for the North Carolina Atlantic coast. Conditions are classic early-fall, and there’s plenty of action along the beaches, inlets, and piers, so let’s get right into what you can expect if you’re hitting the salt today.
**Tide and Weather:**
We’re coming off some moon-driven king tides along the coast. For Atlantic Beach, low tide rolls in around 3:44 a.m., high tide peaks at 10:16 a.m. with over five and a half feet, then we drop again at 4:50 p.m., followed by a smaller high at 10:36 p.m. Sunrise is 7:08 a.m., and sunset hits at 6:38 p.m., giving you a solid window of daylight. According to the National Weather Service, we’ve got east winds this morning at 10–15 knots with seas running 4 to 6 feet offshore, calming a bit closer to shore. These winds are set to shift but expect a persistent onshore push and choppy surf—Small Craft Advisories are up, so boaters need to take heed.
**Fish Activity and Catches:**
Big tides and coastal low pressure have upped water levels and moved fish around. The inshore scene has been on fire with **speckled trout** and **puppy drum** (redfish) working the grass lines and creek mouths, especially on the flooding tide. Flounder are still in the mix, but a lot of folks are catching and releasing due to tighter regulations; most keepers caught have been thick and healthy.
Reports from Atlantic Beach Pier and Oceanana Pier show steady action on **bluefish**, with Spanish mackerel blitzes popping off during the high tide push. Surf anglers working the deeper sloughs at dawn have found big pompano and some solid sea mullet. Offshore, boats that made it out before the seas kicked up found **king mackerel** just past the shoals, and even a few late-season mahi on the temperature breaks.
**Best Lures and Baits:**
Given the stained water from the churned-up surf, you want flash and vibration. Silver spoons, Got-Cha plugs in pink and chartreuse, and classic white bucktail jigs have been top producers on the piers and beaches. For trout and drum, try soft plastics in “electric chicken,” chartreuse, or natural shrimp colors on 1/4–3/8 oz jigheads—don’t hesitate to dip the tail in chartreuse dye if you’re fishing murky water. Over the reefs and nearshore wrecks, slow-trolled Clarkspoons and Drone Spoons behind planers are still drawing strikes from hungry Spanish and kings. Cut mullet and fresh shrimp have been the ticket for bottom species like sea mullet and pompano in the surf.
**Hot Spots to Try:**
- **Bogue Inlet Pier**—excellent action with trout and blues, especially right after sunrise on the incoming tide.
- **Cape Lookout Shoals**—king mackerel are staging up, and live bait rigged on light wire is a prime bet if you can get outside safely.
- The surf at **Emerald Isle** around the accesses near the point has been a reliable spot for red drum and sea mullet on rising tide.
With the big tides, fish will push up into areas you might not expect—look for pockets of calmer water behind points and sandbars, and don’t be afraid to work the skinny water hard at first light. If you’re wading, keep safety in mind with the higher surf and occasional rip currents, especially as conditions can worsen quickly with this week’s forecasted coastal low.
That’s your up-to-the-minute report from the salt, folks. Thanks for tuning in to your local angling expert Artificial Lure—be sure to subscribe to keep your lines tight and your coolers full. 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
**Tide and Weather:**
We’re coming off some moon-driven king tides along the coast. For Atlantic Beach, low tide rolls in around 3:44 a.m., high tide peaks at 10:16 a.m. with over five and a half feet, then we drop again at 4:50 p.m., followed by a smaller high at 10:36 p.m. Sunrise is 7:08 a.m., and sunset hits at 6:38 p.m., giving you a solid window of daylight. According to the National Weather Service, we’ve got east winds this morning at 10–15 knots with seas running 4 to 6 feet offshore, calming a bit closer to shore. These winds are set to shift but expect a persistent onshore push and choppy surf—Small Craft Advisories are up, so boaters need to take heed.
**Fish Activity and Catches:**
Big tides and coastal low pressure have upped water levels and moved fish around. The inshore scene has been on fire with **speckled trout** and **puppy drum** (redfish) working the grass lines and creek mouths, especially on the flooding tide. Flounder are still in the mix, but a lot of folks are catching and releasing due to tighter regulations; most keepers caught have been thick and healthy.
Reports from Atlantic Beach Pier and Oceanana Pier show steady action on **bluefish**, with Spanish mackerel blitzes popping off during the high tide push. Surf anglers working the deeper sloughs at dawn have found big pompano and some solid sea mullet. Offshore, boats that made it out before the seas kicked up found **king mackerel** just past the shoals, and even a few late-season mahi on the temperature breaks.
**Best Lures and Baits:**
Given the stained water from the churned-up surf, you want flash and vibration. Silver spoons, Got-Cha plugs in pink and chartreuse, and classic white bucktail jigs have been top producers on the piers and beaches. For trout and drum, try soft plastics in “electric chicken,” chartreuse, or natural shrimp colors on 1/4–3/8 oz jigheads—don’t hesitate to dip the tail in chartreuse dye if you’re fishing murky water. Over the reefs and nearshore wrecks, slow-trolled Clarkspoons and Drone Spoons behind planers are still drawing strikes from hungry Spanish and kings. Cut mullet and fresh shrimp have been the ticket for bottom species like sea mullet and pompano in the surf.
**Hot Spots to Try:**
- **Bogue Inlet Pier**—excellent action with trout and blues, especially right after sunrise on the incoming tide.
- **Cape Lookout Shoals**—king mackerel are staging up, and live bait rigged on light wire is a prime bet if you can get outside safely.
- The surf at **Emerald Isle** around the accesses near the point has been a reliable spot for red drum and sea mullet on rising tide.
With the big tides, fish will push up into areas you might not expect—look for pockets of calmer water behind points and sandbars, and don’t be afraid to work the skinny water hard at first light. If you’re wading, keep safety in mind with the higher surf and occasional rip currents, especially as conditions can worsen quickly with this week’s forecasted coastal low.
That’s your up-to-the-minute report from the salt, folks. Thanks for tuning in to your local angling expert Artificial Lure—be sure to subscribe to keep your lines tight and your coolers full. 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