NC Coast Fishing Report: Bite, Currents, and Hot Spots for September 3, 2025
03 September 2025

NC Coast Fishing Report: Bite, Currents, and Hot Spots for September 3, 2025

Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report - Daily

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Good afternoon from the North Carolina coast—Artificial Lure here with your September 3rd, 2025, Atlantic-side fishing report. Whether you’re casting off Oak Island, combing the surf at Atlantic Beach, or heading offshore, here’s what you need to know before you grab your tackle.

Sunrise this morning hit at 6:37 AM and we’ll see the sun set at 7:38 PM, giving you nearly thirteen hours of daylight on the water. According to tides4fishing, today’s tidal coefficient is on the lower side at 35 early, creeping up to 47 by sundown. That means the highs and lows aren’t too dramatic and currents are light, so expect a more subtle bite and slower-moving water—a good setup for finesse presentations.

The weather’s been cooperative but holds a northeast wind at 15 to 20 knots with the occasional gust to 25 this afternoon and seas standing at 4 to 6 feet, per the National Weather Service out of Wilmington. Those winds will start to ease late tonight, but it’ll stay choppy for small craft, so boaters use caution.

Let’s talk fish. Recent days have seen steady action inshore: slot and over-slot red drum are cruising the surf and marsh mouths, with speckled trout also putting in appearances especially early and late in the day. Flounder are picking up, particularly near structure—a handful of keepers have come from the backside of Fort Macon and the pilings under the Atlantic Beach bridge, with a few pushing the legal mark. Spanish mackerel and bluefish blitzes continue just beyond the breakers, especially near those tide rips off Bogue Pier and the shoals around Cape Lookout.

Offshore, king mackerel are still the headline, with boats out of Morehead City and Wrightsville reporting fast morning bites on the live-line and trolling decks. Dolphin (mahi) action has slowed but the ones being caught now are larger—look for weedlines and temperature breaks between 15 and 30 miles. Bottom fishing? Vermilion snapper and triggerfish remain reliable hauls for patient crews on shale and ledges in 80 to 120 feet.

As for what’s working, locals aren’t giving up their tried-and-true. The ChatterBait remains a favorite for those targeting inshore bass out of brackish backwaters, with both swimbait and craw-style trailers drawing reliable strikes. On the surf, cut mullet and fresh shrimp are top baits—almost always a win for drum and flounder. For artificial fans, gulp shrimp on a jighead in natural colors (like new penny or white), and popping cork rigs produce well around grass edges, especially as water clarity has improved post-blow. Dead-sticking FishBites on a double-drop rig is still a go-to for whiting, spot, and occasional pompano, especially as we head into the fall runs.

If you’re bass fishing in the creeks, a Big Bite Baits Scentsation Thresher Worm or 5-inch Senko can’t be beat right now—go green pumpkin or watermelon for the clearest water, black-and-blue for stain. Offshore trollers are pulling blue-and-white feathers for the last of the mahi, while king anglers favor live pogies or slow-trolled deep-divers.

Hot spots this week are the Oak Island surf near the pier, where drum and flounder are both chewing early and late, and the artificial reefs off Atlantic Beach—especially AR-315, which saw good king and Spanish reports on Tuesday. Don’t sleep on the Cape Lookout jetty either, as tides align for some strong trout action round dusk.

That’s the scoop for today here along the North Carolina Atlantic. Thanks for tuning in—be sure to subscribe, and tight lines till next time. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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