Winter Bite Heats Up: Bluefin Tuna, Reds, and More off North Carolina's Coast
02 January 2026

Winter Bite Heats Up: Bluefin Tuna, Reds, and More off North Carolina's Coast

Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report Today

About
Hey y'all, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to gal for fishin' the wild Atlantic waters off North Carolina. It's early January 2nd, 2026, and the ocean's callin' with that crisp winter bite. Sunrise hit around 7:14 AM at NC State Fisheries per Tides4Fishing, sunset's 'bout 5:15 PM—plenty of light for a solid day on the water. Tides are movin' strong today; high at roughly 6 AM near 2.7 ft, low 'round noon droppin' to near zero, then evenin' high pushin' 2.5 ft or more, accordin' to Tides4Fishing charts for Beaufort and Cape Hatteras from Tide-Forecast. Solunar activity's average to high, with peaks near dawn and dusk—fish gonna feed heavy then.

Weather's typical winter: chilly winds from the north post-cold front, per National Weather Service marine forecasts, seas 2-4 ft, but watch for pop-up t-storms. Bundle up, stay safe out there.

Fish activity's pickin' up now that recreational Atlantic bluefin tuna season cracked open yesterday, January 1st, says Island Free Press—big pelagics pushin' close to shore. Locals report steady reds and specks in the sounds, trout hittin' near inlets, and blackfish, sheepshead holdin' structure. Recent catches? Good numbers of slot reds, flounder startin' to show, and offshore blues plus false albacore tearin' it up last week. Bass inshore? Winter patterns with soft plastics and jigs dominatin', like green pumpkin worms and crankbaits from Major League Fishing reports.

Best lures right now: Saltwater Assassin's 4-inch Sea Shad unweighted for spooky reds, per Capt. George Hastick in Coastal Angler. Toss bladed jigs, spinnerbaits, or shallow crankbaits like Jackall in shad for reaction strikes. For bait, fresh shrimp or fiddler crabs rule piers and jetties—grab 'em at Frank & Fran's in Avon.

Hot spots: Hit Cape Lookout Bight for tuna and bottom dwellers on the incoming tide, or Ocracoke Inlet for reds and trout where currents rip. Structure at Harkers Island Bridge is gold too.

Get out there before the wind kicks—limits are waitin'!

Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more reports! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

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