North Carolina fishing reports
259 reports for North Carolina — what's biting, water temps, and where to focus.
Bluefish and Spanish mackerel heat up Outer Banks surf and nearshore
Tom at Hatteras Jack reports surf anglers connecting with big bluefish, fish to 30-plus inches, on casting metals and cut baits along the Hatteras and Ocracoke stretch, a standout result for early June on the Outer Banks. Spanish mackerel have pushed into nearshore areas in good numbers as well, per Fisherman's Post (NC). Farther up the coast toward Morehead and Atlantic Beach, Rich of Chasin' Tails confirms the bluefish bite remains strong for pier and surf anglers, with bonito also mixing in off the inlets. Inshore, red drum are present but scattered; Rich notes deeper holes are holding fish. Sea mullet are producing steady results in the Hatteras surf. The waning crescent moon provides favorable low-light windows for early morning sessions targeting both mackerel and big blues. No buoy data was available at report time, so verify current water temps and sea state locally before heading out.
Smokies Trout Shift High as Early Summer Warmth Arrives in the Mountains
The USGS gauge 03512000 recorded 65°F on June 9 — a threshold reading that signals the transition from spring to summer patterns across Western NC's trout waters. At 313 cfs, flows are moderate and wading conditions are accessible throughout most Smokies drainages. The key story right now is elevation: Flylords Mag recently highlighted brook trout "taking dries left and right" once anglers climbed above 2,800 feet, where tributary temperatures stay meaningfully cooler than valley floors. Rainbows and browns in lower runs will be most active in the first two hours after sunrise and the final hour before dark; midday fishing calls for getting weight down into cooler, oxygenated pockets near the bottom, a principle Gink and Gasoline underscored in recent nymphing coverage. Trout Unlimited's current tips on reading water are worth reviewing before your next outing — knowing where fish hold as temps climb separates productive days from blank ones.
Bass Running Strong on the Catawba as Post-Spawn Summer Patterns Take Hold
Tournament results out of Lake Norman signal that Catawba chain bass are cooperating as the season shifts into early summer. B.A.S.S. News reports a Bassmaster Open was recently contested on Lake Norman, and MLF News records a 24-lb, 11-oz five-bass limit from a Newton, NC angler at High Rock Lake in the BFL North Carolina Division — a clear indication that quality bass are active across the region's piedmont impoundments. USGS gauge 02142900 is registering just 0.3 cfs, pointing to very low tributary flow and concentrated lake conditions on the Catawba chain. On the Roanoke, the celebrated spring striped bass run has wound down; by June those fish have largely dispersed into deeper water or moved north. Post-spawn largemouths are transitioning off shallow flats onto mid-lake structure, and Tactical Bassin's post-spawn breakdown — crankbaits on offshore points and dropshot rigs around isolated structure — maps directly onto where Catawba fish should be positioning right now.
Spanish mackerel and bluefish fire up along Cape Lookout and Pamlico Sound
Spanish mackerel are pushing into nearshore waters in strong numbers as June gets underway across the Crystal Coast. Per Fisherman's Post (NC), Morgan of The Reel Outdoors in Swansboro/Emerald Isle reports mackerel moving in good numbers along the beachfront and nearshore zone, while Rich of Chasin' Tails at Morehead/Atlantic Beach confirms the same trend — surf and pier anglers there are connecting on bluefish, Spanish mackerel, and bonito. The bluefish bite stands out in particular: Tom of Hatteras Jack reports big bluefish to 30"+ crashing casting metals and cut baits in the Hatteras/Ocracoke surf, with sea mullet fishing holding steady on the same grounds. Inshore, red drum are present but scattered, holding in deeper holes and structural edges around Morehead City, per Fisherman's Post (NC). With mackerel and blues running strong and bonito making early appearances nearshore, this is shaping up as a productive early-summer window for both shore and boat anglers along this stretch.
Big blues and spanish mackerel light up the Outer Banks surf in June
Per Fisherman's Post (NC), Tom at Hatteras Jack reports bigger bluefish pushing to 30"+ in the OBX surf, hitting casting metals and cut baits along Hatteras and Ocracoke. That surf bluefish action is the standout story for early June, with sea mullet fishing also running steady in the area. North of the Banks, conditions paint a similar picture: Rich at Chasin' Tails (Morehead/Atlantic Beach) notes surf and pier anglers doing well with bluefish, spanish mackerel, and bonito, while Morgan at The Reel Outdoors (Swansboro/Emerald Isle) reports spanish mackerel pushing in strong numbers along the nearshore beachfront. Pulling spoons off the beach has been the go-to tactic for mackerel, a pattern Tex's Tackle confirms is working from Wrightsville Beach northward. Inshore, red drum are scattered but concentrated in deeper holes around structure near inlets, per the Morehead/Atlantic Beach report. No NOAA buoy readings were available for this update — verify local water temps and conditions at the dock before launching.
Post-spawn bass on the bite at Lake Norman as summer low water settles in
Post-spawn largemouth bass are confirmed on the Catawba system this week: B.A.S.S. News reports the 2026 Turtlebox Bassmaster Open concluded at Lake Norman, with the home-lake winner describing a strong final-day showing that required working the lake's structure carefully. USGS gauge 02142900 recorded just 0.47 cfs on June 8 in a Catawba-area tributary, a trickle-level reading signaling that summer low-water conditions are settling across the basin. Expect fish to concentrate around deeper structure and shaded creek arms as surface temperatures climb. On the Roanoke drainage, no fresh on-water reports came in this cycle. MLF News covered a recent BFL event at nearby High Rock Lake where Jacob Smith of Newton, NC, landed a tournament-winning 24-pound, 11-ounce bag of largemouth — a signal that NC Piedmont bass populations are in solid post-spawn form. Tactical Bassin notes a wobble-head jig paired with a shaky-head worm is a reliable early-summer converter for offshore bass. Last-quarter moon phase favors daytime bites.
High-country brookies taking dries as Smokies main stems warm toward summer
Water temps at 66°F recorded on USGS gauge 03512000 signal the Smokies' classic early-summer shift. Valley-floor streams are heating up, pushing rainbow trout toward their fastest, most oxygenated water, while native brook trout at higher elevations are coming into their own. Flylords Mag recently highlighted brookies 'taking dries left and right' once anglers pushed above roughly 2,800 feet in elevation, precisely the altitude where water stays cool enough to keep fish actively feeding through the day. On larger mainstem drainages, dawn and dusk windows are now the productive slots. During midday heat, Hatch Magazine's trout drought guidance points anglers toward pocket water and the turbulent heads of pools, where dissolved oxygen remains highest. Flow at 269 cfs (USGS gauge 03512000) is a workable summer level: wadeable but moving, with enough current to concentrate fish in predictable lies. Pack a mix of small nymphs and caddis or PMD dries for afternoon reaches.
Spanish mackerel flood nearshore as big bluefish rule the Hatteras surf
Spanish mackerel are the headline species along the NC Crystal Coast right now. Morgan of The Reel Outdoors (Swansboro/Emerald Isle) reports mackerel moving in strong numbers into nearshore areas and along the beachfront, and Rich of Chasin' Tails (Morehead/Atlantic Beach) confirms a productive mix of mackerel, bonito, and bluefish for surf and pier anglers — all per Fisherman's Post (NC). At Hatteras, Tom of Hatteras Jack is logging impressive bluefish to 30"+ in the surf on both casting metals and cut baits, with sea mullet fishing holding steady alongside. Inshore around Morehead and Atlantic Beach, red drum are scattered but turning up in deeper structure holes. No buoy data is available this cycle, so sea state and water temperature should be confirmed locally before launching. The Last Quarter moon this week eases overnight light pressure — expect the best daytime feeding windows along the nearshore and Pamlico Sound edges to be mid-morning through early afternoon.
Big bluefish and spanish mackerel running the Outer Banks beachfront
Bluefish to 30 inches and beyond are crashing the surf at Hatteras — Tom at Hatteras Jack reports fish hitting both casting metals and cut baits along the beachfront, per Fisherman's Post (NC). The bluefish bite is carrying across the broader Carolina coast: Rich of Chasin' Tails confirms surf and pier anglers out of Morehead/Atlantic Beach are connecting with bluefish, spanish mackerel, and bonito, while Morgan of The Reel Outdoors notes spanish mackerel pushing into nearshore areas in good numbers around Swansboro/Emerald Isle. Inshore, red drum are scattered but fishing the deeper holes has been productive. Sea mullet at Hatteras have held steady throughout. Offshore, gaffer mahi have been showing up out of Beaufort Inlet — a sign that warming blue water is within reach for an offshore run. The Last Quarter moon this week brings neap tides, a window that tends to steady the rip and reward lighter surf presentations.
Catawba and Roanoke bass settle into summer patterns under lean flows
USGS gauge 02142900 recorded a near-trickle flow of 0.52 cfs on June 8, signaling lean, likely clear conditions across the drainage. No water temperature came back from the gauge, though early June typically pushes surface temps on the Catawba chain of lakes and Roanoke corridor into the upper 70s to low 80s°F. No tackle-shop or charter reports specifically for these freshwater watersheds surfaced in the current feed. Drawing on bass technique content from Tactical Bassin and Wired 2 Fish, the early-summer picture is a familiar one: post-spawn largemouth are recovering and beginning to push offshore, and low, clear water compresses the productive bite into first light and the last hour before dark. Channel catfish typically take over the night shift this time of year, feeding aggressively on deep river bends. Crappie and bream are available but typically slow under summer sun.
Smokies Trout Seeking Cool Water as June Temps Push Higher
USGS gauge 03512000 recorded 66°F water temperature on the morning of June 8, with flows running at 241 cfs — placing this week firmly in warm-water management territory for the Smokies system. At 66°F, rainbow and brown trout remain catchable but are actively seeking thermal refuge in deeper pools, shaded canyon runs, and cold-water tributary confluences. Hatch Magazine's recent guide to fishing through drought and rising temperatures notes that conditions like these fundamentally shift trout behavior, compressing productive windows to the coolest hours — typically the first two hours after sunrise and the hour before last light. Trout Unlimited's brook trout coverage reinforces that the most heat-sensitive species will be retreating to higher-elevation headwaters at these temperatures. For Smokies anglers this week, the early-morning window is the primary target; terrestrial patterns, sulphur emergers, and deeply drifted nymphs should all be in the box, with water selection and presentation timing mattering more than fly choice.
Spanish Mackerel and Bluefish Running Strong Off Cape Lookout
Spanish mackerel are moving in good numbers along the nearshore and beachfront near Cape Lookout, with the bluefish bite running equally strong. Rich of Chasin' Tails reports that surf and pier anglers at Morehead and Atlantic Beach have been landing bluefish, Spanish mackerel, and bonito, with red drum scattered in deeper inshore holes. At Hatteras and Ocracoke, Tom of Hatteras Jack notes bigger bluefish -- some pushing past 30 inches -- hitting casting metals and cut baits in the surf, and sea mullet fishing remains steady on the beachfront. Morgan of The Reel Outdoors (Swansboro/Emerald Isle) confirms mackerel pushing in good numbers into nearshore areas as well, with bluefish action remaining consistently solid. Spoon fishing is the standout technique for mackerel, echoed across multiple Fisherman's Post (NC) correspondents. No buoy readings were available for this report cycle, so precise water temperatures are unknown, but the species mix points to nearshore conditions settling into the productive early-summer window.