North Carolina fishing reports
263 reports for North Carolina — what's biting, water temps, and where to focus.
Smokies trout prime up as mid-May temps hit the sweet spot
The USGS gauge 03512000 recorded 61°F and a flow of 194 cfs in the early hours of May 17 — conditions sitting squarely in the trout comfort zone for Great Smoky Mountains streams. Direct on-the-water reports for this specific region were limited this cycle, so this update blends sensor data with seasonal context. Hatch Magazine's current feature on caddis emergences speaks directly to what southern Appalachian trout streams typically serve up in mid-May: twilight caddis flights drawing rainbows and browns into feeding lanes that stay quiet most of the day. Gink and Gasoline (fly) recently flagged warm spring temperatures accelerating hatch timelines on mountain streams — meaning sulphurs and light cahills may be appearing earlier than usual. With flows at 194 cfs providing wading-friendly conditions and the New Moon reducing overnight light, conditions favor a productive nymph bite mid-day and quality dry fly windows at dawn and dusk.
Red Drum Surging From Pamlico Sound to Cape Lookout Shoals
Ryan of Hatteras Jack reports red drum making a strong push onto the surf at Hatteras and Ocracoke — and the pattern holds coast-wide. Steve of Chasin' Tails at Morehead/Atlantic Beach is seeing bull reds schooling around the Cape Lookout shoals, accompanied by good-sized bluefish working the same water. Inland on the Pamlico, Donald of Custom Marine Fabrication says slot-sized red drum are spread across nearly the entire Neuse River corridor. NOAA buoy 41037 recorded winds near 14 knots with comfortable air temperatures around 74°F this morning — conditions that should keep nearshore boats in play. Atlantic bonito continue to produce excellent action, according to Tex of Tex's Tackle, with fish hitting well from the Liberty Ship out to the 5-mile range off Wrightsville Beach. Morgan of The Reel Outdoors at Swansboro and Emerald Isle adds that surf fishing is finally picking up, with sea mullet, black drum, and the first pompano of the season coming off the beach.
Red Drum Making a Strong Push onto the OBX Surf
Red drum are the story this week on the Outer Banks. Ryan of Hatteras Jack reports surf action has come alive, with drum making a strong push onto the beaches and anglers catching good numbers along the stretch, per Fisherman's Post (NC). Water temperatures are running warm at 77°F per NOAA buoy 41025 offshore Cape Hatteras — a reading that draws migrating drum inshore in force. Down at Cape Lookout shoals, Steve of Chasin' Tails reports schools of bull red drum working alongside plenty of good-sized bluefish, per Fisherman's Post — Carolinas saltwater. Behind the Banks, Donald of Custom Marine Fabrication notes slot-sized redfish pushing into the Pamlico/Neuse corridor with the bite spread across the entire Neuse. The new moon this weekend produces strong spring tidal surges — plan on peak feeding windows during the strongest tidal flows, especially during the first and last hours of daylight.
Post-spawn largemouth targeting bluegill beds on the new moon
USGS gauge 02142900 is recording a critically low 2.17 cfs on the Catawba drainage — near-drought flow territory for mid-May — a signal that reservoir creek arms and tributary shallows are running clear and tight. Regional tournament activity confirms fish are biting: MLF News reports a Phoenix Bass Fishing League event wrapped its weigh-in at High Rock Lake in Salisbury on May 16, just east of the Catawba watershed, a strong regional indicator that piedmont NC reservoirs are in the thick of the post-spawn bass fishery. Tactical Bassin's current content identifies the bluegill spawn as fully underway across the Southeast, and with the new moon arriving today those spawning flats become a concentrated feeding zone for largemouth working the perimeter. No state agency or charter reports specifically address the Catawba or Roanoke systems this week; conditions on the upper Roanoke chain are inferred from seasonal patterns and the broader regional picture.
Red Drum Surge Onto OBX Beaches as Spring Surf Run Peaks
Ryan of Hatteras Jack (Fisherman's Post) reports surf action has come alive along the Hatteras/Ocracoke stretch, with red drum making a strong push onto the beaches and anglers finding good numbers — confirmation the spring drum run is in full swing at the Outer Banks. Water temps at 76°F (NOAA buoy 41025) are squarely in prime drum-feeding territory. Further south at the Cape Lookout shoals, Steve of Chasin' Tails (Fisherman's Post) is seeing schools of bull red drum alongside good-sized bluefish. Interior fish are in the picture too: Donald of Custom Marine Fabrication (Fisherman's Post) reports slot-sized red drum working the full length of the Pamlico/Neuse River system. Wave heights of 4.9 feet and winds near 10 knots are keeping conditions choppy but fishable. Offshore, South Atlantic red snapper seasons are expanding significantly in 2026 under new pilot programs, per Saltwater Sportsman — a noteworthy opportunity for OBX boats making shelf runs this summer.
Post-spawn bass and shellcracker bite heating up on NC piedmont lakes
USGS gauge 02142900 registered just 1.65 cfs as of the evening of May 12 — an unusually lean reading that signals parched feeder creeks across the Catawba and Roanoke drainages and points fish toward deeper reservoir pockets and main-lake structure. On the bass front, Tactical Bassin reports the post-spawn transition is fully underway, with multiple patterns converging simultaneously: topwater frogs over shallow heavy cover are drawing strikes, swimbaits skipped around submerged timber are triggering reaction bites, and finesse drop-shot rigs are the call for scattered post-spawn fish staging near structure. Wired 2 Fish flags May as the peak of the redear sunfish — shellcracker — spawn, calling it "the best bream bite of the entire year" as these fish stack on hard-bottom shallows. With the waning crescent moon dialing down overnight light pressure, plan dawn and dusk windows for the most reliable bass action, and work shellcracker flats during midday when the sun warms the shallows.
Smokies trout primed as mid-May temps hit the sweet spot
USGS gauge 03512000 is logging 61°F today — squarely in the prime feeding range for rainbow, brown, and brook trout across Western NC's mountain streams. At 230 cfs, flows are moderate and wadeable on most mainstem reaches. No specific Smokies-focused angler reports surfaced in this cycle's intel feeds, so conditions below are grounded in gauge data and seasonal context. That said, 61°F on a mid-May Appalachian stream typically signals the onset of some of the year's best dry-fly opportunities. MidCurrent's recent fly fishing coverage notes that hatches are beginning to "fire" and fish are pushing into the shallows — language that maps well to the caddis and sulfur activity typical of this window. Flylords Mag flags the Mother's Day Caddis Hatch as the "unofficial kickoff" of spring's peak fishing period, timing that aligns closely with current conditions. Nymph rigs, dry-dropper setups, and evening dry-fly presentations should all be in play.
Red drum flooding Pamlico Sound and Cape Lookout shoals in mid-May
Bull red drum are making a strong, widespread push across the NC coast this week. Steve of Chasin' Tails, per Fisherman's Post (NC), reports schools of bull reds actively working the Cape Lookout shoals, with good-sized bluefish in the same areas. Inside Pamlico Sound, Donald of Custom Marine Fabrication reports slot-sized red drum spread throughout the Neuse River bite zone. At Hatteras and Ocracoke, Ryan of Hatteras Jack says the surf has come alive with drum pushing hard onto the beaches. Nearshore variety is rounding out: Morgan of The Reel Outdoors at Swansboro/Emerald Isle notes sea mullet, black drum, and early big pompano showing in the surf — the pompano arrival flagged as notably early for that stretch of coast. NOAA buoy 41037 logged winds around 22 mph and air temps near 66°F on May 12. The waning crescent moon this week favors low-light morning and evening feeding windows.
Red drum surge onto Hatteras beaches as Outer Banks season heats up
Water readings at NOAA buoy 41025 show 76°F along the Diamond Shoals corridor, warm enough to trigger a strong red drum push along the Hatteras surf. Ryan of Hatteras Jack, per Fisherman's Post — Carolinas saltwater, reports the surf has come alive with red drum making a strong push onto the beaches and anglers catching good numbers along the stretch. South toward the Cape Lookout shoals, Steve of Chasin' Tails (Fisherman's Post — Carolinas saltwater) confirms schools of bull red drum working those waters alongside plenty of good-sized bluefish. Slot-sized drum are also pushing up the Pamlico and Neuse rivers, per Fisherman's Post (NC). Winds are running at a moderate 16–22 mph off both NOAA buoys this week. Spanish mackerel, typical when water temps reach this level, should be working nearshore rips as well. The waning crescent moon means quieter tidal swings — concentrate on incoming-tide windows along the Hatteras beach troughs for the most consistent drum contact.
Roanoke striper run closing out as post-spawn bass and bream hit prime form
USGS gauge 02142900 logged just 1.56 cfs at midday May 12 — a very low reading pointing to clear, thin conditions across the monitored drainage. No water temperature was returned from any gauge or buoy this cycle, and no region-specific shop or charter intel came through for the Catawba and Roanoke freshwater systems. The seasonal picture still coheres: Wired 2 Fish's current coverage calls May peak timing for redear sunfish moving onto spawning beds, noting it as one of the best bream bites of the year — a pattern that applies squarely to Catawba-area lakes and ponds. Tactical Bassin's post-spawn transition reporting confirms largemouth bass are schooling and accessible right now, with topwater poppers and swimbaits among the go-to presentations when fish bunch up. On the Roanoke, the celebrated spring striped bass run typically winds down through mid-May; the calendar says the window is narrowing and anglers targeting stripers should prioritize the next several days before this season closes out.
Smokies trout in the zone as mid-May hatches begin to fire
USGS gauge 03512000 logged 58°F and 226 cfs in a Smokies-area drainage early on May 12 — water temps sitting squarely in the trout feeding zone. No direct tackle-shop or guide dispatches from Western NC surfaced in this cycle's intel feeds, so conditions here draw on gauge data and seasonal context. At 58°F, trout metabolism and surface activity typically ramp up considerably: expect fish to be mobile, feeding both sub-surface and at the film during afternoon hours. MidCurrent's current Tying Tuesday roundup describes patterns covering "every feeding lane from the surface film to open water" as "hatches begin to fire and predatory fish start pushing into the shallows" — language that maps well onto mid-May Smokies dynamics. Flylords Mag identifies the Mother's Day Caddis Hatch as "the unofficial kickoff of the best of pre-runoff fishing." With water at this temperature, that window is either open or very close. Flows at 226 cfs are moderate and wading-friendly on most reaches.
Bull Reds Flood Cape Lookout Shoals and Pamlico as May Push Arrives
Schools of bull red drum are working the Cape Lookout shoals this week — Steve of Chasin' Tails reports solid action off Morehead/Atlantic Beach, with plenty of good-sized bluefish running in the same water, per Fisherman's Post (NC). On the Pamlico Sound side, Donald of Custom Marine Fabrication reports slot-sized red drum pushing throughout the Neuse River system, with the bite covering nearly the full stretch of the river. Along the Outer Banks surf, Ryan of Hatteras Jack confirms that red drum have made a strong push onto Hatteras and Ocracoke beaches. NOAA buoy 41037 recorded wind at 10 m/s (roughly 19 knots) Tuesday morning with air temps near 18°C — enough breeze to push bait and fish tight to surf edges and sound structure. Offshore, expanded red snapper access under the new South Atlantic EFP program opens May 22, per Saltwater Sportsman, giving anglers an extended window not seen at this scale in several years.