North Carolina fishing reports
267 reports for North Carolina — what's biting, water temps, and where to focus.
Red Drum Surge onto Hatteras Beaches as Water Hits 73°F
Water temps at 73°F across both NOAA buoys near the Outer Banks signal prime late-spring conditions — and the red drum are responding. Ryan of Hatteras Jack, as reported by Fisherman's Post — Carolinas saltwater, confirms surf action has "come alive" with red drum making a strong push onto the Hatteras beaches, with anglers finding good numbers along the stretch. The Waning Gibbous moon adds low-light feeding windows at dawn and dusk, making those runs especially productive. Offshore, a significant development is in motion: per Saltwater Sportsman and Sport Fishing Mag, federally approved EFP pilot programs will give NC recreational anglers an expanded red snapper season in Atlantic waters this summer — one of the broadest access windows the state has seen in years. With water temperatures already in the low 70s and drum actively pushing the surf, the Outer Banks bite is tracking right on seasonal schedule.
Smokies Trout in Prime Form: 54°F Water and Spring Hatches Building
USGS gauge 03512000 recorded 54°F and 215 cfs in the Western NC drainage early this morning — a temperature that puts rainbow and brown trout firmly in their feeding lane. At this reading, fish are active across the water column throughout daylight hours rather than restricted to low-light windows alone. Field & Stream's current trout-insect primer highlights the four hatch groups driving early May action on mountain freestones: mayflies, stoneflies, caddisflies, and midges. Hatch Magazine's caddis emergence coverage notes that extended afternoon caddis flights are a hallmark of this seasonal window, capable of pushing trout to the surface in earnest. MidCurrent's weekly fly-tying roundup features midge-style patterns tailored for clear, pressured water alongside pine squirrel jig streamers built for rocky-bottom runs — both directly applicable to the tight corridors of Smokies streams. Flow is moderate and wadeable. Expect the strongest action mid-morning through late afternoon as water warms and insects begin to move.
Crystal Coast Spring Bite in Full Swing as Pamlico Sound Enters May
Coastal Angler Magazine's Crystal Coast May 2026 dispatch puts it plainly: spring fishing has arrived in earnest along NC's Crystal Coast and Cape Lookout corridor. NOAA buoy 41037 logged light winds of 4 m/s and an air temperature near 68°F early on May 4, though no surface water temperature reading was available from the station. The Waning Gibbous moon will concentrate the most productive feeding windows in the low-light hours around dawn and dusk. Sport Fishing Mag's May coverage notes black drum are actively transitioning along Mid-Atlantic barrier islands this time of year — a seasonal pattern that typically extends to the Cape Lookout inlets and the southern sound. Spotted seatrout and red drum are expected to remain the backbone species inside Pamlico Sound based on the region's typical early-May calendar, with inshore trips best timed to the first two hours of daylight and the initial flood of the incoming tide.
Red Drum Surge Onto Hatteras Surf as OBX Water Hits 75°F
Water temperatures of 73–75°F, recorded this morning by NOAA buoys 41013 and 41025, have the Outer Banks in prime spring form. Ryan of Hatteras Jack, per Fisherman's Post — Carolinas saltwater, reports the surf at Hatteras and Ocracoke has come alive — red drum are making a strong push onto the beaches with good numbers showing along the full stretch of shoreline. Further south along the NC coast, Fisherman's Post also notes solid bluefish action nearshore near Morehead and Atlantic Beach, with early-season black drum and pompano appearing at Swansboro and Emerald Isle. Coastal Angler Magazine's May Crystal Coast update independently confirms spring fishing is now "in full swing" across coastal NC. Fisherman's Post additionally reports the NC Wildlife Resources Commission adopted a temporary sheepshead harvest rule for Joint Fishing Waters this season — check current regulations before keeping fish. The waning gibbous moon and light winds set up productive early-morning tide-change windows heading into the week.
Catawba Bass Locked on Beds as Roanoke Striper Window Narrows
USGS gauge 02142900 logged just 9.55 cfs on the Catawba drainage before dawn on May 4 — low, clear conditions that reward finesse presentations and long fluorocarbon leaders. Per Wired 2 Fish, this is prime time for targeting spawning bass: Brandon Coulter's two-bait system — a swimbait to locate bed fish near shallow structure, a finesse plastic to seal the deal — translates well to the skinny coves and laydowns across the Catawba reservoirs. Crappie are likely near their spawn-window peak; Wired 2 Fish documented a 4.10-pound slab from a Mississippi reservoir on April 24, illustrating the caliber possible when fish are staging, a pattern that mirrors typical early-May conditions in NC. On the Roanoke, On The Water's May 1 Striper Migration Map notes post-spawn females pushing out of the Chesapeake — a sign the Roanoke's spring striper run is entering its late-season window. Tonight's waning gibbous moon sets up strong low-light windows at dawn.
Smokies Trout Prime Window: 60°F Water and May Hatches Converge
USGS gauge 03512000 recorded 60°F water and a 223 cfs flow on the afternoon of May 3 — conditions that place Western NC mountain trout squarely in their most active feeding range. At 60°F, rainbow, brown, and brook trout shift into sustained all-day feeding mode rather than seeking thermal refuges in deeper pools. Field & Stream published a timely trout-insect primer this week, noting that mayflies, stoneflies, caddisflies, and midges form the backbone of a trout's diet — and all four groups are in meaningful emergence in Southern Appalachian freestone streams through May. Flows at 223 cfs indicate manageable, wading-accessible conditions at most stream reaches. The waning gibbous moon supports strong feeding pushes at first and last light. This is one of the better early-May setups we're likely to see in the Smokies corridor before summer temperatures push water into the upper sixties and beyond.
Smokies Trout Prime Up as Little Tennessee Hits 52°F and 226 cfs
USGS gauge 03512000 recorded the Little Tennessee River at 52°F and 226 cfs on the morning of May 3 — a near-ideal temperature window for Western NC trout. Rainbows, browns, and native brook trout all feed aggressively through the upper-40s-to-mid-50s range, and current flows are moderate enough to wade primary runs without difficulty. Early May is when aquatic insect activity ramps up hard across Smokies streams: per Field & Stream's recent guide to trout aquatic insects, mayflies, stoneflies, caddisflies, and midges converge as the foundation of a trout's diet, and mid-spring is peak emergence for sulphurs, light cahills, and grannom caddis. The full moon on May 3 tends to dampen midday dry-fly action; expect the most aggressive surface feeding during the first and last hour of light. Nymph and emerger patterns should produce steadily throughout the day at the current 226 cfs.
Crystal Coast Spring Bite In Full Swing: Kings and Scamps Take Center Stage
Coastal Angler Magazine's Crystal Coast May 2026 report confirms spring fishing is "in full swing" along the NC coastline, with a separate Coastal Angler contributor noting that May has historically delivered strong action on king mackerel and scamp grouper. NOAA buoy 41037 logged winds at 11 m/s (about 21 knots) and air temperature at 59.5°F this morning; no water temperature reading was available. The full moon amplifies tidal exchange across Pamlico Sound, compressing bait at current edges and inlet mouths — historically one of the sharpest feeding triggers of the spring. Offshore, Cape Lookout's live-bottom ledges are the traditional staging ground for scamps through mid-May, while king mackerel hunt nearshore structure and rip lines. Inshore on Pamlico Sound, red drum and flounder are typical for this spring window, with fish transitioning from wintering grounds to shallow grass-flat margins. Check state regulations before harvesting any species.
Red Drum Surge Hits Hatteras Beaches as Water Temps Reach 74°F
Water temperatures at NOAA buoy 41025 registered 74°F on May 3, and the Outer Banks surf is producing. Ryan of Hatteras Jack reports that red drum have made a strong push onto the beaches along the Hatteras and Ocracoke stretch, with anglers finding good numbers in the surf, per Fisherman's Post Carolinas saltwater — the headline story on the Banks this week. Bluefish are also in the regional mix: Steve of Chasin' Tails reports good-sized fish active along the Morehead and Cape Lookout corridor. Atlantic bonito have been running well to the south, with Tex of Tex's Tackle noting excellent nearshore action near Wrightsville Beach in the 1–5 mile range. A temporary rule adjustment for sheepshead harvest in NC joint fishing waters has been recently adopted — verify current state regulations before targeting that species. Full moon conditions are driving strong tidal swings, a key factor for timing surf drum sessions. NOAA buoys 41025 and 41013 show winds of 8–9 m/s across the region.
Full Moon Pushes Bass onto Beds; Roanoke Stripers Prime as Flow Runs Low
USGS gauge 02142900 is logging a lean 9.55 cfs as of the evening of May 1, signaling low, clear water across the measured Catawba tributary — conditions that typically push fish tight to structure and reward precise presentations. No water temperature was recorded at this station, but the NC Piedmont's early-May baseline typically sits in the low-to-mid 60s°F. Tonight's full moon is the headline event: largemouth bass on both Catawba and Roanoke impoundments should be locked onto spawning beds or staging just off them, and sight-fishing shallow flats with patience can produce outsized fish right now. On The Water's May 1 striper migration update confirms the annual post-spawn push is accelerating along the Atlantic seaboard — a seasonal cue that parallels landlocked striper behavior on the Roanoke system. Wired 2 Fish and Outdoor Hub both report big crappie staging for spawn on Southern reservoirs this week, a pattern that translates squarely to NC piedmont lakes.
Spring Warmth Reaches 74°F Along Outer Banks
NOAA buoys recorded 74-degree water off the Outer Banks this weekend—significantly warmer than the low-to-mid 50s reported by Fisherman's Post for Hatteras and Ocracoke earlier in April. That source noted cool water had kept surf fishing slow with dogfish sharks dominating action. Ocean Isle Fishing Center, per the same outlet, predicted red drum would be among the first to activate once temperatures rose. That inflection appears to be arriving now. Conditions vary by location: buoy 41013 in the southern sound shows calmer 2.6-foot swells, while offshore buoy 41025 reports 6.6-foot waves. Watch for red drum activity to surge this week as the warming trend continues.
Crappie Spawn Firing at Falls Lake
White and black crappie are on beds in the upper reaches. Spider rigging and dock shooting producing limits for patient anglers.