It’s Artificial Lure here with your Wilmington, NC fishing report for Sunday, August 17, 2025. It’s been a classic summer Carolina weekend—sticky, warm, and just breezy enough to keep things interesting on the water. Sunrise came at 6:34 a.m., and we’re looking at a sunset about 7:55 p.m. today, giving us plenty of light for a full day of action on the Cape Fear and nearby beaches. Let’s get into it.
Tides today are working in our favor if you time it right. Low tide hit around 8:19 a.m., with a beefy high tide rolling in at 3:20 p.m., peaking just over 5.2 feet before dropping off to a low again close to 10 p.m., according to Tide-Forecast. That means mid-morning through late afternoon is prime, especially if you’re working the inshore creeks or looking for big surface bites along the banks.
Weather’s typical August fare—early humidity, creeping into the high 80s by midday, and a slight SW breeze at 10 knots offshore should make for manageable drift. No significant storms brewing, and light chop out at Masonboro and Carolina Beach Inlet, so it’s safe for small craft but bring the sunblock.
Fish activity remains hot. Red drum are thick in the creeks and marshes, and flounder are stacking up near the inlets. Reports from the Spreaker Wilmington NC Fishing Report and charter captains say Spanish mackerel are running strong near the beach, with some bigger kings farther out. In the Gulf Stream, boats pulling ballyhoo and flashy artificial skirts are still finding mahi, blackfin tuna, and the occasional sailfish on longer offshore runs, especially 10-15 miles out from Carolina Beach. Several parties this week boxed a mixed bag of reds, flounder, and trout inshore, along with a few citation-sized speckled trout at the jetties.
Best lures right now: gold spoons and topwater plugs at sunrise for redfish, Gulp shrimp on a jighead or live finger mullet if the bite turns picky. Spanish are smacking silver Got-Cha plugs and flashy Clarkspoons trolled behind the boat just outside the breakers. If you’re deep dropping for flounder or sea bass, switch to bucktail jigs tipped with squid or soft plastics.
Live bait is still king—menhaden and mullet for the big reds and trout, and live shrimp if you can get your hands on ‘em at the bait shop before sunrise. Offshore, nothing beats a fresh rigged ballyhoo.
For hot spots, Carolina Beach Inlet delivers consistent action for flounder and Spanish first thing in the morning on either side of the tide. Further up, try the docks and grass lines along Bradley Creek—early mornings have seen big reds cruising the shallows on higher tides, especially if you sneak in quietly with a kayak or skiff. If you want to chase bluewater beasts, offshore charters out of Wrightsville and Carolina Beach are still reporting steady mahi and wahoo bites—just check conditions before heading that far out.
That wraps up today’s Wilmington, NC fishing report. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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