Artificial Lure here with your June 21, 2025, Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina fishing report. The first light cracked the eastern horizon at 6:02 AM, setting up a warm, breezy summer Saturday. Expect sunset tonight at 8:26 PM. According to Surfline’s Oceanana Pier tide calendar, we’re looking at a morning high tide around 3:46 AM, a low at 9:47 AM, another high at 4:22 PM, and the last low just before 11 PM—today is a double-high, double-low cycle, perfect for chasing moving fish up and down the water column.
Weather-wise, June has delivered classic Carolina conditions: warm, lighter winds (with the occasional squall sneaking through), and rising water temps fueling the bite. That heat’s pulled in clouds of bait—menhaden, finger mullet, and mullet—so the predators are right behind. The best use of your time is to match the hatch: get those cast nets ready if you’re planning to soak live bait, but artificial lures are producing too.
Spanish mackerel and bluefish are thick from Wrightsville up through the Crystal Coast, with the bite best on the outgoing tide. Trolling Clarkspoons or casting 5/8oz metal jigs when you see the birds working will put fish in the cooler. Bluefish are crashing topwater plugs and spoons along the beaches and are always game for a fight. While Atlantic bonito are mostly gone for the summer, don’t be surprised if you spot cobia shadowing bait balls, rays, or even sea turtles; keep a dedicated cobia rod rigged and ready with a large bucktail or live baitfish.
Bottom fishing has been excellent out past 120 feet. Anglers are hauling up triggerfish, grouper, and big vermilion snapper. Nearshore reefs (like AR 315, 320, and 330) are giving up flounder on soft plastics and bucktails, plus a nice push of gray trout. Inshore, red drum are feeding best around visible bait. Early and late, fish marsh edges with topwater plugs (the MirrOlure Top Dog Jr. and Top Pup are local favorites), or drift live shrimp or cut menhaden under a popping cork for steady action. Soft plastics and slow-rolled swimbaits fished near docks are also putting reds on the deck during midday heat.
Offshore, the yellowfin tuna blitz is on in the northern Outer Banks, and mahi are still hot from Hatteras to Carteret County. King mackerel are running strong, especially off the southern piers.
For hotspots today, check Cape Lookout for cobia and bait balls, and target the nearshore reefs for flounder and gray trout. The Wrightsville Beach jetties and the Oceanana Pier are both firing for Spanish and bluefish on moving tide.
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