Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report Today

Coastal NC Fishing Report: Trout Storming Inshore, Mackerel Offshore as Winds Ramp Up


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Artificial Lure here with your Tuesday, November 18th, 2025 fishing report for the Atlantic Ocean off North Carolina. Let’s dig right in—this cold snap has really given the bite a shake-up, and if you’re angling today, there’s plenty you’ll want to know before you hit the water.

First, **weather**: early mornings are crisp, with temps hovering in the upper 40s and rising into the low 60s by afternoon. Winds are blowing N to NE at 15 to 25 knots, so expect rolling seas of 4 to 7 feet if you’re heading offshore. It’s a classic November setup—keep an eye on those gusts and dress accordingly. [National Weather Service out of Morehead City confirms today's marine advisory, so plan for bumpy rides.]

**Tidewise**, at Oak Island, the sun popped up right around 7:20 am and will duck back behind the horizon just after 6:34 pm. We’re looking at a high tide at 5:58 am, a mild midday low at 12:06 pm, and the afternoon high rolling in at 6:14 pm. These moving tides right around dawn and dusk are primetime for most species, and with a high solunar activity rating, fish are up and prowling. [Tides4Fishing charts pinpoint today’s major and minor feeding windows for best luck.]

**Fishing action** has been lively: inshore, the speckled trout and puppy drum have been stars of the show. Reports out of Hatteras and the southern beaches say anglers are catching solid numbers of specks up to 5 pounds, with most action coming during falling tide on live shrimp and chartreuse soft plastics. Black drum and sheepshead are holding near docks, bridges, and oyster beds, eager to crunch a well-presented fiddler crab or shrimp on a jig.

**Offshore**, when the seas allow, king mackerel remain steady—Hatteras boats landed fish tipping the scales at 41 pounds just days ago, mostly on slow-trolled live menhaden or dead cigar minnows. Blackfin tuna and the occasional dolphin (mahi) are still making an appearance beyond the break, especially on the warmer breaks of water. For those chasing bragging rights, a handful of sailfish were caught and tagged this past week. With the changing winds, bottom fishers are still finding sea bass and triggers out deep.

**Best baits and lures:** For trout and red drum, it’s tough to beat a 1/4 oz jighead paired with a paddle-tail swimbait in electric chicken or natural mullet patterns. Popping cork rigs with live shrimp remain effective, especially around creek mouths at high tide. Those eyeing sheepshead should stick with fiddler crabs or sand fleas on a stout Carolina rig close to pilings.

Offshore, nose-hooked live menhaden are money for mackerel; if you’re working artificials, flashy spoons or blue/white skirted trolling lures do the trick. For tuna, troll cedar plugs and small feathers behind the boat, especially near temperature breaks.

**Hot Spots:** Oak Island and Masonboro Inlet offer prime access to the inshore bite, particularly at sunrise. For offshore hunters, the Hatteras Bight is the call—kings are stacking up on the shoals and wrecks in 60 to 80 feet. Inshore, Core Creek near Morehead and the Cape Lookout rock jetty have been pumping out keeper trout this week.

Shark-watchers, you might hear talk of tagged white sharks pinging off Beaufort—so mind your releases, and keep your camera handy if you’re lucky enough to spot one.

That wraps up your Tuesday fishing scoop! Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe for your daily fix, and keep those reports and photos coming. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report TodayBy Inception Point Ai