Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report Today

Late Fall Fishing Frenzy on the North Carolina Coast


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Artificial Lure here with your November 19, 2025, fishing report straight from the Atlantic coast of North Carolina.

First up, the **sunrise hit at 6:30 a.m., with sunset tonight at 5:01 p.m.** You’re looking at a solid day length for chasing everything that bites. Tides are in that shifting fall mode—today at Atlantic Beach, expect a high tide just after 6 a.m., with low tide rolling in around noon, and another high at 6 p.m., according to local tide charts. This sets up a near-perfect window for morning and evening bites, right as that tidal movement’s kicking up bait and action.

Weatherwise, the National Weather Service says the coast will start calm this morning with some light west winds, picking up a bit into the afternoon but nothing that should keep you off the water. Seas are settling after a few days of chop, now running in that 3 to 5-foot range off Hatteras, which makes small-craft fishing a green light. Air temps are hovering upper 50s early, sneaking toward 66 by midafternoon—classic late-November comfort.

Now, onto the fishing—reports right out of Hatteras Harbor Marina say inshore boats yesterday brought in great hauls of **Red Drum, Bluefish, Black Seabass, and Sheepshead**, with offshore guys scoring **King Mackerel, Blackfin Tuna, Wahoo**, and a few late-running Dolphin. They even had a couple Sailfish releases, which is a fall bonus. Things have stayed steady for boats fishing inside and just outside the inlets.

Bait and lure talk—this time of year, when the water cools and bait balls start to move, live and cut mullet are kings for the surf and sound, especially if you’re targeting drum or bluefish. For artificials, anglers are having luck with bladed jigs in creeks for red drum, soft plastics rigged weedless near the grass edges, and on the piers, classic Gotcha plugs and shiny spoons for blues and Spanish. Offshore, most have been pulling ballyhoo for Wahoo and Mahi, while Sabikis for bait bring up plenty of small bottom fish for grouper. A few of the bass guys fishing closer to brackish rivers report best results flipping swim jigs and throwing crankbaits on rocky points—Major League Fishing notes that precise presentation with green pumpkin or shad colors is producing solid fish.

For hotspots, you can’t go wrong working the **Point at Cape Lookout**—if you hit moving water, there’ll be red drum and scattered trout. The **Hatteras Inlet channels** are producing everything from drum to sheepshead, and the deeper holds near **Atlantic Beach Bridge** are hot for black sea bass on cut bait. If surf is your thing, try near the **Oceanana Pier at sunrise or sunset**—lots of bait, lots of bluefish.

Fishing’s good and should only get better as water temps drop and the fish fatten up for winter. That’s the story this morning: fair weather, clean tides, and a wide-open bite from inshore grass lines to the bluewater edge.

Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s North Carolina surf and sea report—don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates and tackle tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report TodayBy Inception Point Ai