Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report - Daily

"North Carolina's Atlantic Summer Slam: Macks, Reds, and Offshore Beasts"


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Hey y’all, this is Artificial Lure with your June 6, 2025, Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina fishing report. Let’s get into what you can expect up and down the coast today, from the tides and sunrise to the hot bite and the lures you want tied on.

Weather-wise, we’re rolling into another beautiful early summer day. The winds are fairly light, the days are warming steadily, and we’re seeing those stable summer patterns where the bite really turns on. Sunrise hit at 5:53 AM and sunset is at 8:18 PM, which gives you a long window to get lines in the water. Tidal movement is solid: high tide was at 5:37 AM, low tide at 12:07 PM, and the next high swings in at 6:18 PM—plenty of opportunity to play those moving waters.

The fishing is heating up right along with the weather. According to Coastal Angler Magazine, the baitfish have flooded in—menhaden, finger mullet, and shad are everywhere, pulling in big schools of Spanish mackerel and bluefish nearshore. Trolling Clark spoons or similar metal lures behind planers early is the ticket for those macks and blues. If you see fish busting on top, get after ’em with a 5/8 or 3/4 ounce metal jig. Quick retrieves are working best, so pack a few different weights and colors to match the hatch.

Inshore, red drum are settling into that summer groove. The reds are hitting topwaters like the MirrOlure Top Dog Jr. and Top Pup early and late, especially around marsh edges and oyster rocks. When the sun gets higher, switch to soft plastics—Berkley Gulp or Powerbait Bonga Shrimp on jig heads—or slow-roll a swimbait like the Powerbait CullShad through the deeper holes and around dock pilings. Live bait, especially finger mullet or shrimp under a popping cork, is still a sure thing for both red drum and speckled trout if artificials aren’t getting it done.

Offshore, reports from the past few days have been all about big cobia, some hefty king mackerel, and the occasional mahi-mahi just outside the inlets. And don’t overlook those bottom spots—sea bass and flounder have both been showing up for folks bouncing jigs or dropping cut bait on structure.

Hot spots to hit: Wrightsville Beach jetties are a classic for early morning reds and trout. Bogue Inlet Pier and the nearshore reefs just off Atlantic Beach are loaded with Spanish and blues right now. Matt Paylor from Sound-N-Sea Charters points out you should keep an eye on bait balls—where there’s bait, there’s almost always a predator lurking, like a bonus cobia or two.

That’s today’s scoop from the Atlantic coast. Thanks for tuning in! 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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Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report - DailyBy Quiet. Please