Artificial Lure here with your Atlantic Coast North Carolina fishing report, Friday October 31, 2025. Our fall is holding strong—let’s get into the details for today and what’s happening out on the water.
First off, the weather’s got a west wind rolling at 15 to 25 knots with seas running 4 to 6 feet nearshore according to NOAA’s Wilmington desk. That Small Craft Advisory sticks until about 2 PM—so the morning bite’s gonna be bumpy unless you’re on bigger water, but after lunch, things calm down. Air is crisp, the pressure high, and high pressure will take over fully by the weekend, bringing calmer seas and benign conditions. If you’re heading out, check your gear and watch for wind gusts.
Tides today along Oak Island show a low tidal coefficient: that means the tidal swing is minimized, so currents will be gentle early, picking up a notch midday, ending with a moderate swing. Not huge water movement—a prime set up for inshore bite windows. Sunrise checked in at 7:28 AM, and you’re looking at sunset around 6:18 PM. With slow tides early, best action should be midday through the evening.
Let’s talk fish activity. October’s abundance means coastal anglers have been reporting great numbers of **red drum**, **speckled trout**, and **Spanish mackerel**. Reports from Carolina Sportsman and local podcasts like Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Daily Fishing Report say reds are especially active, stacking up in the marshes and at ocean inlets. Trout have moved shallow, hitting hard on moving tide over grass beds and dropoffs. Spanish macks are blitzing bait balls just off the beach.
Recent catches show boaters pulling five to eight keeper reds per trip near Wrightsville and Topsail, with trout limits caught from Little River north to Bald Head. Nearshore, Spanish and a handful of blues are being nabbed; offshore, grouper and snapper are finally coming over the rails with high success on deep reefs, especially south of Cape Fear. The OBX piers have seen black drum, puppy drum, and spot—the fall run is full on.
For bait and tackle, here’s what’s working:
- **Inshore reds and trout:** Soft plastics—especially paddle tails like Gulp Shrimp and Strike King’s Swim’n Caffeine Shad in new penny or electric chicken. Topwaters are still drawing early morning strikes—try a spook or Rapala Skitterwalk near grass beds and oyster shoals.
- **Spanish and blues:** Gotcha plugs and Stingsilvers, especially chrome and chartreuse, are hot off the piers and beaches.
- **Offshore reefs:** Live menhaden, frozen cigar minnows, and jigs tipped with cut squid pull up grouper and snapper. Carolina Sportsman suggests braided line for grouper—to muscle them out fast.
- **Pier bite:** Live shrimp and cut mullet are consistent, tossed under a popping cork or bottom rig.
Best bait shops are slinging plenty of fresh shrimp and mullet—get ‘em while they’re cold. And word is, Berkley PowerBait Crash Craws and DOA shrimp soft plastics have been running out the doors.
Hot spots today:
- **Masonboro Inlet:** Reds schooling on the outgoing tide; trout moving up creeks with cleaner water.
- **Oak Island piers:** Mixed bag—trout early, reds midday, and maybe a shot at a nice black drum as the sun drops.
- **Little River jetties:** Flounder and slot drum on live mullet.
- **AR-425 artificial reef:** Grouper and snapper for those who get offshore.
A couple of reminders—flounder season closes today, so get your last legal keeper before midnight. And as always, stay safe in rough seas and watch for fast-approaching squalls late afternoon as that ocean temperature drops.
Thanks for tuning in to your local fishing report—remember to subscribe so you don’t miss a bite or updated rig tip. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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Published on 2 days, 3 hours ago
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