Summer pattern — tailing fish on flooded flats.
Inshore migration calendar
North Carolina Outer Banks migration calendar.
- Mid-Atlantic
- North Carolina
- 7 species tracked
The Outer Banks is the meeting point of cold-water and warm-water Atlantic species — striped bass winter here, cobia and Spanish mackerel show up each spring, and the fall bull red drum run on Cape Lookout and Cape Hatteras is one of the most famous events in American saltwater fishing.
Fishing regulations change every season. This page is a summary maintained by Bield — bag limits, exact dates, and species-specific rules must be verified with North Carolina Division of Marine Fisheries before each trip.
What's running now
June on the water.
Map
North Carolina Outer Banks hotspots.
Productive locations
- Cape Lookout
- Oregon Inlet
- Hatteras Inlet
- Pamlico Sound
Active this month
- Red DrumGood
- Speckled TroutGood
- Southern FlounderGood
- Spanish MackerelGood
- CobiaGood
- BluefishFair
All species
Sorted by current month.
- Red DrumSciaenops ocellatusGoodFull Red Drum calendar for North Carolina Outer BanksBest months: September · OctoberTop lures: Live mullet under popping cork, Cut mullet on bottom, Gold spoons
- Speckled TroutCynoscion nebulosusGoodFull Speckled Trout calendar for North Carolina Outer BanksBest months: No peak month identified
Topwater dawn/dusk on flats.
Top lures: Soft plastic paddletails on jigheads, MirrOlure suspending plugs, Live shrimp under popping cork - Southern FlounderParalichthys lethostigmaGoodFull Southern Flounder calendar for North Carolina Outer BanksBest months: September · October
Summer pattern.
Top lures: Live finger mullet, Live mud minnows, Gulp! shrimp on jighead - Spanish MackerelScomberomorus maculatusGoodFull Spanish Mackerel calendar for North Carolina Outer BanksBest months: September · October
Resident fish through summer.
Top lures: Clark spoon trolled, Gotcha plugs, Small metal jigs - CobiaRachycentron canadumGoodFull Cobia calendar for North Carolina Outer BanksBest months: April
Summer cobia on structure.
Top lures: Live eels, Bucktail jigs, Whole crab on bottom - BluefishPomatomus saltatrixFairFull Bluefish calendar for North Carolina Outer BanksBest months: November
Most fish gone north.
Top lures: Metal-lipped poppers, Diamond jigs, Cut bunker chunks (wire leader) - Striped BassMorone saxatilisAbsentFull Striped Bass calendar for North Carolina Outer BanksBest months: No peak month identified
No striped bass in coastal NC summer.
Month-by-month
Top 5 species, full year.
Quick reference for trip planning across the year. Each cell shows the typical migration status for that month.
| Species | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Red Drum | ||||||||||||
| Southern Flounder | ||||||||||||
| Spanish Mackerel | ||||||||||||
| Speckled Trout | ||||||||||||
| Cobia |
Regional notes
Top species — the longer read.
Red Drum in North Carolina Outer Banks
Resident year-round throughout NC and Lowcountry. Fall bull red run on Cape Lookout and Outer Banks September–November is one of the iconic American saltwater events.
Speckled Trout in North Carolina Outer Banks
Year-round resident with strong winter (deep-hole) and summer (grass-flat) patterns. Topwater dawn/dusk fishing through warm months.
Southern Flounder in North Carolina Outer Banks
Same pattern with peak fall run September–November. NC fall closure typically October–November. SC and GA seasons vary year to year.
Marine forecast
NOAA Zone AMZ153Wind, swell, and tide-stage forecasts that drive whether fish are feeding inshore or holding offshore.
State agencies
Bag limits, slot rules, and seasonal closures live with the agencies — verify before keeping fish.
Real-time migration alerts for North Carolina Outer Banks.
Bield: Fish ties NOAA buoy data, water-temperature readings, and your saved species list together — and alerts you when arrivals reach your home water.
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