June 2025 — NC Outer Banks: Offshore at Full Production, Gulf Stream Tuna, Mahi on Weedlines. June is a early summer month with water in the 66-72°F range — flounder peak; sea bass season; offshore canyon fishing builds. Here’s the full breakdown of what’s biting, where to fish, and the most productive tactics.
What’s Biting — June 2025
Primary targets this month: Marlin, Yellowfin Tuna, Mahi, Cobia.
Marlin
Marlin (primarily blue and white) on the Big Rock tournament (June) is the world’s most famous blue marlin event; canyons produce white marlin and blues in summer. Trolled skirted lures (Black Bart, Joe Yee), rigged ballyhoo, or pitched live bait. White marlin is the smaller, schooling species; blues are the trophies.
Yellowfin Tuna
Yellowfin tuna on the Gulf Stream edge — under 30 miles from Oregon Inlet — yellowfin year-round with peak in spring and fall. Chunking (cut sardine, butterfish) at anchor, live bait drifting, or trolled feathers and cedar plugs. Heavy stand-up tackle (50-80 lb class) for the bigger grades.
Mahi
Peak mahi season on the weed lines and Gulf Stream rips 25-40 miles offshore, May through October. Look for weed lines, color changes, floating debris, and frigatebirds. Trolled ballyhoo with skirts (blue/white, pink/white), or live pilchards pitched to schools. Bull and cow pairs in spring; schoolies (3-12 lb) summer.
Cobia
Cobia around the Cape Lookout shoals, the Cape Point area, the nearshore wrecks (USS Schurz, Indra), and bait pods on the beach — keep an eye on stone crab and shrimp buoys for cruising fish. Live eels, large pinfish, and 3-6 oz bucktails.
Water Conditions & Patterns
Water temperatures are running 66-72°F. Flounder peak; sea bass season; offshore canyon fishing builds. The OBX inlets move ocean water in and out of the massive Pamlico/Albemarle sound system — Oregon, Hatteras, and Ocracoke inlets all push hard on outgoing. Surf fishing for big drum at Cape Point and Hatteras is tide-and-current driven.
Check the NOAA marine forecast and tide charts before launching. Wind direction often matters more than wind speed for inshore fishing — clean water beats churned water nine times out of ten.
Tactics & Tackle for This Month
- Peak striper inshore. Surf, jetties, bays — fish are everywhere. Live bait (bunker, eels) and trolled tubes both work.
- Fluke opens. Bay and inshore drift fishing — bucktail with Gulp! or strip-bait teaser combos.
June Outlook
Early summer apex — peak tarpon, peak red snapper opener (Gulf), peak striper (NE).
Regulations Reminder
Cobia: 36″ fork length, one per harvester (FL state waters — verify current rules). Tuna: NOAA HMS permit required. Strict size and bag limits — verify current NOAA rules. Marlin: HMS permit required. Blue 99″ LJFL minimum; white 66″ LJFL minimum. Most tournaments catch-and-release. Always verify current state regulations before each trip — slots, bag limits, and seasons change.
Local Resources
Bait & Tackle: Hatteras Jack (Rodanthe, 252-987-2428); Frank & Fran’s (Avon); TW’s Bait & Tackle (Pirate’s Cove); Red Drum Tackle (Avon); Tradewinds (Ocracoke).
Public Boat Ramps: Oregon Inlet Marina, Hatteras Harbor, Frisco Cove, Ocracoke ramp, the Bonner Bridge area, numerous Pamlico Sound sound-side ramps.
Charter Fishing: $1,200-$2,500 offshore (Hatteras Gulf Stream); $600-$900 inshore/sound; $1,000-$1,500 nearshore.
More NC Outer Banks Resources
NC Outer Banks Fishing Guide · NC Outer Banks Seasonal Calendar · All NC Outer Banks reports →
Reports updated every Thursday on fishing.digital.
