Cape Point Surf Fishing: Everything You Need to Know

From our sister site: Getting to Cape Point requires an ORV permit and a real 4×4. See Cape Hatteras ORV Permit and AWD vs 4WD for beach driving.

Last updated: May 2026. Cape Point is the most heavily managed beach in the National Seashore — closures rotate constantly for bird nesting, turtle nesting, and storm overwash. Always check the NPS beach access map the morning you go.

Cape Point is the southernmost reach of Hatteras Island, the spot where the beach turns sharply west and the Atlantic and the Gulf Stream collide in a deep-water rip just offshore. It is the most famous surf-fishing location on the East Coast and there are reasons.

It is also a place where first-timers routinely make rookie mistakes that cost them fish, time, or the truck. This is the practical guide.

Why It Fishes

Three things make Cape Point exceptional:

  • The rip current at the tip. The Atlantic flow from the north meets the gyre flow from the south. The collision creates a deep-water rip that pulls bait fish, dolphin, and predators into the same compressed feeding zone.
  • The bight. The southern face wraps around the point, creating a sheltered, slightly deeper trough on the inside. Drum, blues, and Spanish stack up there.
  • The deep water close to shore. Most OBX surf is shallow sandbars and troughs. At the Point, you can stand on dry sand and be near 20+ feet of water at the tip.

How to Get There

Three ways:

  1. Drive the beach. Take Ramp 43 or Ramp 44 from Highway 12 in Buxton. ORV permit required. See the permit walkthrough. Air down to 18-20 PSI before you hit sand.
  2. Walk from the lighthouse parking. Free parking at the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse, then walk a long mile of soft sand to the Point. Doable, but you’re hauling rods, cooler, sand spike, and bait that distance both ways.
  3. Drive to the closest legal ORV parking, walk the rest. Hybrid approach when ramps are restricted.

Closures: The Single Most Important Thing

Cape Point closes more often than any other beach on the seashore. Three causes:

  • Piping plover and oystercatcher nesting (March through August): Large buffers go up around active nests. Some years the entire Point is closed for the majority of spring and summer.
  • Sea turtle nesting (May through October): Smaller fenced areas, often nighttime driving restrictions.
  • Storm overwash: After a strong nor’easter, ramps 44 and the routes to the Point can be impassable for days.

The closures change weekly. The morning-of NPS beach access map is the only source you should trust.

When the Point Fishes Best

  • Mid-April through mid-May — spring citation drum run. The signature window. Cut bait on fish-finder or fireball rigs.
  • June through August — Spanish, blues, sharks, pompano in the wash on the south side.
  • Mid-September through mid-November — fall drum run. The other peak. October is legendary for night fishing.
  • Winter — striped bass, the occasional drum on warm days.

Tide-wise: the two hours either side of high or low slack is the standard window. The rip current at the tip moves bait constantly regardless of tide.

How to Fish It

Cape Point is not one spot — it’s three:

  • The tip: Where the beach turns west. The deepest water. Fish big baits on heavy gear for citation drum, sharks, and the occasional cobia.
  • The south face (the bight): Calmer water, slightly deeper trough. Better for slot drum, pompano, sea mullet, blues. The family-friendly side.
  • The north face: Standard surf-fishing dynamics. Sloughs, sandbars, troughs.

Most serious citation anglers fish the tip and the south face simultaneously — heavy rod on the tip with cut bait, lighter rod on the south face for whatever’s around.

Etiquette on the Point

The Point is a crowded fishery during the spring and fall runs. A few unwritten rules:

  • Don’t crowd another angler’s spread. A 20-yard buffer is standard.
  • If someone has multiple rods set, don’t fish between them.
  • If someone hooks a big fish, give them room to walk the fish down the beach.
  • Don’t drive between fishing setups and the water. Park behind, walk around.
  • Pack out everything. The Point gets crowded; trash from one weekend becomes a problem the next.

What You’re Up Against

The Point is famous, which means it is fished hard. On a peak fall weekend you may share the tip with 40 other trucks. The fishing is still excellent — the place produces fish year after year — but expectations should match the crowd. Locals who fish the Point regularly know which side of the rip is producing and when; vacationers often don’t, and the difference is real.

If you’ve got one shot at the Point during your trip, go early (sunrise on a moving tide), bring real gear, fish cut bait at the tip and a bottom rig on the south face, and don’t expect the parking lot to be empty.

If the Point Is Closed

It happens — sometimes for months. The alternatives:

  • Hatteras Inlet (south end of Hatteras Island, Ramps 55 and 59). Similar dynamic, smaller scale, similar species.
  • Oregon Inlet south side and the catwalk. The northern equivalent.
  • Frisco / Ramp 48 and 49. Less drama, real fish.
  • Ocracoke South Point. Ferry over. Quietest of the lot.

The Honest Read

Cape Point earns its reputation. A citation drum from the tip on a fall evening is one of the great moments in American surf fishing. The catch is that it is also a place where weather, closures, and crowds will frustrate you. Plan for the closures, fish the right tide, bring the right gear, and treat the spot with the seriousness it deserves. It will pay you back.

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