Outer Banks Surf Fishing in April

Last updated: May 2026

April is when the Outer Banks surf comes alive. Water temperatures rise through the 50s into the low 60s, and the migration pours through. This is the month most locals circle on the calendar — the puppy drum bite is at its peak, the bluefish run is on, and the variety of what shows up on a single tide can be wild.

What’s biting

Puppy drum. Peak month. Slot-sized reds (18-27″) stack up in the wash, particularly on rising tides and around inlet cuts. Fresh cut mullet on a fish-finder rig is the standard. Some days the bite is silly.

Bluefish. The “big blue” run hits — 5-12 pound choppers chasing bait through the suds. Metal jigs, plugs, or cut bait on heavy wire leader (they will bite through mono).

Sea mullet. Still going strong through mid-month, fading as water warms past 60°.

Sea trout (speckled and gray). Trout start showing in the inlet mouths and adjacent beach. MirrOlures, soft plastics on jig heads, or live shrimp under a float.

Black drum. Big spawning drum push through. These are the 30-50 pound class fish — catch-and-release only above the slot.

Cobia (boat fishery mostly, but sight-cast from piers possible by late month).

Regulations

Red drum slot: 18-27″, one per person per day. Anything over 27″ must be released — and the circle-hook rule matters for the big spawners. Use non-stainless circle hooks for natural bait, and release oversized fish in the water without lifting them by the lip.

Bluefish: 3 fish per person per day, no minimum size in NC ocean waters (confirm at NCDMF).

Tactics

Two-rod setup is the move. Heavy stick with cut bait for drum and big blues, lighter rod with metal or plug for active blues. Watch for diving birds — that’s the bluefish run on bait.

Tides matter. Fish the last two hours of the rising tide and the top of the high through the first hour of the drop. That’s when bait pushes into the slough and predators follow.

Where to fish

The whole 70-mile Seashore is in play. Oregon Inlet (both sides), Pea Island, Salvo, Avon, Cape Point (when accessible — piping plover closures begin), Hatteras Inlet, Ocracoke. Piers are all open by mid-April.

This is the month to fish if you only have one week a year on the Outer Banks.

See the full OBX Species Calendar for a year-round overview, or jump to an adjacent month:

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