The Outer Banks runs about 130 miles from the Virginia line down to Ocracoke Inlet, and almost every mile of it holds surf-fishable water. “Fish anywhere” is not useful advice, though, when you’ve got one week of vacation and you want to actually catch something. This is the index — the major spots, what each one does, and what to expect.

The Geography in Three Pieces

  • The northern beaches (Corolla, Duck, Southern Shores, Kitty Hawk, Kill Devil Hills, Nags Head, South Nags Head): Family beaches, hotels, rentals. Town-managed. Beach driving restricted in summer. Piers are here. Easier access, more crowded.
  • Hatteras Island (Rodanthe, Waves, Salvo, Avon, Buxton, Frisco, Hatteras Village): National Seashore. ORV permit territory. Cape Point, the inlets. Wilder, less developed, the heart of OBX surf fishing.
  • Ocracoke Island (ferry-only access from Hatteras or Cedar Island): The quietest. Long stretches of undeveloped beach. Worth the ferry.

The Cultural Spots

  • Cape Point — The most famous surf-fishing spot on the East Coast. Spring and fall citation drum, summer Spanish and blues, year-round drama. Full guide.
  • Oregon Inlet (south side and the catwalk) — Tide-driven, big-fish, accessible by truck or by walking the bridge catwalk.
  • Hatteras Inlet (north side, Ramps 55 and 59) — Similar inlet dynamic to Oregon, less pressured.
  • Ocracoke South Point — The quietest of the inlet spots. Ferry over, fish all day.

The Piers

Piers are the simplest way to fish the OBX without learning the surf-fishing learning curve. No license needed (pier’s blanket license covers you). Tackle rental on site. Family-friendly. Full pier guide.

  • Jennette’s Pier (Nags Head) — The flagship. Concrete, NC Aquarium-operated.
  • Avalon Pier (Kill Devil Hills) — Classic wooden pier.
  • Nags Head Pier — Whalebone Junction area.
  • Outer Banks Fishing Pier (Nags Head) — Southernmost of the Nags Head trio.
  • Rodanthe Pier — Hatteras Island’s surviving pier.
  • Avon Pier — Working-class pier, locals’ choice.

The ORV Ramp Map

If you have an NPS ORV permit, the entire beach is accessible by ramp. The ramps fishermen care about most:

  • Ramp 4 (Coquina Beach) — Easy access, family-friendly.
  • Ramps 23 and 27 (Salvo) — Less crowded, good slough fishing.
  • Ramps 30, 34, 38 (Avon) — Solid summer fishing.
  • Ramps 43 and 44 (Cape Point) — Gateway to the famous one.
  • Ramps 48 and 49 (Frisco) — Underrated for pompano and sea mullet.
  • Ramps 55 and 59 (Hatteras Inlet) — Inlet-edge big-fish water.
  • Ramps 67, 70, 72 (Ocracoke) — Quietest of the OBX.

Individual ramp pages with typical species, parking notes, and current closure status are linked from each.

Sound vs. Surf

When the wind is wrong for the ocean — usually SW or S — the sound side is the play. The Pamlico and Roanoke sounds hold puppy drum, speckled trout, flounder, and the occasional striped bass. Less dramatic than the surf, but you can fish protected water and still catch a cooler.

  • Avon sound side — protected water, good for sight-fishing puppy drum on a falling tide.
  • Salvo / Waves sound side — kite-surfing spots double as fishing spots.
  • Hatteras Inlet sound side — strong current edges, real big-fish potential.
  • Oregon Inlet sound side — the catwalk and the back side.

How to Choose for Your Trip

  • Family vacation, no truck, want to catch fish: A pier (Jennette’s is easiest).
  • Family vacation, have a truck and ORV permit: Coquina Beach, Ramps 23-27 (Salvo), or Ramps 48-49 (Frisco).
  • Serious about citation drum: Cape Point, Oregon Inlet, Hatteras Inlet.
  • Bad wind on the ocean: Sound side.
  • Want solitude: Ocracoke.

What to Read Next

From our sister site: For 4×4 access to each of these areas — Cape Point, Avon, Hatteras Inlet, Ocracoke, Carova — see OBX Off-Road Beach Access.