Dragonflies in North Carolina in April

Yes, April is a good month to see dragonflies in North Carolina. It is the 5th busiest month of the year, with 8,547 of the 65,970 sightings logged across the year (13%), based on verified iNaturalist records.

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By Tim, founder of Easy Street Markets. I maintain the wildlife database and verify every animal and source myself. Updated June 28, 2026.

Common Green Darner photographed in North CarolinaTwo-striped Forceptail photographed in North CarolinaEastern Ringtail photographed in North Carolina
Photos by iNaturalist observers, used under Creative Commons.

Good month for dragonflies in North Carolina

13%

of yearly sightings

8,547

records in April

#5

busiest month of 12

65,970

verified records a year

March 2.8%, April 13%, May 18.1%. Busiest month is June at 22.8%.

Best months: June, July, MayPeak season right now

65,970 verified observations of dragonflies in North Carolina, recorded across 12 months of the year on iNaturalist.

When dragonflies are recorded in North Carolina

Peak month

June

15,046 records (22.8% of the year)

Quietest month

December

96 records

MonthObservationsShare
January1270.2%
February2600.4%
March1,8372.8%
April8,54713%
Maypeak11,94318.1%
Junepeak15,04622.8%
Julypeak12,28318.6%
August9,43814.3%
September4,5246.9%
October1,4572.2%
November4120.6%
December960.1%

Dragonflies you are most likely to see

SpeciesVerified observations
Common Whitetail5,807
Eastern Pondhawk5,265
Blue Dasher4,855
Ebony Jewelwing3,423
Great Blue Skimmer2,883
Fragile Forktail2,511
Slaty Skimmer2,254
Widow Skimmer1,715

In North Carolina, April carries 13% of the year's dragonflies sightings, about 4.7 points above an even month-to-month split. That makes it the 5th busiest of the twelve months, out of 12 months with recorded activity.

Activity is rising from March (2.8%) into April, and it heads toward May (18.1%) after. The busiest month is June (22.8%), so if timing is flexible, that window is the safer bet.

The dragonflies most often recorded in North Carolina are Common Whitetail, Eastern Pondhawk and Blue Dasher. Those counts are annual totals rather than a April split, so treat them as which species you are likely to encounter, while the month figures above show how many sightings fall in April itself.

Which dragonflies you are most likely to see

  • Common Whitetail5,807 records
  • Eastern Pondhawk5,265 records
  • Blue Dasher4,855 records
  • Ebony Jewelwing3,423 records
  • Great Blue Skimmer2,883 records
  • Fragile Forktail2,511 records
Plan your tripAppalachian National Scenic Trail

Plan your dragonfly trip in North Carolina

Start with live tours near Appalachian National Scenic Trail, then compare a nearby stay and a broader wildlife backup before you lock in the trip.

Frequently asked questions

Can you see dragonflies in North Carolina in April?+

Yes. April accounts for 8,547 of the 65,970 verified dragonflies sightings logged in North Carolina across the year, which is 13% of the annual total.

Is April a good time to see dragonflies in North Carolina?+

April is the 5th busiest month. It is workable, though June and July is the stronger window for a reliable sighting.

What month is best for dragonflies in North Carolina?+

June is the single busiest month, with the broader peak running through June, July and May, based on 65,970 verified observations.

Which dragonflies are you most likely to see in North Carolina?+

The most-recorded species in North Carolina are Common Whitetail, Eastern Pondhawk and Blue Dasher, based on all-time iNaturalist counts.