Season, Timing & Conditions
Understanding when greenheads are active — and what conditions make them worse — is one of the most practical tools you have for avoiding them.
The Greenhead Season: Late June Through August
Greenhead fly populations typically emerge in mid-to-late June and remain active through early September, with peak numbers and worst activity concentrated between mid-July and early August. If you’re planning a beach trip and greenheads are a concern, early June and post-Labor Day visits will almost always be calmer.
June
Emerging
Early July
Active
Mid July
Peak Season
August
Peak Season
September
Declining
Time of Day Matters
Greenheads are exclusively daytime biters — they are essentially inactive at night. But within daytime hours, their aggression peaks during the hottest part of the afternoon, typically between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. If you can be on the beach early in the morning or plan to head in before mid-afternoon, you’ll face far fewer flies. Early morning beach walks are almost entirely greenhead-free even during peak season.
Wind Direction: The Biggest Factor on Any Given Day
Experienced Jersey Shore beachgoers know to check wind direction before they decide where to set up for the day — and for good reason. Greenhead flies normally stay near the marsh edge. When westerly winds (blowing from land to sea) pick up, they push flies out of the marshes, across the back bays, and directly onto beach areas. A calm morning can turn into a fly-swarmed afternoon within 30 minutes of a wind shift.
Conversely, a strong ocean breeze (easterly wind) is your friend. It pushes flies back toward the marsh and, since greenheads are relatively weak fliers, they struggle to make headway against a consistent sea breeze. Checking the forecast for a consistent easterly component is one of the best advance indicators of a fly-light beach day.
The effect is even more pronounced for towns where the barrier island is narrow — in places like Wildwood Crest, ocean breezes can largely clear greenheads from the beach. In wider areas closer to the marsh, even a sea breeze may not keep all flies away.
Local Tip
That’s exactly why we built Flies on the Beach — a real-time fly report for specific Jersey Shore towns, updated daily through the season. Before heading out on a summer day, check the report to see where conditions are favorable and which beaches are getting hit.