Madison River Montana Fishing — Live Conditions, Hatch Chart & Reports
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Madison River, Montana

Earthquake Lake to Ennis — A river of legend with 200 miles of prime freestone trout water

📍 Southwestern Montana 🎣 Rainbow Trout, Brown Trout 📅 Best: Jun, Jul, Sep, Oct 📊 USGS 06037100
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About the Madison River
Southwestern Montana · Earthquake Lake to Ennis — Blue Ribbon Freestone

The Madison River flows north from Yellowstone National Park through southwestern Montana for nearly 200 miles before joining the Jefferson and Gallatin to form the Missouri. It is one of the great fly fishing rivers of the world — consistently ranked among the top trout streams in the United States for its size, accessibility, and astonishing insect diversity.

The most celebrated section runs from Earthquake Lake (formed by the 1959 quake that gave the area its distinctive character) down to Ennis — approximately 50 miles of wide, braided freestone water ranging from 2,000 to 6,000 feet in elevation. This is wade-fishing country at its finest: gravel bars and boulder gardens that give way to classic riffle-run-pool sequences where trout hold in predictable lies.

The Madison's Salmonfly hatch in late May and early June is among the most anticipated events in Western fly fishing. The river's large Pteronarcys stoneflies emerge in massive numbers, drawing fish from deep holding lies to the surface for aggressive, explosive takes. Follow the hatch upstream from the lower river as temperatures warm — it's a moving event that can provide peak fishing across two weeks if you plan correctly.

Summer brings excellent PMD, Caddis, and Grasshopper (terrestrial) fishing. Fall — particularly September and October — sees aggressive streamer fishing for pre-spawn browns and exceptional BWO emergences that can rival anything the river offers in spring.

Hatch Chart
Individual hatch data for the Madison River · All months · April highlighted
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Midge
Peak
Peak
On
On
On
Peak
Peak
Blue-Winged Olive
On
On
Peak
Peak
On
On
Peak
On
On
Salmonfly
On
Peak
On
Golden Stonefly
On
Peak
Peak
On
Pale Morning Dun
On
Peak
Peak
On
Caddis
On
On
Peak
Peak
Peak
On
Trico
On
Peak
Peak
On
Grasshopper
On
Peak
Peak
On
Crane Fly
On
Peak
Peak
Peak hatch
Some activity
Inactive
Outlined = current month (April)
Fly Pattern Recommendations
Proven patterns for each active hatch on the Madison River
Midge
Zebra Midge #20-22
Griffin's Gnat #18-20
Blue-Winged Olive
Parachute Adams #16-20
RS2 #18-20
Sparkle Dun #16-20
Salmonfly
Stimulator #4-8 (orange)
Sofa Pillow #6-8
Chubby Chernobyl #6
Clark's Stone #6
Golden Stonefly
Yellow Stimulator #8-10
Kaufmann Stone #8-10
Golden Ribbed Hare's Ear #10
Pale Morning Dun
PMD Comparadun #16-18
Sparkle Dun PMD #16-18
CDC PMD Emerger #16-18
Caddis
Elk Hair Caddis #14-16
X-Caddis #14-16
Soft Hackle #14-16
Trico
Trico Spinner #22-24
CDC Trico #22-24
Grasshopper
Dave's Hopper #8-12
Chubby Chernobyl #8-10
Rainy's Grand Hopper #8-10
Access & Sections
Public access points and section descriptions

Earthquake Lake to Hebgen Dam

Upper section with mountain character. Access via US-287. Excellent Salmonfly water. Campgrounds throughout provide multi-day access.

Quake Lake to Ennis — Main Valley

The heart of Madison fishing. Multiple public access sites maintained by Montana FWP along US-287. Both wade and float access throughout.

Ennis to Three Forks — Lower Madison

Bigger, more powerful water. Best accessed by drift boat. Spring Salmonfly and fall streamer fishing are exceptional. Less crowded than the upper sections.

Species & Regulations
What swims here and how you can fish for it

Rainbow Trout

Primary species throughout. Wild fish averaging 14–18 inches in prime sections. Strong fighters in the fast Madison current. Most active during PMD and Caddis hatches.

Brown Trout

Present throughout but more concentrated in the lower river. Pre-spawn browns in September and October are among the most aggressive fish in Montana. Respond well to streamers.

Regulations Summary
⚠ Montana fishing license required. The Madison has a reduced limit compared to most Montana rivers — check Montana FWP regulations for current slot limits and seasonal closures. Catch and release strongly encouraged. Some sections closed during spawning periods.
Pro Tips
Local knowledge from guides who fish this water
💡

Follow the Salmonfly hatch upstream — it moves at roughly 5–10 miles per day as water temps rise. The peak window on any given stretch is only 3–5 days.

💡

Hopper fishing in August is underrated on the Madison. Fish tight to the banks during warm afternoons and expect aggressive takes.

💡

The Madison's current is deceptively strong — wade carefully and use a wading staff. Felt soles and studs recommended.

💡

Fall streamer fishing for pre-spawn browns is some of Montana's finest. Use large Sculpins and Articulated Streamers on sinking lines, swinging through deep runs.

Guides on the Madison River
Verified licensed guides who know this water

No verified guides listed for this river yet. Browse all guides →

Quick Facts
StateMT
TypeBlue Ribbon Freestone
USGS Gauge06037100
Ideal Flow800–4,000 cfs
Primary SpeciesRainbow Trout
Best Months
JunJulSepOct

River fishes year-round but conditions peak during these windows.

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