Yellowstone River Montana Fishing — Conditions, Hatch Chart & Reports
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Yellowstone River, Montana

Paradise Valley — The longest undammed river in the lower 48 flows through Montana's most beautiful valley

📍 South-Central Montana — Paradise Valley 🎣 Cutthroat Trout, Rainbow Trout 📅 Best: Jun, Jul, Sep, Oct 📊 USGS 06191500
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About the Yellowstone River
South-Central Montana — Paradise Valley · Paradise Valley — Livingston to Gardner

The Yellowstone River holds the distinction of being the longest undammed river in the contiguous United States — over 600 miles of free-flowing water from Yellowstone Lake to its confluence with the Missouri near the North Dakota border. The Paradise Valley section between Livingston and the Yellowstone National Park boundary near Gardiner is the most celebrated fishing water: 55 miles of powerful, braided freestone river flowing through one of Montana's most spectacular landscapes.

The scale of the Yellowstone is part of its character. This is big water — averaging 200–400 feet wide through the valley — requiring either drift boat access or confident wading at the river's numerous gravel bars and island complexes. The fish match the river: cutthroat, rainbow, and brown trout that grow large on the Yellowstone's abundant food supply, with fish in the 18–22 inch range genuinely common in quality sections.

The river's Salmonfly and Golden Stone hatches in late May and June are among the most impressive in Montana — vast numbers of large stoneflies emerging over multiple weeks, triggering aggressive surface feeding from every trout in the river. The timing varies with spring temperatures, but the stretch from Gardiner north to Livingston typically sees peak Salmonfly activity from late May through mid-June, moving upstream with warming temperatures.

Summer brings excellent Caddis, PMD, and hopper fishing. Fall streamer fishing for large pre-spawn browns is exceptional from September through October, and the combination of fall foliage in Paradise Valley and aggressive brown trout makes autumn the finest time to experience the Yellowstone.

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

Gardiner — Park Boundary to Yankee Jim Canyon

Access from Gardiner and along US-89 south. The most scenic section with the Absaroka Range as backdrop. Good wade access from gravel bars. Salmonfly hatch peaks here in late May.

Paradise Valley — Yankee Jim to Livingston

Primary fishing corridor. Multiple public fishing access sites (FAS) maintained by Montana FWP. Both float and wade access throughout.

Livingston — Below City

Public access in and below Livingston. More agricultural character below town but still excellent fishing. Spring Salmonfly and fall streamer fishing both exceptional.

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

Cutthroat Trout

Yellowstone strain cutthroat — the iconic native trout of the park and upper river. Averaging 14–18 inches. Most active during Salmonfly and Caddis hatches in summer.

Rainbow Trout

Abundant in Paradise Valley. Wild fish averaging 14–18 inches. Hybridize with cutthroat in some sections. Strong fighters in powerful current.

Brown Trout

Dominant in lower Paradise Valley and below Livingston. Large average size — pre-spawn browns of 20–26 inches are encountered regularly in fall. Best targeted with streamers.

Regulations Summary
⚠ Montana fishing license required. Yellowstone River has specific regulations that vary by section — check Montana FWP carefully. Some sections have seasonal closures to protect spawning fish. Yellowstone National Park section (above Gardiner) requires NPS permit.
Pro Tips
Local knowledge from guides who fish this water
💡

The Salmonfly hatch moves upstream — it starts near Livingston in late May and reaches Gardiner by mid-June. Track its progress with local fly shop reports.

💡

Drift boat or raft is the most effective way to cover the Yellowstone's productive water. Bank fishing from gravel bars is viable but covers far less productive water.

💡

Hopper fishing in August along the sagebrush banks is outstanding — the Yellowstone's combination of high banks and open country means abundant terrestrials.

💡

Fall streamer fishing for large Paradise Valley browns is the Yellowstone's best-kept secret. October visits with large sculpin patterns produce trophy encounters.

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

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

Quick Facts
StateMT
TypeLivingston to Gardner
USGS Gauge06191500
Ideal Flow1,000–10,000 cfs
Primary SpeciesCutthroat Trout
Best Months
JunJulSepOct

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

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