Sandy River, Oregon
Mount Hood — Wild steelhead in Portland's backyard river
The Sandy River flows west from the glaciers of Mount Hood through the Mount Hood National Forest to the Columbia River at Troutdale — just 20 miles east of downtown Portland. As the most accessible wild steelhead river for the Pacific Northwest's largest metropolitan area, the Sandy occupies a place of special importance in Oregon fishing culture, providing millions of Portland-area residents with genuine wild fish angling within an hour's drive of the city.
The Sandy is a genuine wild river despite its proximity to urban Oregon — a medium-sized coastal-influenced stream with dramatic seasonal fluctuations in flow, glacier-fed clarity that varies with temperature and rain, and wild runs of winter steelhead, summer steelhead, and coho salmon that have maintained themselves in the Sandy's challenging bar-strewn lower river for millennia.
Winter steelhead — arriving December through March — are the Sandy's most significant fishery. Wild B-run fish averaging 8–12 pounds enter the river in greatest numbers during February and March, providing Portland-area fly fishers with genuine wild fish swinging opportunities just minutes from the metro area. The combination of accessibility, wild fish, and the dramatic Mount Hood backdrop makes winter steelhead fishing on the Sandy one of the Pacific Northwest's most culturally important fly fishing traditions.
Wild cutthroat trout and small resident rainbow provide summer fishing in the upper river sections near Marmot and the Dodge Park area — smaller fish than the steelhead runs, but beautiful wild fish in excellent mountain stream habitat.
Dodge Park — Primary Summer Access
Multnomah County park with excellent Sandy River access. Camping available. Walk-wade access to good summer cutthroat and fall steelhead water.
Oxbow Regional Park — Lower River
One of the finest winter steelhead access points. Large parking area and easy river access. Prime February-March swinging water.
Marmot Road Area — Upper River
Access from Marmot Road east of Sandy, OR. Upper river character with better summer trout fishing. Less pressure than lower sections.
Winter Steelhead
Wild B-run fish averaging 8–12 pounds, December through March. February and March peak. Swinging wet flies in the Sandy's classic pools is the traditional approach.
Summer Steelhead
Wild summer-run fish entering June through August. Smaller average size than winter fish. Dry fly and waked fly opportunities during low summer flows.
Westslope Cutthroat
Resident cutthroat in upper river sections. Wild fish averaging 10–14 inches. Good summer attractor dry fly fishing.
February and March are the finest winter steelhead months on the Sandy — commit a full day on an incoming storm front for the best fresh fish encounters.
The Sandy's proximity to Portland makes it the starting point for many Pacific Northwest anglers learning to swing flies for steelhead — excellent guide infrastructure available.
Always check ODFW before heading to the Sandy in winter — wild steelhead closures can happen quickly based on run counts.
The Mount Hood backdrop and old-growth forest corridor make the Sandy one of the most visually stunning urban rivers in America.
No verified guides listed for this river yet. Browse all guides →
River fishes year-round but conditions peak during these windows.
Fished the Sandy River recently? Help the community with a report.
+ Submit a ReportRead recent fishing reports from anglers on the Sandy River.
Sandy River Reports →