Weber River Utah Fishing — Live Conditions, Hatch Chart & Reports
HookedFishingConditions › Weber River

Weber River, Utah

Below Echo Reservoir — Blue Ribbon trout fishing and the legendary Mother's Day Caddis

📍 Northern Utah 🎣 Brown Trout, Rainbow Trout 📅 Best: May, Jun, Sep, Oct 📊 USGS 10128500
Live USGS Conditions
Loading from USGS gauge 10128500...
View full USGS gauge data ↗
About the Weber River
Northern Utah · Below Echo Reservoir — Blue Ribbon Tailwater

The Weber River is Northern Utah's best-kept secret — a Blue Ribbon fishery that sits in the shadow of the more famous Provo and Green rivers but rivals both in productivity and character. Flowing from the Rocky Mountains through Echo Canyon and into the Cache Valley, the Weber offers multiple distinct fishing experiences from its tailwater sections below reservoirs to freestone reaches in the upper canyon.

The most productive fishing occurs on the Middle Weber — the tailwater stretch below Rockport Reservoir flowing through the pastoral Wanship-Coalville corridor. This section holds exceptional populations of brown trout that average 16–18 inches, with true trophy fish exceeding 24 inches encountered regularly by persistent anglers. The softer gradient and meandering character create ideal holding water.

The Weber's claim to fame is its Mother's Day Caddis hatch — arguably even more reliable and dense than the better-publicized Provo version. When water temperatures hit the magic window in early May, millions of Brachycentrus caddis blanket the surface and the river's large browns throw caution aside for surface flies. This single event draws anglers from across the Intermountain West every year.

The Lower Weber below Echo Reservoir offers the most consistent flows and the largest fish, but requires more patience — trophy browns in this section are predominantly caught on streamers and large nymphs fished deep near undercut banks.

Hatch Chart
Individual hatch data for the Weber 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
Peak
Blue-Winged Olive
On
On
Peak
Peak
On
On
Peak
Peak
On
Mother's Day Caddis
On
Peak
On
Caddis (general)
On
Peak
Peak
Peak
On
Pale Morning Dun
On
Peak
Peak
On
Golden Stonefly
On
Peak
On
Crane Fly
On
Peak
On
Peak hatch
Some activity
Inactive
Outlined = current month (April)
Fly Pattern Recommendations
Proven patterns for each active hatch on the Weber River
Midge
Zebra Midge #20-24
Mercury Midge #22
Brassie #18-20
Blue-Winged Olive
RS2 #18-22
Parachute BWO #18-20
Sparkle Dun #18-20
Mother's Day Caddis
Black Elk Hair Caddis #14-16
Brachycentrus Pupa #14-16
Black Soft Hackle #14
Caddis (general)
Elk Hair Caddis #14-16
X-Caddis #14-16
Goddard Caddis #12-14
Pale Morning Dun
PMD Comparadun #16-18
PMD Sparkle Dun #16-18
Golden Stonefly
Yellow Stimulator #8-12
Golden Stone Nymph #8-10
Access & Sections
Public access points and section descriptions

Middle Weber — Wanship to Coalville

Walk-In Access (WIA) program provides legal access across private property. Look for WIA signs along River Road. The 'Creamery Lane' and 'Spring Chicken' WIA are particularly productive.

Lower Weber — Weber Canyon (Echo to Ogden)

Road access via I-84 frontage road. Limited pull-offs but excellent water. Best for targeting trophy browns on streamers.

Upper Weber — Above Rockport

Freestone character in the Kamas Valley. Multiple access points from UT-32. Smaller fish but wild cutthroat present in upper reaches.

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

Brown Trout

Dominant species in the Middle and Lower sections. Known for exceptional size — 18–24 inch fish are genuinely common. Most active during Mother's Day Caddis and fall BWO hatches.

Rainbow Trout

Present throughout. More cooperative and found in faster water than browns. Primary target during midge and BWO hatches.

Mountain Whitefish

Numerous in all sections. Underrated sport fish that takes midges and small nymphs readily in winter.

Regulations Summary
⚠ Check current UDWR Northern Region regulations. Walk-In Access (WIA) land requires a valid Utah hunting or fishing license for access. Artificial lures and flies only on designated sections. Utah fishing license required.
Pro Tips
Local knowledge from guides who fish this water
💡

The Mother's Day Caddis on the Weber often peaks 1–2 weeks later than the Provo due to higher elevation and cooler temperatures. If you miss it on the Provo, head to the Weber.

💡

Find the WIA access points before your trip — Google Maps doesn't always mark them accurately. The UDWR website has current WIA maps.

💡

Big browns in the Lower Weber are creatures of habit. Fish the same undercut bank twice — once at dusk and once at dawn — before moving on.

💡

During winter, the Middle Weber between Wanship and Coalville fishes almost entirely on midge larvae. Go small, go deep, and be patient.

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

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

Quick Facts
StateUT
TypeBlue Ribbon Tailwater
USGS Gauge10128500
Ideal Flow120–800 cfs
Primary SpeciesBrown Trout
Best Months
MayJunSepOct

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

Submit a Report

Fished the Weber River recently? Help the community with a report.

+ Submit a Report
View All Reports

Read recent fishing reports from anglers on the Weber River.

Weber River Reports →