Fly Fishing Yellowstone National Park: Cutthroat in the Meadows, Wolves on the Ridge, and the Strangest Trout Stream on Earth
Yellowstone holds the largest concentration of wild cutthroat trout in the world, a river that flows past erupting geysers, and backcountry meadow streams where you fish with bison grazing behind you and wolves howling at dusk. It's not just fly fishing. It's fly fishing inside the world's first national park.
Yellowstone National Park is the most extraordinary setting in which a fly angler can cast to a trout. Not because the fish are the largest (they aren't — the Madison and Missouri outside the park grow bigger fish). Not because the hatches are the most prolific (the Henry's Fork next door has denser emergences). But because the entire experience — the wild cutthroat rising in a meadow stream while a herd of bison grazes 200 yards away, a wolf pack howls from the ridgeline, and the Absaroka Range catches the last light — is something no other fly-fishing destination on Earth can replicate.
The park holds over 2,500 miles of streams and rivers and the largest remaining populations of genetically pure Yellowstone cutthroat trout in their native range. The fishing is entirely catch-and-release for cutthroats, the rivers are wild and undammed, and the backcountry waters — accessible only by hiking — hold fish that see fewer anglers per season than most Western rivers see in a week.
This is fly fishing stripped to its essence: a rod, a box of dry flies, a pair of waders, and a trail into country that looks the same as it did when the park was established in 1872.
The Waters — Five Fisheries in One Park
Slough Creek — The Meadow Dream
Slough Creek is the stream every fly angler pictures when they imagine Yellowstone. Four meadows — Third, Second, First, and Lower — stretch through broad, open valleys in the park's northeast corner, holding wild Yellowstone cutthroat in clear, slow-moving meadow water that's designed for dry-fly fishing.
The meadows are accessed by hiking from the Slough Creek Campground trailhead. First Meadow is 2.5 miles in — a manageable day trip. Second Meadow is 4 miles — doable for fit anglers who start early. Third Meadow is 6 miles in and requires an overnight stay with a backcountry permit — but it holds the largest cutthroats, fish of 18 to 22 inches that have seen almost no fishing pressure.
The fishing is textbook meadow-stream dry-fly work. The cutthroat hold in feeding lanes in the slow, clear water, rising to PMDs, Green Drakes, caddis, and terrestrials with the confident, splashy rises that cutthroats are famous for. A #14 Parachute Adams or a #12 Elk Hair Caddis fished upstream on a dead drift is all you need for most situations. The fish aren't as selective as Henry's Fork Ranch trout — they eat with a willingness that makes the hiking worthwhile.
The wildlife is constant. Bison graze in the meadows. Wolves patrol the ridges — the Lamar Valley wolf packs are among the most-watched in the world. Grizzly and black bears are present. Moose browse in the willows along the creek. You fish with awareness here — bear spray on your wading belt, food stored in bear canisters, and one eye on the landscape at all times.
Best season: July 4 through mid-September. The creek clears from runoff by early July and fishes well until the park's October 31 closing.
The Lamar River — The Serengeti of North America
The Lamar River flows through the Lamar Valley — called the "Serengeti of North America" for its wildlife density — and holds wild cutthroat, rainbow, and hybrid trout in a mid-sized freestone river accessible from the Northeast Entrance Road.
The Lamar clears by mid-July and produces outstanding hatches of PMDs, Green Drakes, Grey Drakes, and caddis through August. The river is wider and faster than Slough Creek, with riffles, runs, and pocket water that demand a more active wading approach. A #16 Sparkle Dun during the PMD hatch or a #10 Green Drake Paradrake during the sporadic but electrifying drake emergence produces explosive takes from cutthroat that eat dry flies with an aggression that browns can't match.
Hopper fishing from late July through September is the Lamar's peak — a #8 Chubby Chernobyl or foam hopper bounced against the grassy undercuts produces the Lamar's largest fish.
The Firehole River — The Strangest Trout Stream on Earth
The Firehole flows through the most active geyser basins in Yellowstone — past Old Faithful, through the Upper and Midway Geyser Basins — and the geothermal influence creates a river unlike anything else in fly fishing. Hot springs and geysers warm the water, which means the Firehole hatches earlier in spring than any river in the region and shuts down earlier in summer when the water gets too warm.
The Firehole holds rainbow trout, brown trout, and brook trout (not cutthroat — the geothermal chemistry favors different species). The fish are wild and educated — the Firehole gets heavy traffic from park visitors who stop at the pullouts — and the fishing is technical. Long leaders, small flies (Pheasant Tail #16-18, Elk Hair Caddis #16, Parachute Adams #18), and drag-free drifts in the flat, slow pools are the game.
The window is narrow: Mid-May through late June is the Firehole's prime. PMDs, BWOs, and caddis hatch in the geothermally warmed water weeks before the park's other rivers clear from runoff. By July, the water warms past 70°F and the fish stress — ethical anglers stop fishing the Firehole by mid-July and don't return until fall.
The setting is surreal. You're casting to rising trout with steam from a geyser billowing behind you and the smell of sulfur in the air. The Firehole is fly fishing on another planet.
The Yellowstone River — Inside the Park
The Yellowstone River inside the park flows from Yellowstone Lake north through Hayden Valley and the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone (with its famous waterfalls) to Tower Junction. The river holds native cutthroat trout throughout, with different sections offering different experiences:
Hayden Valley is closed to fishing (critical grizzly habitat), but the Buffalo Ford section upstream of Fishing Bridge was historically one of the most famous cutthroat fisheries in the world. (Check current closures — some sections remain closed for cutthroat conservation.)
The Grand Canyon section — from below the Lower Falls to Tower Junction — holds cutthroat in 15 miles of steep canyon water accessible only by serious hiking. Seven Mile Hole is the most famous access: a 5-mile hike each way with roughly 4 hours of streamside fishing. The fish in the canyon see almost no anglers, and the setting — fishing at the bottom of Yellowstone's Grand Canyon — is unforgettable.
Yellowstone Lake
Yellowstone Lake is the largest high-elevation lake in North America and historically held the largest population of native cutthroat trout anywhere. The lake trout (an invasive species introduced in the 1990s) has devastated the native cutthroat population, and the park has spent decades and millions of dollars on lake trout removal. The cutthroat population is recovering but remains fragile.
Fishing the lake's tributary streams during the June cutthroat spawning run — when fish stack at the creek mouths — is one of the great wildlife-and-fishing spectacles in the national parks. Grizzly bears, pelicans, and osprey all feed on the spawning cutthroat alongside the anglers.
The Hatch Chart — Park-Wide
- Mid-May–June: Firehole comes alive first — BWOs, caddis, PMDs in the geothermally warmed water. The rest of the park is still in runoff.
- Late June–July: Salmonflies on the park's Madison River section. Green Drakes and PMDs on Slough Creek and the Lamar. The park opens up.
- July–August: The main event — PMDs, caddis, and hoppers on every fishable stream. Slough Creek meadows at their best. Firehole shuts down from heat.
- September–October: Fall — hoppers fading, BWOs returning, browns and cutthroat feeding hard before winter. The park empties of tourists. The fishing improves.
The Fly Box
The Yellowstone fly box is simple — cutthroat are cooperative, and the hatches are readable:
Dry flies: Parachute Adams (#12-18), Elk Hair Caddis (#14-16), Chubby Chernobyl (#8-10), Stimulator (#8-14, gold/yellow), Sparkle Dun PMD (#14-16), Green Drake Paradrake (#10-12), foam hopper (#8-10), ant (#16-18), beetle (#14-16)
Nymphs: Pheasant Tail (#14-18), Hare's Ear (#12-16), Zebra Midge (#18-22), Prince Nymph (#12-16)
Streamers: Woolly Bugger (#6-10, olive/black) — for the larger rivers and Firehole browns
The Gear
Rod: 9-foot 5-weight covers everything in the park. A 4-weight works for Slough Creek's meadow water. The 5-weight handles the Lamar's faster runs, the Firehole's longer casts, and the wind that blows across the Lamar Valley.
Leaders: 9 to 12 feet tapered to 4X-5X. The cutthroat aren't as leader-shy as the Bighorn's browns, but the clear meadow water on Slough Creek demands reasonable stealth. 5X covers most dry-fly situations.
Bear spray: Not optional. Every angler in the Yellowstone backcountry carries bear spray on their wading belt, accessible with one hand. Grizzly encounters are not rare — they're expected.
The Culture — West Yellowstone, the Park, and the Ethic
West Yellowstone is the gateway — the town where most Yellowstone fly anglers stay, buy their flies, and get the current park fishing report. The anchor fly shop — founded by the creator of the Sparkle Dun — has the most detailed park fishing reports, the most Yellowstone-specific fly selection, and the institutional knowledge of decades on these waters.
The fly shops in Gardiner (the north entrance) provide the other essential outfitting for the park's northern waters — Slough Creek, the Lamar, and the Yellowstone River.
The park fishing ethic is fundamental to the experience. Yellowstone's waters are catch-and-release for cutthroat, barbless hooks only, and the respect for the resource is palpable. The anglers who fish Yellowstone's backcountry understand that they're guests in a ecosystem that predates them by millennia, and they treat the fish, the wildlife, and the landscape accordingly.
Regulations: A Yellowstone fishing permit is required (available at park visitor centers or online). No bait. Barbless hooks only. Cutthroat must be released. Some waters have seasonal closures — check the park's current fishing regulations before planning.
When to Go
- Late May–June: Firehole early season — the park's first fishable water
- July: Slough Creek and Lamar clear from runoff — the main event begins
- August: Peak — every fishable stream producing, hoppers, the best overall month
- September: The park empties, the fish feed hard, fall BWOs — the quiet, rewarding window
- October (through Oct 31): Late season — cold mornings, midday hatches, almost nobody on the water
Top Fishing Guides Nearby
Yellowstone guides fish inside the park where cutthroat trout rise freely — matching Callibaetis on Yellowstone Lake's inlet streams, working the Firehole's geothermally warmed meadow runs during the fall BWO, and swinging streamers through the Gibbon's canyon where few anglers ever venture.

Upper Madison Angler
West Yellowstone, MT, US
4.5 (88 reviews)
Upper Madison Angler specializes in guided fly fishing on Hebgen Lake and the Upper Madison River in Montana. Led by experienced outfitter Jake Schilling, the service focuses on pursuing rainbow and brown trout, westslope cutthroat, and the prized grayling—offering anglers access to some of the region's most distinctive species in a spectacular natural setting. The guide service tailors trips to all skill levels, shifting strategies with the seasons. Spring brings productive leech fishing, while summer delivers exciting dry fly opportunities. Whether an angler is refining technique or seeking adventure in premier Montana waters, Upper Madison Angler delivers personalized instruction and expert local knowledge for a memorable experience.
Yellowstone Fly Fishing
West Yellowstone, MT, US
5.0 (3 reviews)
Yellowstone Fly Fishing offers expertly guided fly fishing adventures on Hebgen Lake and the surrounding waters of the Yellowstone region. With deep knowledge of local hatches, seasonal conditions, and prime fishing locations—particularly the nutrient-rich arms of Hebgen Lake—their experienced guides help anglers of all skill levels pursue trout using dry fly and other proven techniques. Whether you're refining your casting technique or seeking a full day on the water, Yellowstone Fly Fishing tailors each trip to match your experience level and goals. The guides' intimate familiarity with this iconic region ensures visitors access some of the finest fishing opportunities available while enjoying the natural beauty and solitude of the Yellowstone area.

Blue Ribbon Flies
West Yellowstone, MT, US
4.9 (123 reviews)
Blue Ribbon Flies offers premier dry fly fishing experiences near Hebgen Lake in Montana, specializing in pursuit of the region's legendary gulpers—hefty brown and rainbow trout that rise eagerly to surface flies. Operating from mid-May through September, the service combines morning sessions on Hebgen Lake with afternoon float or wade trips on nearby rivers, providing anglers with diverse water and multiple chances at trophy fish. Each full-day outing includes expert guide service, lunch, and transportation, allowing clients to focus entirely on the fishing. The guides bring years of local knowledge and a genuine commitment to creating memorable days on Montana's premier trout waters. Whether an angler is a seasoned dry fly enthusiast or looking to refine their technique, Blue Ribbon Flies delivers a well-rounded adventure in some of the West's most beautiful and productive waters.

Montana Wilderness Outfitters
West Yellowstone, MT, US
5.0 (15 reviews)
Montana Wilderness Outfitter is a family-owned guide service based in West Yellowstone, offering over 25 years of expertise in the Greater Yellowstone ecosystem. Specializing in fly fishing for wild trout, the outfit leads anglers into pristine backcountry waters within Yellowstone National Park and the Lee Metcalf Wilderness, where native cutthroat and other species thrive in remote settings. The experienced guides excel at designing trips that match each angler's skill level and preferences. From day float trips to multi-day pack expeditions, Montana Wilderness Outfitter combines exceptional fishing opportunities with immersive wilderness experiences. Their traditional pack trip format allows guests to explore the landscape much as adventurers did over a century ago, making each journey as much about discovery and solitude as it is about landing fish.

Madison River Outfitters
West Yellowstone, MT, US
4.5 (88 reviews)
Yellowstone Country Yellowstone Country specializes in fly fishing across Montana's most prized waters, including the Madison, Missouri, Yellowstone, and Snake Rivers. The operation is staffed by a team of exceptionally experienced guides, each bringing an average of over 20 years of expertise to the water. Whether clients prefer the flexibility of walk trips or the expansive reach of float trips, Yellowstone Country tailors each outing to showcase the region's finest fishing opportunities. The guides are known for their patient, instructional approach, welcoming anglers of all skill levels while teaching fundamental fly fishing techniques that enhance both technique and confidence. From first-time fly fishers to accomplished anglers, clients can expect a thoughtfully guided experience that balances instruction with the natural beauty and productive waters of Yellowstone Country.

Madison Adventures
West Yellowstone, MT, US
4.5 (88 reviews)
Madison Adventures Madison Adventures offers guided ice fishing experiences on the pristine waters of Hebgen Lake, nestled near West Yellowstone, Montana. Led by Garrett Ostler, a seasoned guide with over 40 years of fishing expertise, the operation specializes in pursuing Rainbow Trout, Brown Trout, Brook Trout, Rocky Mountain Whitefish, and Utah Chub. Each trip is thoughtfully crafted to balance sport, safety, and the natural beauty of Montana's high country. Garrett brings a genuine passion for ice fishing and deep local knowledge to every outing. He provides all necessary equipment and guides anglers of varying skill levels with patience and warmth. Whether seeking trophy catches or simply enjoying a day on the ice, guests can expect personalized attention and an authentic connection to one of the region's most rewarding winter pursuits.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a permit to fish in Yellowstone?
Yes — a Yellowstone fishing permit is required (available at park visitor centers or online). No state fishing license is needed inside the park. Barbless hooks only, no bait, cutthroat must be released. Some waters have seasonal closures — check current regulations before planning.
What is Slough Creek?
A meadow stream in Yellowstone's northeast corner with four meadows holding wild cutthroat trout. First Meadow is a 2.5-mile hike from the trailhead, Third Meadow is 6 miles (overnight required) with the largest fish — 18 to 22 inches. The fishing is all dry flies in clear, slow meadow water.
Why is the Firehole River called the strangest trout stream?
The Firehole flows through Yellowstone's most active geyser basins — past Old Faithful and through the Midway Geyser Basin. Geothermal features warm the water, creating early-season hatches but forcing a mid-July shutdown when temperatures exceed 70°F. You fish with steam from geysers behind you.
Are there grizzly bears near the fishing?
Yes — grizzly encounters are expected, not rare, in Yellowstone's backcountry. Every angler carries bear spray on their wading belt. Slough Creek, the Lamar, and the Yellowstone Lake tributaries are all in active grizzly habitat. Fish with awareness and store food in bear canisters.
When is the best time to fish Yellowstone?
August is the best overall — every fishable stream is producing, hoppers are on, and the meadow streams are at their peak. July is when the main rivers clear from runoff. September is the quiet, rewarding window after tourists leave. The Firehole fishes earliest (May-June).
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