Oregon Fishing Guide | Oregon Tails

Oregon Fishing Guide · Zones, Species & Regulations

Oregon
Fishing
Guide

Nine distinct fishing zones. Salmon, steelhead, trophy trout, halibut, and world-class bass. Everything you need to fish Oregon — from tidewater to alpine lake.

9Fishing Zones
20+Target Species
1M+Salmon/yr (Columbia)
5M+Trout Stocked/yr

Interactive

What’s Biting Where

Filter by species to see which zones hold them. Click any zone for details.

Show zones with:
All Species 🐟 Chinook Salmon 🐟 Coho Salmon ⚡ Steelhead 🎣 Trout 🐠 Bass 🐟 Crappie 🐟 Catfish 🐟 Walleye 🐋 Pacific Halibut 🪨 Rockfish & Surfperch ⚓ White Sturgeon
Northeast Zone

Field Guide

Oregon’s Target Species

Identification, habitat, techniques, and where to find them. All sourced from ODFW.

By Zone

Oregon’s 9 Fishing Zones

Click any card to expand. Regulations are base rules — always confirm current in-season changes before fishing.

Quick Reference

Regulation Summary

Base limits by zone. Seasons and bags change frequently — see the notice below.

⚠️ Verify before every trip. Oregon fishing regs change mid-season based on run sizes and population data. Always check the ODFW e-regulations and the weekly Recreation Report before heading out. New 2026: An Ocean Endorsement is now required for most anglers fishing Oregon’s ocean.

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Oregon Sport Fishing Regulations by Zone — base limits, always verify current rules before fishing
Zone Trout — Lakes Trout — Rivers Salmon / Steelhead Bass Other Key Limits
NorthwestCoast & Coast Range 5/day open all year 2/day May 22–Oct 31 Varies seasonal — check updates Chum: C&R only on Kilchis & Miami rivers, Sept–Nov
WillametteWillamette Valley 5/day 8-inch min C&R only May 22–Oct 31 Varies check in-season 5/day, max 3 over 15″ Spring Chinook Apr–Jul; Coho begins Sept
CentralDeschutes / High Desert 5/day max 1 over 20″ 2/day May 22–Oct 31, max 1 over 20″ 2/day adults, seasons vary by water 5/day, max 3 over 15″ Kokanee included in trout limit
NortheastBlue & Wallowa Mtns 5/day 8-inch min 2/day 8-inch min, May 22–Oct 31 Varies steelhead: 3 hatchery/day (Sept 1–Apr 15) John Day smallmouth bass: no bag limit
SoutheastHigh Desert 5/day 8-inch min, all year 2/day 8-inch min, all year — unlimited brook & brown trout Kokanee 25/day extra; Crappie no limit
SouthwestRogue & Umpqua 5/day all year 2/day May 22–Oct 31, no bait above tidewater Varies spring & fall Chinook; winter steelhead Dec–May Wild coho harvest limited at Tenmile Lakes
SnakeHells Canyon 6/day no min, all year Same as lakes Salmon closed unless announced; 3 hatchery steelhead/day (Sept 1–Apr 30) 6/day, max 3 over 15″ Crappie & catfish: no limits
ColumbiaColumbia River Highly variable check Recreation Report weekly Smallmouth: no limit Walleye: no limit; Sturgeon: C&R in most areas
MarineOcean & Bays Announced Apr/May quota-based seasons Ocean Endorsement req. (2026+); Halibut: quota May–Oct; Surfperch: 15/day; Rockfish: see bottomfish regs

Pro Techniques

Fishing Tips by Species

Techniques, gear, and timing that actually work — from ODFW biologists and Oregon anglers.

📋
Check regulations every trip
Oregon regulations change mid-season. Always verify the current ODFW e-regulations AND the weekly Recreation Report before leaving — seasons can open and close within days based on run counts.
Dawn and dusk outperform midday
Most Oregon species are most active in low light. The first 2 hours after sunrise and the last 2 before sunset consistently produce better action than high-noon fishing.
🌊
Read the water before you fish
Fish hold in predictable places: trout behind rocks and in current seams, steelhead in tailouts and holding runs, bass near structure and shade. Walk the stretch before casting.
🌡️
Water temperature changes everything
Bass slow below 50°F. Trout get lethargic above 65°F. Steelhead prefer 42–55°F. Knowing the temperature tells you how aggressive the fish will be and how deep to fish.
🎫
Get licensed before you go
A valid Oregon sport fishing license is required for anyone 12+. Additional tags and the new Ocean Endorsement (2026) may be required. Buy online at myodfw.com or at most sporting goods retailers.
🔭
Use the ODFW Recreation Report
ODFW biologists file weekly field reports on current conditions in every zone. This is the single best resource for knowing where fish are biting right now.
🎣
Bobber and jig for beginners
Tie a weighted jig or cured eggs below a floating strike indicator (bobber) and drift it in current. When the bobber dives, stops, or twitches sideways — set the hook. This method is effective from any bank.
🚣
Cover water systematically
Unlike trout that hold tight to one spot, steelhead are traveling fish. Move through runs methodically — cast across, mend line, let the bait swing to the bank, then take one step downstream and repeat.
🌊
Fish the seams and tailouts
In rivers, steelhead rest where fast water meets slow water (seams), and in the shallow tail-ends of pools (tailouts) before moving upstream. These are the highest-percentage spots.
🕐
Winter steelhead: December–April
Winter steelhead enter coastal rivers from December when the first rains arrive and can be caught through April. Trask, Nestucca, Wilson, and Siletz are the most accessible rivers near the coast.
☀️
Summer steelhead: Deschutes July–December
The lower Deschutes is Oregon’s premier summer steelhead river. Fish enter in July — most anglers float the canyon section between Maupin and the Columbia with a drift boat or raft.
🪝
Use a 5-7 wt fly rod for steelhead
For fly fishing, a 7–8 weight single-hand or 4–5 weight spey rod works well. Swing wet flies, egg patterns, or intruder-style flies through holding water on a downstream swing.
🐟
Identify hatchery fish before keeping
In most zones, only hatchery-origin salmon may be retained. Hatchery fish have a clipped adipose fin (the small fin just ahead of the tail). Always check before keeping — wild fish must be released.
🌊
Spring Chinook: February to July
Spring Chinook are Oregon’s premier table fish. Sandy and Clackamas rivers: April–June. Upper Willamette tributaries (McKenzie, Santiam): June–July. Use drift rigs with cured eggs/shrimp or back-bounce a plug.
🎣
Coho: drift or plunk
Drift fishing bounces bait along the bottom at the speed of the current — ideal when coho are spread through a run. Plunking anchors a lure (spinner, spoon) in a spot where fish travel — good when fish are stacked.
🤿
Ocean salmon: troll within 15 feet
For ocean coho and Chinook, troll within 10–15 feet of the surface at 3–5 mph. Use a spoon or artificial squid tipped with a piece of fresh herring, with a dodger or flasher in front. July–August is typically best.
🎯
Fall Chinook: wild and hatchery both ok
The fall Chinook run on the Columbia is three to four times the size of the spring run. Both hatchery and wild fish can be kept during fall seasons — the largest and most accessible fishery in the state.
🗓️
Columbia Buoy 10 fishery: August
The mouth of the Columbia River (‘Buoy 10’) hosts one of the most popular salmon fisheries in the Pacific Northwest every August, with large concentrations of coho and Chinook staging before entering the river.
🎣
Match the hatch on the Deschutes and Metolius
Oregon’s finest trout rivers require observing what’s hatching before rigging up. Watch for insects on the water surface, then match size and color with a dry fly or emerger. Pale Morning Duns, Caddis, and Salmonflies are key hatches.
🎿
Spring and fall outperform summer
Focus on cooler months — spring and fall — for the best river trout action. Mid-summer heat pushes trout deep and makes them lethargic during the day. In summer, fish early morning or evening, or target deep pools.
🧲
PowerBait and worms for still-water trout
At stocked ponds and lakes, PowerBait (floating variety in chartreuse or rainbow) on a sliding sinker rig suspended off the bottom is the most consistent producer for hatchery rainbows. Use a #10–14 hook.
🎯
Detroit Lake: use a Wedding Ring spinner
At Detroit Lake, troll a Wedding Ring spinner with a nightcrawler trailer at 1–2 mph. Focus on the North Santiam Arm in mid-summer when fish move deeper into cooler water. Kokanee: use Ford Fender + small spinner + white corn.
🏔️
Brown trout: spinners or minnow-imitating flies
Brown trout are the wariest of the trout species. Use spinners like a Panther Martin or flies mimicking small minnows (woolly bugger, muddler minnow). As the fly swings downstream, hold line off the water for a natural drift.
🦟
Sea-run cutthroat: late summer
Sea-run (coastal) cutthroat leave estuaries and move back into fresh water to spawn in late July–September. These can be large, hard-fighting fish — find them in NW Zone coastal rivers. Use small spinners, wooly buggers, or dry flies.
🌊
Largemouth: structure is everything
Largemouth bass hold near cover: weed beds, dock pilings, submerged logs, rock piles, channel cuts. Cast parallel to structure, not just into it. Work soft plastics (worms, creature baits) slowly along the bottom for biggest fish.
🪨
Smallmouth: target the rocky runs
The John Day River’s world-class smallmouth bass thrive in the deep, rocky pools between rapids. Drift boat fishing allows you to cover miles of canyon water. Cast near boulders, ledges, and drop-offs — not vegetation.
☀️
Summer: fish deep after 9 AM
Once the sun is high, largemouth bass retreat to deeper, cooler water. Use drop-shot rigs, deep-diving crankbaits (10–15 ft), or Carolina rigs to find them in summer. Return to surface lures at dusk.
🎯
Spawn season makes them catchable
Bass guard their nests aggressively during spawn (May–June, water temp 58–65°F). Males will strike anything near the nest. This is the most reliable time to catch bass from shore on soft plastics near shallow gravel areas.
🌅
Surface lures: early morning and evening
Topwater fishing (poppers, buzzbaits, frogs) produces best strikes in the first 2 hours of light and last hour before dark. Work lures along weed edges, points, and near any shaded structure.
Hybrid bass at Ana Reservoir: use bait
Ana Reservoir in Lake County holds Oregon’s state-record hybrid bass. Fish early in the year in deeper water along the west side. Still-fish near the bottom with sand shrimp, prawns, worms, or chicken livers. They feed actively all winter due to spring-fed constant temperatures.

FAQ

Common Questions About Fishing in Oregon