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Gallatin River Fishing Reports

Your Local Source For Fishing Reports

Big Sky Country is our backyard. We've put our passion for Montana fly fishing trips to work and have hand-picked a selection of fly-fishing lodges, overnight float trips, and day trips. If you're thinking of a Montana fly fishing vacation, looking for a multi-day wilderness fishing experience, or just visiting Bozeman or Missoula or another Montana town and want to add on a fishing trip, let Yellow Dog's Montana roots work for you.

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Gallatin River Fishing Reports
Updated Jun 16, 26

As of 2026, all Montana Fishing Licenses must be purchased online at Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

Flow Data: Gallatin River near Gallatin Gateway, MT

Quick Overview

Fishing: Good to Great

Fishing Window (best time to fish): 11AM - 7PM

Best Fishing Method: Dry Dropper

2nd Best Method: Dry fly fishing

Hatches: Caddis, Little Yellow Sallies, PMD's, Salmonflies, Goldenstones

Conditions The river continues to drop this week. Warm weather is expected all week. The fishing has been good to great. The dry fly action is getting better every day with the increased bug activity.

Current and Upcoming Hatches Caddis have been flying around and can get fish up in certain areas. PMD's and Yellow Sallies are active and hatching daily. Stonefly nymphs, PMD nymphs, caddis nymphs and worms are available to fish sub-surface.

A dark bodied caddis dry can be quite effective when you find fish rising to these insects.

Little Yellow Sallies are out in good numbers and will continue into July.

Salmonflies are hatching below the Canyon and will slowly work their way up the river over the next few weeks. Fish have yet to key in on these giant bugs but as more and more hit the water fish will be increasingly ready for the massive meal on the waters surface.

Tactics and Tips A large dry with a dropper will be the best option to catch fish that are both looking up and focused on feeding subsurface. A large salmonfly colored Chubby with a salmonfly or goldenstone nymph will be quite effective. Set the dropper 2-3 feet below your dry fly depending on the depth of water you are fishing. Fish have been eating dries and nymphs pretty well. Streamer fishing, swinging or stripping will be worth a try if the surface action is not super hot. Focus on fishing summer water (faster riffles) with the recent rise in temperature.

Nymphs

  1. Pat's Rubberleg
  2. Trout Retriever
  3. Vinyl Stone Nymph
  4. Kyle's BH Yellow Sally
  5. Black Lite Brite Perdigon
  6. Trina's Squirm

Streamers

  1. Skiddish Smolt
  2. Lil' Kim
  3. Mini Peanut Envy
  4. Thin Mint Bugger

Dry Flies

  1. Henry's Fork Foam Stone - Salmonfly
  2. Parachute Adams (12–20)
  3. Hi-Vis PMD
  4. Orange Chubby Chernobyl #6
  5. Peacock Elk Hair Caddis

As of 2026, ALL Montana fishing licenses must be purchased online at Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks. If you are planning to fish in the headwaters of the Gallatin River area above Taylor's Fork (approx. 1 mile upstream); be aware that most of this is in Yellowstone National Park which requires a separate fishing license and is seasonally open to fishing according to YNP regulations.

Fishing from a boat is not allowed on the Gallatin River from the headwaters downstream to the confluence of the West (main-stem) and East Gallatin River, however it is permissible to use a boat/craft for access for wade-fishing in this stretch of the river. Fishing from a boat is allowed downstream of this point to the rivers mouth. Bob's Shuttle provides shuttle service (seasonal) between Manhattan and Three Forks on the Gallatin River and can be reached at 406-595-0587 via voice or text. In general, shuttles should be arrange the day prior or before 9 am the morning of your departure.

Historical River Flow
Discharge Rate (cfs)
Date