Bighorn River 
The Bighorn River is rated one of the world’s finest trout streams because of its abundant trout, dense insect hatches, and easy accessibility. Prior to 1965, the Bighorn was a warm, silty stream that flowed out of the spectacular Bighorn Canyon northward into the eastern Montana prairie. With the completion of Yellowtail Dam at Fort Smith, Montana, most of the river’s silt load was trapped behind the dam. The river below was transformed into a cold, clear tailwater, much like a giant spring creek - an ideal habitat for trout. The Bighorn River’s headwaters lie in the Absaroka, Bighorn, and Wind River mountain ranges of northwest and north central Wyoming. From below the Montana-Wyoming state line, the mainstem flows through Bighorn Canyon to Yellowtail Dam, a 47-mile-long passage between the northern end of the Bighorn Mountains and the southeast margin of the Pryor Mountains. The canyon, its sandstone and limestone cliffs rising steeply hundreds of feet, holds the waters of Bighorn Lake. From the Afterbay Dam, a reregulating facility 2 miles downstream, the Bighorn River journeys 84 miles - through the Crow Indian Reservation, past massive tree-dotted ramparts and rock outcroppings, beside rolling hills, grasslands, and pine-covered ridges - and joins the Yellowstone River near the old settlement of Bighorn, just east of Custer, Montana.
Total Length: 112 miles
FWP Region: Region 5
Fishing District: Central Fishing District,
Eastern Fishing District
Species Present
- Game Fish Opportunities:
-
Brown Trout, Burbot, Channel Catfish, Mountain Whitefish, Rainbow Trout
- All Species Present:
-
Bigmouth Buffalo, Black Bullhead, Black Crappie, Brown Trout, Burbot, Channel Catfish, Common Carp, Emerald Shiner, Fathead Minnow, Flathead Chub, Freshwater Drum, Goldeye, Green Sunfish, Lake Chub, Longnose Dace, Longnose Sucker, Mountain Sucker, Mountain Whitefish, Northern Pike, Plains Killifish, Rainbow Trout, River Carpsucker, Sauger, Shorthead Redhorse, Smallmouth Bass, Smallmouth Buffalo, Stonecat, Walleye, Western Silvery/Plains Minnow, White Sucker, Yellow Perch
NOTE: There may be game fish present (including
Species of Concern) that are not listed in the game fish category due
to low numbers for that fish. Until you identify your catch, please handle all fish carefully. Thank you.
Fishing Regulations
View the latest Montana Fishing Regulations.
Boating Regulations
Standard Boating Regulations for the State of Montana
Exceptions to Standard Boating Regulations for Bighorn River
| Regulation |
Description & Exceptions |
Closed to all motorboats
|
From Afterbay Dam to the Bighorn FAS |
Fishing Pressure
Mouth to Little Bighorn River (River Mile: 0 to 42)
| Year |
Days Fished¹ |
Trips² |
State Rank³ |
Regional Rank³ |
| 2007 |
6,946 |
104 |
81 |
13 |
| 2005 |
10,726 |
163 |
59 |
12 |
| 2003 |
8,143 |
183 |
73 |
12 |
| 2001 |
6,123 |
122 |
90 |
14 |
| 1999 |
9,314 |
215 |
74 |
12 |
Little Bighorn River to Big Horn FAS (Access Cr) (River Mile: 42 to 71)
| Year |
Days Fished¹ |
Trips² |
State Rank³ |
Regional Rank³ |
| 2007 |
12,314 |
193 |
45 |
7 |
| 2005 |
15,690 |
271 |
44 |
6 |
| 2003 |
14,404 |
296 |
43 |
5 |
| 2001 |
20,668 |
383 |
34 |
5 |
| 1999 |
21,696 |
458 |
36 |
5 |
Big Horn FAS (Access Cr) to Afterbay (River Mile: 71 to 84)
| Year |
Days Fished¹ |
Trips² |
State Rank³ |
Regional Rank³ |
| 2007 |
88,254 |
1,365 |
2 |
1 |
| 2005 |
68,464 |
1,182 |
6 |
1 |
| 2003 |
67,234 |
1,490 |
5 |
1 |
| 2001 |
74,402 |
1,503 |
5 |
1 |
| 1999 |
94,361 |
2,104 |
4 |
1 |
| ¹ Estimated yearly fishing use in angler days (one angler fishing one body of water in one day for any amount of time). |
| ² The number of times that a section of water was reported as having been fished (used to estimate the number of "Days Fished"). |
| ³ How this section of water ranked among all surveyed sections in the state or region, based on "Days Fished" in a survey year. |
| |
Gauging Stations
- Bighorn River near St. Xavier, MT
- View Data
| River Mile: 84
- Bighorn River ab Tullock Cr nr Bighorn MT
- View Data
| River Mile: 4