2026 Chinook Regulations on the North Alaska Peninsula

Conservation first. Opportunity follows.

May 4, 2026

angler holding chinook salmon in water with two handed fly rod

The 2026 sport fishing regulations for Chinook (King) salmon on the North Alaska Peninsula are now in place. These changes reflect a more conservative, forward-looking approach to managing one of the last consistently strong wild king fisheries left.

It’s a direction we support—and one we’ve been pushing for.

The Big Picture

Working with biologists and managers at the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, these updated regulations are designed to protect spawning fish, stabilize escapement, and reduce pressure during key windows of the run.

This isn’t about reacting to a collapse. It’s about making sure one never happens.

fly angler holding a large king salmon by the riverbank in shallow water
Angler holding a large king salmon in shallow river water

2026 Chinook Regulations — What You Need to Know

For Bering Sea drainages of the Alaska Peninsula, the new rules are clear:

King Salmon 20” or Greater

  • Alaska Residents:
    • 1 fish per day / 1 in possession
    • 2 fish annual limit
    • Harvest record required
  • Non-Residents:
    • No retention allowed
    • All fish must be released immediately

King Salmon Under 20”

  • 10 fish daily/possession limit
  • No annual limit

Gear Restrictions (Jan 1 – July 25)

  • Unbaited, single-hook artificial lures or flies only
Angler holding a large king salmon in shallow river water
Boat traveling along a winding river surrounded by dense green vegetation under cloudy skies

Why These Changes Matter

Non-resident catch-and-release only is a meaningful shift. It protects the backbone of future runs—while still allowing anglers full participation in the fishery.

Paired with gear restrictions that reduce mortality, these regulations are built to do one thing well: keep fish moving upstream.

From what we see on the water every season, this is the right call. Some years are exceptional. Others are tighter. The long-term trend matters more than any single season—and these measures help keep that trend pointed in the right direction.

Boat traveling along a winding river surrounded by dense green vegetation under cloudy skies
angler holding king salmon in water with net

Built Into Our Program From Day One

The reality is, these regulations don’t change how we operate—they reinforce it.

Our Chinook program has always been structured around conservation:

  • Swung fly and Catch and Release only
  • Single, barbless hooks
  • Fish kept in the water during release and photos whenever possible

We’ve taken this approach because it works—for the fish, and for the fishery.

These new rules simply align the broader system with the standard we’ve already been fishing by.

What It Means for Your Trip

If you’re fishing with us, the experience doesn’t change:

  • The grab still matters
  • The swing still matters
  • Covering water, reading fish, and fishing well still define the day

We fish the conditions. We fish the rules. And we create as many quality opportunities as possible for anglers committed to the swung fly—regardless of retention.

The Long Game

The North Alaska Peninsula remains one of the last places where wild Chinook salmon return in meaningful and consistent numbers. That’s not by accident. It’s the result of good habitat, responsible management, and anglers willing to take a long-term view.

We believe in protecting that.

These 2026 regulations are a step in the right direction—and we’re proud to stand behind them.

Know the regs. Respect the fish. Fish with intention.

We’ll see you on the river.