Oregon Non-Resident Fishing License: Cost & Rules (2026)

Official ODFW nonresident license help

Oregon Non-Resident Fishing License: 2026 Cost, Tags, Endorsements and Online Buying

Fishing Oregon as a visitor? The base nonresident license is only the starting point. Salmon, steelhead, sturgeon, halibut, Columbia Basin trips, ocean fishing, two-rod fishing and shellfish can all change what you need before you cast.

This guide explains Oregon non-resident fishing license cost in 2026, daily and annual options, ODFW Electronic Licensing System steps, MyODFW app proof, Combined Angling Tag, Columbia River Basin Endorsement, Ocean Endorsement, and common mistakes visitors should avoid.

$138Nonresident annual angler
$291-day angling + shellfish
$89NR Combined Angling Tag
Jan-DecAnnual license period
★ Quick license finder
Choose Your Oregon Nonresident Fishing Situation

Use these shortcuts before checkout. Oregon is easy to buy online, but easy to buy wrong. A trout day, salmon trip, Columbia River trip, ocean bottomfish trip and shellfish trip can each require a different mix of documents.

Quick warning: If your Oregon trip includes salmon, steelhead, sturgeon or halibut, do not buy only the base angling license. ODFW says a Combined Angling Tag is required to legally fish, including catch-and-release, for those species.
Real answer first

How Much Is an Oregon Non-Resident Fishing License in 2026?

ODFW’s 2026 recreational fee schedule lists the nonresident annual angling license at $138. Short-trip nonresident anglers can choose one-day angling and shellfish for $29, two-day for $48, three-day for $68, or a nonresident seven-day license for $117.

Those prices are only the base license cost. Nonresidents may also need a $89 nonresident annual Combined Angling Tag for salmon, steelhead, sturgeon or halibut, a Columbia River Basin Endorsement for Columbia Basin salmon/steelhead/sturgeon, a 2026 Ocean Endorsement for many ocean fisheries, or a Two-Rod Validation where allowed.

Simple rule: Buy the nonresident license for your trip length first. Then add the tags and endorsements based on species and location before fishing.
At a glance

Oregon Nonresident Fishing License Quick Facts for 2026

Oregon annual fishing licenses are valid from January 1 through December 31. Daily and short-term licenses are better for single trips, but the math changes quickly if you fish several days or plan to return later in the year.

🧳Annual NR$138Nonresident angler
📅1-day$29Angling and shellfish
🐟NR tag$89Combined Angling Tag
🌊Ocean$9/$4Annual / daily
🎣Two-rod$34Where allowed
Source review note: This guide uses official Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife licensing pages, ODFW Electronic Licensing System guidance, the 2026 recreational fee schedule, Columbia River Basin Endorsement guidance, Ocean Endorsement guidance and sport fishing regulation reminders. Always verify your final checkout and current fishing regulation before fishing.
Page guide

What This Oregon Non-Resident Fishing License Guide Covers

2026 cost table

Oregon Non-Resident Fishing License Cost in 2026

ODFW’s 2026 recreational fee schedule lists the following angling, tag and endorsement fees. These amounts include the agent fee where applicable in the official fee schedule. Always confirm the final checkout total inside ODFW’s licensing system.

Oregon Nonresident Item2026 FeeBest ForImportant Note
Nonresident Annual Angler$138Visitors who fish Oregon often or return later in the year.Valid Jan. 1 through Dec. 31.
One-Day Angling and Shellfish$29One-day fishing, crabbing or clamming trip.Add daily endorsements if required.
Two-Day Angling$48Weekend trips.Check tag and endorsement needs.
Three-Day Angling$68Short guided or vacation trip.Useful for salmon or coastal weekends with add-ons.
Nonresident Seven-Day Angling$117Weeklong Oregon fishing vacation.Compare with annual if returning later.
Nonresident Annual Combined Angling Tag$89Salmon, steelhead, sturgeon or halibut.Required to legally fish, including catch-and-release, for these species.
Hatchery Harvest Tag$43Extra hatchery salmon/steelhead harvest opportunity where allowed.Read current rules before buying.
Two-Rod Angler Validation$34Using two rods in allowed waters.Does not apply everywhere.
Ocean Endorsement$9 annual / $4 dailyMany ocean fisheries beginning in 2026.Same price for residents and nonresidents.
Columbia River Basin Endorsement$9.75 annual / $1 dailySalmon, steelhead or sturgeon in Columbia Basin.$9.75 plus $2 agent fee if purchased separately.
Cost example: A nonresident salmon trip may require a base nonresident license plus a Combined Angling Tag and possibly the Columbia River Basin Endorsement, Ocean Endorsement or both, depending on where and what you fish.
Online purchase

How to Buy an Oregon Non-Resident Fishing License Online

ODFW says you can purchase an Oregon fishing license online or at an ODFW licensed vendor. The official online path is ODFW’s Electronic Licensing System, also connected through the MyODFW site and app.

1

Open the official ODFW license system

Start from ODFW’s buying guide or go directly to ODFW’s license system.

2

Create or verify your account

ODFW says anglers who purchased an annual license since 2016 may already have an online profile. New buyers can create an account.

3

Select “Fishing” from the catalog

After login, choose “Purchase from the catalog,” then select the fishing category and choose your license length.

4

Add required tags and endorsements

Before checkout, add the Combined Angling Tag, Columbia River Basin Endorsement, Ocean Endorsement or Two-Rod Validation if your trip requires them.

5

Choose paper or electronic documents

ODFW allows paper documents you can print, or electronic display and tagging through the MyODFW mobile app.

Guest checkout tip: ODFW says daily paper fishing licenses and Waterway Access Permits can be purchased without creating an account through guest checkout, but an account is required for electronic licenses displayed in the app.
Paper or app

Oregon Paper License vs MyODFW App: What Nonresidents Should Know

ODFW’s Electronic Licensing System gives visitors two practical paths. You can print paper documents, or you can use electronic display and e-tagging in the MyODFW app. Both can work, but you must be able to show valid proof in the field.

Paper option

Print immediately: ODFW says you can buy licenses and tags online and print them from any printer.

Electronic option

Use MyODFW app: Electronic display and tagging are handled through the MyODFW mobile app.

Poor service

Prepare before leaving: ODFW tells app users to login, sync documents and use field mode when service is poor.

Phone battery

Your responsibility: ODFW says keeping your phone charged is your responsibility so you can show your license and tag.

Field warning: If you choose e-tagging, set up the app before fishing. Do not wait until you have no cell service and a fish that must be tagged immediately.
Major add-on

Oregon Combined Angling Tag for Nonresidents

ODFW says anglers should consider the Combined Angling Tag if they plan to fish for salmon, steelhead, sturgeon or halibut. ODFW’s buying guide says this tag is needed to legally fish, including catch-and-release, for those species.

Nonresident annual tag

$89: 2026 nonresident annual Combined Angling Tag listed in ODFW’s fee schedule.

Species covered

Salmon, steelhead, sturgeon and halibut: Check current ODFW rules before targeting any of these species.

Catch-and-release

Still matters: ODFW says the tag applies to legally fish for these species, including catch-and-release.

Harvest reporting

Tag properly: If retaining fish, record harvest exactly as ODFW requires for paper or electronic tags.

Plain-English example: A visitor trout fishing for one day may only need a short-term license. A visitor fishing for salmon needs the correct license plus the Combined Angling Tag and possibly an endorsement.
Columbia Basin

Oregon Columbia River Basin Endorsement for Nonresidents

The Columbia River Basin Endorsement is required when angling for salmon, steelhead or sturgeon in the Columbia River Basin unless an exemption applies. It is in addition to the fishing license and Combined Angling Tag.

Columbia Basin Endorsement TypeFeeBest ForImportant Note
Annual, bought with annual fishing license$9.75Annual anglers targeting Columbia Basin salmon, steelhead or sturgeon.Buy with license when possible.
Annual, bought separately$9.75 + $2 agent feeAnglers who forgot to add it at initial purchase.Costs more when purchased separately.
Daily license endorsement$1 per dayShort daily fishing trips.Add for each daily-license day when needed.
Columbia warning: The Columbia Basin includes the mainstem Columbia River from Buoy 10 upstream and rivers and tributaries that drain into the mainstem. Check the exact water before fishing salmon, steelhead or sturgeon.
2026 ocean rule

Oregon Ocean Endorsement for Nonresidents in 2026

Starting in 2026, ODFW requires an Ocean Endorsement for many ocean fishing situations. The cost is the same for residents and nonresidents: $9 annual or $4 daily.

Annual endorsement

$9: Valid through the calendar year for anglers who fish ocean waters often.

Daily endorsement

$4: Valid for a single day, useful for short coastal trips.

When needed

Many marine fish: ODFW says it is required for many ocean fisheries, such as rockfish, lingcod, halibut and tuna situations.

Not shellfish

Shellfish exception: ODFW says the Ocean Endorsement is not required for taking shellfish.

Salmon/steelhead note: ODFW says you do not need an Ocean Endorsement if fishing for and retaining salmon or steelhead in the ocean. But if another marine finfish is retained, such as rockfish, lingcod, halibut or tuna, the endorsement is required.
Shellfish and crabbing

Oregon Nonresident Shellfish, Crabbing and Clamming Rules

The Oregon one-day angling and shellfish license costs $29 in 2026. Nonresident annual shellfish and nonresident three-day shellfish options also exist. Shellfish rules are separate from many angling rules, and closures can change quickly for safety or conservation reasons.

1-day angling + shellfish

$29: Useful for a one-day mixed fishing, crabbing or clamming trip.

Nonresident annual shellfish

$37: ODFW 2026 fee schedule lists this for nonresident annual shellfish.

Nonresident 3-day shellfish

$25: Short shellfish-focused trip option in the 2026 fee schedule.

Ocean endorsement

Not for shellfish: ODFW says Ocean Endorsement is not required for taking shellfish.

Safety warning: Always check Oregon shellfish closures, beach closures, marine biotoxin alerts and local regulations before crabbing or clamming.
Two rods

Oregon Two-Rod Validation for Nonresidents

ODFW’s 2026 fee schedule lists the Two-Rod Angler Validation at $34. This does not mean you can use two rods everywhere. Two-rod use is allowed only in specific waters and situations.

Two-rod validation checklist

  • Buy a valid Oregon angling license first.
  • Add the Two-Rod Validation only if you will use two rods.
  • Confirm the exact water allows two rods.
  • Do not assume two rods means higher bag limits.
  • Carry proof of the validation with your license.
Plain-English rule: If you fish with one rod, you usually do not need this validation. If you want to fish with two rods, buy the validation and check the water-specific rule first.
Age rules

Oregon Youth, Child and Adult Fishing License Rules

ODFW says all anglers 18 and older must purchase a fishing license and appropriate tags and endorsements. Young anglers ages 12-17 need a $10 Youth License. Children younger than 12 do not need a license to fish or shellfish.

Age GroupLicense RuleImportant Note
Children younger than 12No license needed to fish or shellfishStill follow fishing rules, limits and methods.
Youth ages 12-17$10 Youth LicenseIncludes fishing, hunting, shellfish license and Columbia River Basin Endorsement.
Adults 18 and olderFishing license requiredAdd tags and endorsements based on species and location.
Family trip tip: Youth licensing is cheaper, but salmon, steelhead, sturgeon, halibut and harvest-tag rules can still matter. Check the exact youth rules before the trip.
Rules after buying

Oregon Fishing Rules Nonresidents Must Check After Buying

A license is only permission to fish. Oregon fishing rules still control open seasons, zones, species, bag limits, length limits, gear, bait, barbless hooks, hatchery vs wild fish, harvest recording and emergency updates.

Before fishing Oregon as a visitor, check this list

  • Is your license valid for the correct date?
  • Are you fishing freshwater, ocean, Columbia Basin or shellfish areas?
  • Are you targeting trout, bass, salmon, steelhead, sturgeon, halibut, rockfish, tuna, crab or clams?
  • Do you need the Combined Angling Tag?
  • Do you need the Columbia River Basin Endorsement?
  • Do you need the Ocean Endorsement?
  • Do you need a Two-Rod Validation?
  • Are wild fish harvest limits different from hatchery fish limits?
  • Are emergency regulation updates or closures in effect?
  • Can you show proof on paper or in the app with enough battery?
Regulation note: ODFW recommends using current published regulations and downloading a PDF on your device. AI summaries and old screenshots can be inaccurate.
Avoid problems

Common Oregon Nonresident Fishing License Mistakes

Most Oregon visitor mistakes happen because anglers buy only the base license and forget tags or endorsements. The second most common mistake is relying on cell service for e-tagging after reaching a remote river, coast, lake or boat ramp.

Skipping Combined Tag

Salmon, steelhead, sturgeon and halibut require the Combined Angling Tag, even for catch-and-release fishing.

Missing Columbia Endorsement

Columbia Basin salmon, steelhead and sturgeon trips can require this endorsement in addition to license and tag.

Forgetting Ocean Endorsement

Starting in 2026, many ocean finfish trips require the Ocean Endorsement.

Wrong short-term math

A 7-day license is $117, while annual is $138. Compare before buying if you may return.

No app setup

Download, login, sync and use field mode before fishing where service is poor.

Assuming shellfish is covered

Shellfish, crabbing and clamming have their own rules, closures and license choices.

Editorial trust note

How This Oregon Non-Resident Fishing License Guide Was Checked

This guide was prepared using official Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife licensing pages, ODFW’s Electronic Licensing System page, the 2026 recreational fee schedule, Columbia River Basin Endorsement guidance and the new 2026 Ocean Endorsement guidance.

Official items checked:
  • ODFW fishing licensing information page.
  • ODFW guide for how to buy an Oregon fishing license online.
  • ODFW Electronic Licensing System and MyODFW app proof guidance.
  • 2026 ODFW recreational license fee schedule.
  • Nonresident annual, daily, two-day, three-day and seven-day angling fees.
  • Nonresident annual Combined Angling Tag fee.
  • Columbia River Basin Endorsement cost and requirement.
  • Ocean Endorsement cost and 2026 requirement.
  • Shellfish, Two-Rod Validation, youth and age-rule notes.
Find local help

Find Oregon Fishing License Vendors Near You

If you do not want to buy online, Oregon fishing licenses are sold through ODFW licensed vendors and ODFW offices that sell licenses. Call before visiting because hours, printer access and license-system availability can vary.

Search Oregon Fishing License Vendors

Use this map for a general search, then confirm through ODFW before relying on a location.

FAQs

Oregon Non-Resident Fishing License FAQs: Cost, Tags, Rules and Online Buying

How much is an Oregon non-resident fishing license in 2026?

ODFW’s 2026 fee schedule lists the nonresident annual angling license at $138. Short-term options include one-day angling and shellfish at $29, two-day at $48, three-day at $68, and nonresident seven-day at $117.

Can nonresidents buy an Oregon fishing license online?

Yes. Nonresidents can buy Oregon fishing licenses online through ODFW’s Electronic Licensing System. You can print paper documents or use electronic documents and tagging through the MyODFW app.

Do Oregon nonresidents need a Combined Angling Tag?

Yes, if fishing for salmon, steelhead, sturgeon or halibut. ODFW says the Combined Angling Tag is needed to legally fish, including catch-and-release, for those species. The 2026 nonresident annual Combined Angling Tag is $89.

How much is Oregon’s Columbia River Basin Endorsement?

ODFW lists the annual Columbia River Basin Endorsement at $9.75 when purchased with an annual license, or $9.75 plus a $2 agent fee when purchased separately. For daily licenses, it is $1 per day.

How much is the Oregon Ocean Endorsement in 2026?

The Ocean Endorsement costs $9 annual or $4 daily. ODFW says the cost is the same for residents and nonresidents.

Who needs an Oregon fishing license?

ODFW says all anglers 18 and older must purchase a fishing license and appropriate tags and endorsements. Young anglers ages 12-17 need a $10 Youth License. Children younger than 12 do not need a license to fish or shellfish.

Can I fish with two rods in Oregon as a nonresident?

Only where allowed and only with the correct validation. ODFW’s 2026 fee schedule lists the Two-Rod Angler Validation at $34.

Does an Oregon fishing license cover crabbing and clamming?

Not always. The one-day angling and shellfish license includes shellfish for that day, but annual shellfish and short-term shellfish options are separate. Check ODFW shellfish rules and closures before crabbing or clamming.

When is an Oregon annual fishing license valid?

ODFW says fishing licenses are valid from January 1 to December 31. Buy next year’s license when available if planning ahead.

Can I use the MyODFW app without cell service?

ODFW advises app users to login, sync documents and use field mode before going into areas with poor service. You are responsible for showing your license and tag, so keep your phone charged or carry paper backup where allowed.

Editorial disclaimer: Oregon nonresident fishing license fees, tags, endorsements, ocean rules, Columbia Basin rules, shellfish closures, salmon and steelhead regulations, halibut rules, sturgeon rules, two-rod rules, app features and emergency updates can change. This guide is educational and should not replace Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife regulations, ODFW licensing checkout information or enforcement guidance. Always verify the final requirement on official ODFW resources before fishing.
Final summary

Final Summary: Oregon Non-Resident Fishing License Cost and Rules in 2026

An Oregon non-resident annual angling license costs $138 in 2026. Short-term visitor options include one-day angling and shellfish at $29, two-day at $48, three-day at $68, and seven-day at $117. Salmon, steelhead, sturgeon, halibut, Columbia Basin fishing, ocean fishing and two-rod use can require extra tags or endorsements.

The safest path is to buy through ODFW’s official Electronic Licensing System, choose paper or app proof, add the Combined Angling Tag and any required endorsements, sync the MyODFW app before fishing, and check current Oregon sport fishing regulations for the exact species and waterbody before keeping fish.

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