Find the right line for the water ahead.
Explore Cortland’s freshwater fly line series by presentation, water type, and technique. Then view the full freshwater lineup below.
Start by Fishing Style
Start with the way you fish, then move into the freshwater series that best match your setup.
Trout & Technical Presentations
For dry flies, nymphs, indicators, and contact-style freshwater presentations.
Streamers & Big Flies
For larger flies, heavier rigs, aggressive tapers, and covering water.
Demanding Freshwater Setups
For hard-fighting freshwater species, larger flies, and dedicated specialty setups.
Spey, Switch & Two-Handed
For freshwater two-handed casting, swing presentations, and longer-line control.
Understand each series before you shop.
Each freshwater series serves a different purpose. Use this guide to see where each line family fits before moving into the full product collection.
Kelly Galloup Series
Streamer-focused tapers designed to deliver big flies with control, depth, and efficiency.
Best For Modern streamer fishing, big flies, and aggressive trout tactics.
→50+ Series Freshwater
Freshwater lines built with a 50-pound plus core for demanding species and stronger setups.
Best For Hard-fighting freshwater species and larger fly presentations.
→Trout Series
Balanced freshwater lines for dry flies, nymphs, and light streamers on rivers and streams.
Best For Dry flies, nymphs, light streamers, and versatile trout setups.
→Euro Nymph Series
Lines built for tight-line and modern nymphing techniques where sensitivity matters.
Best For Euro nymphing, contact rigs, strike detection, and reduced line sag.
→Streamer Series
More powerful freshwater tapers for casting larger flies and heavier rigs.
Best For Streamers, weighted flies, floating lines, and sinking tip options.
→Two-Handed Series
Lines for freshwater Spey, switch, Skagit-style casts, and two-handed line control.
Best For Two-handed rods, swing fishing, taper belly length, and grain-weight selection.
→Specialty Series
Freshwater lines developed for specific species, densities, grain weights, and presentation needs.
Best For Dedicated freshwater setups that call for a specific line design.
→444 Classic Series
Heritage Cortland lines with a classic feel, supple handling, and familiar freshwater performance.
Best For Classic Cortland feel, soft presentations, and freshwater floating line performance.
→Classic Series
Traditional tapers with a familiar casting feel trusted by anglers for decades.
Best For Anglers who prefer a traditional line profile and familiar casting feel.
→Narrow the options before your next day on the water.
Answer a few quick questions to narrow the Cortland lines that make the most sense for your rod, target species, and setup.
Shop All Freshwater Fly Lines
Explore the full freshwater lineup below, including trout, streamer, nymphing, two-handed, classic, specialty, and 50+ freshwater fly line options.
FRESHWATER FLY LINE TYPES
Freshwater fly lines are built with specific tapers and materials to match different fishing styles. While some lines are versatile enough for multiple techniques, specialized designs perform best when accuracy, power, or control are critical.
how to choose a freshwater fly line
Once you understand the different freshwater fly line types, choosing the right one comes down to how you fish and the conditions you fish most often. Different line designs prioritize accuracy, power, or sensitivity based on technique.
- Trout Series: Balanced lines for dry flies, nymphs, and light streamers on rivers and streams.
- Streamer Series: More powerful tapers for casting larger flies and heavier rigs.
- Euro Nymph Series: Designed for tight-line and contact nymphing techniques where sensitivity matters most.
- Classic / 444 Series: Traditional tapers with a familiar casting feel trusted by anglers for decades.
- 50+ Series: Built with a stronger core for anglers targeting larger freshwater species or fishing more aggressive setups.
Freshwater fly line faqs
Freshwater fly lines are designed for lighter flies, precise presentations, and controlled casting. They differ from saltwater or specialty lines in taper design, coating, and core construction.
Start with your primary technique (dry flies, nymphs, streamers, or Euro nymphing) then consider water type and fly size. Matching the line to how you fish improves casting and presentation.
Trout Series lines focus on balance and accuracy, while Streamer Series lines use more powerful tapers to turn over larger or heavier flies.
Some general-purpose lines can cover multiple techniques, but specialized lines perform better when conditions or techniques demand precision or power.
Taper controls how energy transfers during the cast, affecting accuracy, turnover, distance, and how the fly lands on the water.
Not sure which line fits your setup? Use Cortland’s Fly Line Selector to match your rod, fishing style, and conditions.