Aerial view of the forested Klamath River canyon for an article about Yurok land back in California

Yurok Tribe reclaims 17,000 acres in California’s largest-ever land back deal

The Yurok Tribe has completed the largest land return agreement in California history, reacquiring 17,000 acres of ancestral territory along the Klamath River. Secured through a partnership with conservation land trusts, the transfer places critical forestland, sacred sites, and traditional fishing grounds back under Yurok governance — and sets a new standard for what Yurok land back agreements can look like across the United States.

At a glance

  • Yurok land back: The agreement returns 17,000 acres of ancestral Yurok territory in Northern California, making it the largest such transfer in state history.
  • Klamath River watershed: The land surrounds the Klamath River, already the site of the largest dam removal and river restoration project in U.S. history.
  • Conservation easement: A perpetual conservation easement ensures the land can never be sold for commercial logging or development, protecting it in perpetuity.

What this land means to the Yurok people

The Yurok are the largest federally recognized tribe in California. Their identity, spiritual practices, and sustenance have been tied to the Klamath River corridor for thousands of years.

When settlers and the U.S. government forced the Yurok from their ancestral lands during the 19th and 20th centuries, commercial logging companies moved in. Decades of clearcutting degraded the forests, disrupted salmon runs, and severed the Tribe from places central to their ceremonies and way of life. This agreement begins to reverse that history.

Returning land to the Yurok is not simply a property transaction. It restores the Tribe’s authority to manage forests using ecological knowledge accumulated over millennia — knowledge that modern conservation science increasingly recognizes as essential to long-term ecosystem health. Traditional Yurok stewardship practices emphasize balance between human use and ecological resilience, an approach that commercial forestry largely abandoned.

A stronger river, a healed watershed

The timing of this transfer is no accident. The Klamath River dam removal project — the largest river restoration effort in U.S. history — is already underway, with four major dams demolished in recent years. Salmon are returning to stretches of the river they haven’t accessed in over a century.

But a river does not heal in isolation. The health of the surrounding watershed — its forests, slopes, and riparian zones — determines whether that recovery holds. Yurok stewardship of these 17,000 acres gives the restoration project its best possible chance at lasting success.

The Tribe’s Natural Resources Division has long managed fisheries, wildlife corridors, and cultural resources across their existing territory. This expansion brings more of the ancestral landscape under that same careful governance. For those following Indigenous land stewardship milestones globally, the Yurok agreement reflects a widening consensus: Indigenous stewardship is not a historical relic. It is a frontline conservation strategy.

A blueprint spreading across the country

The structure of this deal offers a practical model for future transfers. Conservation land trusts acquired the acreage, then transferred it to the Tribe under a perpetual conservation easement. This approach addresses one of the most common obstacles in land back negotiations: concerns among conservation donors and funders that returned land might eventually be sold or developed.

The easement removes that uncertainty permanently. The land stays wild, and the Tribe governs it. Both goals are secured in the same legal instrument.

Organizations like the National Congress of American Indians and the First Nations Development Institute have tracked a growing wave of similar negotiations across the country. Tribal nations from the Pacific Northwest to the Great Lakes are pursuing comparable partnerships, citing the Yurok agreement as evidence that these deals can work.

The National Wildlife Federation, which has supported tribal conservation partnerships across the U.S., calls agreements like this one among the most effective conservation tools available. When the people who know the land best are the ones governing it, the land tends to thrive.

Progress with eyes open

17,000 acres is significant, but the Yurok’s ancestral territory once encompassed far more land than this agreement restores. Funding, legal complexity, and political will remain real barriers to scaling Yurok land back agreements — and agreements like them — at the pace many tribal advocates say the moment requires. The conservation easement model, while protective, also places some limits on how the Tribe can use the land, a tension that ongoing negotiations will need to address.

Still, the Klamath corridor is healing. The salmon are running. And the people who have stewarded this land for thousands of years are home.

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For more on this story, see: Yurok Tribe

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