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CanWePaddle

Illinois River — Savoy to Chambers Springs: Water Level Today — Can You Paddle It?

Illinois River · Class II · Arkansas

Current verdict

Too low to paddle

Not enough water to float well — expect scraping and walking. Wait for rain or a dam release.

75 cfs/ 2.4 ft gauge
Runnable 100–1,200 cfs
Estimated range

USGS gauge 07194800 · updated Jul 9, 8:00 AM UTC

7-day flow trend

1,31202026-07-022026-07-08
Daily mean flow (cfs), past 7 days. Shaded band = runnable range.

Section facts

Difficulty
Class II
Length
8 mi
Float time
~4.5 hr
Best months
March–July
Put-in
Savoy (Hwy 16 Bridge)
Take-out
Chambers Springs Access

Reading USGS gauge 07194800 — Illinois River at Savoy, AR · runnable range is an estimate (see methodology)

FAQ

What water level is good for paddling Illinois River — Savoy to Chambers Springs?

This section is generally runnable at 100–1,200 cfs (a conservative estimate — see our methodology). Below that it gets too low and bony; well above the top of the range it becomes pushy and then dangerous. We compare the live USGS reading to that range to produce today's verdict.

How do I check Illinois River levels?

We read USGS gauge 07194800 — the same public data USGS publishes — about every 30 minutes and compare it to the runnable range for this reach. You can also view the raw gauge yourself at waterdata.usgs.gov.

Is Illinois River — Savoy to Chambers Springs good for beginners?

This section is rated Class II. At good levels it suits confident beginners and up, but it can have riffles or small rapids. Scout anything you can't see, and stay off it at high water.

When is the best time to paddle Illinois River here?

Typically March–July, when flows are most reliable for this section. Spring can run high after rain or snowmelt; late summer can drop too low. Always check today's gauge reading rather than assuming.

How long does it take to float Illinois River — Savoy to Chambers Springs?

This reach is about 8 miles, roughly 4.5 hours at a relaxed pace. Higher water is faster; low water and headwinds are slower. Add time for stops.

Nearby sections

Learn more