We describe a new method to collect adult Pacific Lamprey Entosphenus tridentatus in wadable streams using a backpack electrofisher with pulsed, direct current at 300 V, 50 Hz, and 4 milliseconds pulse width in a 150 m2 reach of Eel Creek, a small dunal stream in Oregon (USA). The 150 m2 collection reach was predominately coarse substrate (20% boulders, 60% cobble, 15% pebbles, and 5% sand), whereas the substrate in the remainder of the 4.2 kilometer long Eel Creek is predominately sand and silt. The specific conductivity of the stream was 83.7 μS X cm‐1 and water temperatures ranged from 8.9 to 17.2oC, with water depth ≤1.2 m. One person electrofished while gradually moving downstream, and up to 6 netters stationed up to 6 m away covered most of the channel width and caught the lamprey as they emerged from the substrate and floated or swam downstream. We collected 118 adult lamprey (mean: 29.5 lamprey X hr‐1; range: 4 – 80 lamprey X hr‐1) measuring 504 ±54 mm TL over eight collection events during 2018 – 2021. A total of 117 of 118 of these fish were subsequently anesthetized, handled, tagged, and released within a few hours with no mortalities, external injuries, or abnormal behavior. One lamprey (0.8% of all collected lamprey) that was collected and tagged, died during a second collection 35 d later. The estimated peak power output was 267.7 μW X cm‐1 and the estimated mean body volume of the lamprey was 378 ±68 cm3. The results suggest that backpack electrofishing I a useful method for collecting adult lamprey in streams with favorable habitat that concentrates them.