The Metlakatla Indian Community, Annette Island Reserve is a federally recognized Alaska Native tribe of Tsimshian people. This Alaska Native tribe is headquartered in Metlakatla, Alaska (, which means "saltwater passage"). Their landbase, the Annette Island Reserve is the only Indian reservation in Alaska.
The Metlakatla Indian Community is led by a democratically elected tribal council. Its mayor is Albert G. Smith. The Metlakatla Agency of the Bureau of Indian Affairs serves the tribe. The tribe ratified its constitution and corporate charter in 1944 and amended it in 1949.
The tribe migrated from "Old Metlakatla" in British Columbia with missionary William Duncan in 1891, and settled in Metlakatla, Alaska, or "New Metlakatla". They became a Tsimshian tribe in the United States.
The Annette Island Reserve is 86,000-acre reservation on Annette Island. The land and surrounding waters are under control of the tribe, not the state. The Alaska Marine Highway, a state ferry service, provides daily service off the island. The reservation is also accessible by plane but not by roads.
The Metlakatla WIC Clinic provided healthcare on the reservation.
The reservation surrounded by the Tongass National Forest and part of the Prince of Wales-Hyder Census Area.
Metlakatla is 8 nautical miles away from Ketchikan but not connected by highway, so travel off the island is airplane or boat.
Fishing, harvesting seaweed, and hunting are important to the tribe's livelihood. The Metlakatla Indian Community is affiliated with Sealaska Corporation, an Alaska Native corporation.
The Metlakatla Indian Community speaks English and the Tsimshian language.