| Northeastern Pomo | |
|---|---|
| Salt Pomo | |
| Native to | United States | 
| Region | Northern California | 
| Extinct | 1961 [1] | 
|  Pomoan  
 | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 |  pef  | 
| Glottolog |  nort2967  | 
|   The seven Pomoan languages with an indication of their pre-contact distribution within California; Northeastern Pomo in   pink | |
Northeastern Pomo, also known as Salt Pomo, is a Pomoan language of Northern California. There are no living fluent speakers. It was spoken along Stony Creek, a tributary of the Sacramento River. Northeastern was one of seven mutually unintelligible Pomoan languages spoken in Northern California. Unlike the other six Pomoan languages (going to north to south: Northern Pomo, Central Pomo, Eastern Pomo, Southeastern Pomo, Kashaya Pomo, Southern Pomo), Northeastern Pomo was not spoken in an area immediately contiguous with any other Pomoan-speaking area. Northeastern Pomo speakers were ringed by speakers of Yuki, Nomlaki, and Patwin; Yuki is unrelated to Pomoan or Nomlaki and Patwin, both of which are within the Wintu language family.