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Matt Brown's Tragic Final Days: What His Family Wishes They Had Known

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“Alaskan Bush People” star Matt Brown saw his brother Noah Brown the day before he died by suicide.

It was “just one of those, like, driving by [and] wave-type situations,” Noah told Us Weekly on Monday, going on to share his regrets about not stopping last week.

“I wish I had more time when I drove past,” the 33-year-old confessed. “But … it is what it is.”

A man wearing a green hooded jacket and green knit cap smiles at the camera with pine trees in the background.

Matt Brown (pictured above in 2024) ran into his brother Noah Brown the day before his tragic death by suicide. mattbrown511/Instagram

Noah Brown with his hand on his head.

The duo had “one of those, like, driving by [and] wave-type situations,” Noah (pictured above on Saturday) told Us Weekly. noah_dc_brown/Instagram

Noah, who identified Matt after his body was pulled from a Washington river Saturday, went on to describe his final conversation with his late sibling “two or three weeks” before Matt’s passing.

“I ran into him in the grocery store [and] the last thing I said to him was, ‘Okay, love you more, man,’ which was our thing,” Noah recalled.

“You never know when the last time you’re going to see someone is, so [our family] always [says] how you feel right before you say goodbye, because it could be the last thing,” he added. “Then that was it.”

As for their relationship dynamic prior to Matt’s death, Noah said they were “good” but “kept [their] distance.”

Alaskan Bush People' alum Matt Brown.

Noah regrets not having “more time” to chat with Matt (pictured above on May 10). YouTube/Matthew Brown

A man in a tank top driving a blue truck with a small American flag hanging from the rear view mirror.

Noah’s last conversation with Matt (pictured above in June 2025) took place at a grocery store. Matt Brown/YouTube

He explained, “In the later years, I realized it was best to just kind of let him do his own thing. … The stress of a large family gets to some people, and it’s just one of those things. [I] just let’s let him live his life.

“He and I were good and I’m very, very thankful for that,” Noah continued. “I do wish, though, that there could have been more, but in the end, that’s kind of always how it is. You always wish that you could have done more, no matter how much it was that you were doing.”

Matt went missing on Wednesday, with the Okanogan County Sheriff Office revealing a 911 caller “heard a sound” at the Okanogan River, turned and saw a man “facedown in the water drifting away in the current.”

A gun was later recovered from the area.

He died by suicide, according to brother Bear Brown’s TikTok video over the weekend.

Alaskan Bush People star Matt Brown with a paper bag on a table.

Noah shared his “love” with Matt (pictured above on May 12) at the time. Instagram/abpmattbrown

Matt Brown from "Alaskan Bush People" with a serious expression, looking up from below, with a blue sky and pine trees in the background.

Matt (pictured above in June 2025) went missing Wednesday. Matt Brown/YouTube

“I didn’t think he would hurt himself, it does look like the injury is self-inflicted,” Bear told his social media followers. “Obviously, the coroner has to look at him and stuff, but I thought you guys should know it is him.”

Bear, like Noah, ran into Matt prior to his death while out shopping “a little bit ago.”

Matt, who struggled “for a long time with alcohol and drugs,” told his brother that he had “fallen off the wagon,” Bear claimed.

The 38-year-old, at the time, urged Matt to go to rehab.

A man with short grey hair and a black tank top looking up, with a blue corrugated building behind him.

His body was recovered from a Washington river and identified by Noah on Saturday. mattbrown511/Instagran

Cast of Alaskan Bush People standing on a dirt road in a forest.

The family members appeared on “Alaskan Bush People” between 2014 and 2019. Discovery+

He insisted via TikTok that his family did not “shun” Matt, alleging instead that his sibling “didn’t want anything to do with the family.”

The Brown family, notably, appeared on Discovery Channel’s “Alaskan Bush People” between 2014 and 2019.

If you or someone you know is affected by any of the issues raised in this story, contact the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline by calling or texting 988.