Résumé : The ability to trace and quantify sediment provenance in northwestern Patagonia is increasingly needed to properly understand modern sediment erosion and transport processes in this rapidly changing environment, and to accurately interpret sediment records from adjacent basins in terms of climate and environmental change. Nonetheless, no study so far has systematically evaluated the effectiveness of different tracers to reconstruct sediment provenance in this region. To fill this gap, we assess the effectiveness of commonly-used provenance indicators, including bulk mineralogy, major and rare earth element (REE) geochemistry, and Sr and Nd isotopes, to reconstruct sediment provenance in northwestern Patagonia. First, the ability of these tracers to discriminate between the main sources of sediment in the region is investigated, mostly using data compiled from the literature. Then, the potential of these tracers for provenance reconstruction is assessed by comparing the composition of sediments from six major Chilean rivers between 44 and 48°S to lithological proportions in their respective watersheds. The results suggest that mineralogy, major element geochemistry, and REE geochemistry can be used as qualitative tracers of sediment provenance. However, the compositional overlap between the sources and the relatively large variability within them prevent quantitative reconstructions. By comparison, 87Sr/86Sr and εNd allow to clearly differentiate between the sources, most likely due to significant age differences between the main lithologies, and to estimate the relative contribution of each source. End-member mixing results based on Sr and Nd isotopes show that the relative source contributions are in general agreement with the lithological proportions in the river watersheds. Differences between estimated contributions and lithological proportions in the watersheds are interpreted as the result of the high regional precipitation gradient and unequal glacier distribution, which lead to variable erosion rates across the study area. Our results demonstrate the suitability of 87Sr/86Sr and εNd for quantitative provenance reconstruction in northwestern Patagonia. They constitute a strong basis for the interpretation of sediment archives from the Patagonian fjords and from the eastern South Pacific, and they should be particularly useful to quantitatively investigate modern and past earth-surface processes.