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A Park Hub Field Guide
Lat 48.5231° N
Long 113.9885° W
Elevation3,150 – 10,466 ft

Montana · Stamp 12 / 63

Glacier

National Park · Established 1910

The Crown of the Continent, where the water splits three ways and the ice, slowly, is running out of time.

Area1,013,322 acres
TrailheadWest Glacier, Montana
Visitors2.9M / yr
Scroll to begin the ascent
Live · No vehicle reservation required in 2026 Going-to-the-Sun Road open, full length 1 active alert 64°F · mountain air Live layer, from the National Park Service
Best windowJul–Sep · Logan Pass opens mid-to-late June Getting there30 min from Kalispell · 2.5 hr from Missoula Fee$35 / vehicle · 7 days
★★★★★ 4.9 from 13 travelers 2 visitor stories 2.9M annual visitors Grounded in live NPS data
Glacier · Mile 01 · The Story

Where the water
splits three ways.

Stand at Triple Divide Peak and you are standing on top of a hydrological oddity: rain falling on one side eventually reaches the Pacific, on another the Atlantic by way of the Gulf of Mexico, and on a third the Arctic Ocean via Hudson Bay. Nowhere else in North America does one point send water to three different oceans. Locals call the park the Crown of the Continent for exactly this reason.

The glaciers that carved this landscape, and gave the park its name, are mostly gone or going. Fewer than thirty remain of the roughly 150 that existed when the park was established in 1910, and most of those are a fraction of their historic size. What is left is still spectacular: knife-edge ridges, hanging valleys, and Going-to-the-Sun Road, a fifty-mile engineering feat that crosses Logan Pass at 6,646 feet.

Come for the road. Stay for the fact that you are looking at a landscape actively disappearing, one summer at a time. Read the story, check the live data above for road and shuttle status, and when you leave, collect the stamp.

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Nowhere else are the mountains more like temples, or the forests more like cathedrals, than at Glacier.
Adapted from early Great Northern Railway promotional writing on Glacier, circa 1915
Going-to-the-Sun Road · Logan Pass
"The mountains are calling and I must go."
John Muir
Glacier · Mile 02 · The Essentials

Best Things to Do in Glacier

Six ways to spend your time, from a red-bus tour on the road itself to a boat ride under Grinnell Point.

Drive

Going-to-the-Sun Road

Fifty miles of engineering across the Continental Divide, cresting at Logan Pass with a view in every direction. No reservation needed in 2026.

The signature drive
See

Logan Pass at midday

Mountain goats and marmots work the meadows right by the visitor center. Parking is limited to three hours starting July 1.

Everyone · 1 hr
Do

Boat tour on Lake McDonald

The largest lake in the park, ringed by colorful lakebed stones visible right through the clear water.

Families · relaxed
Explore

Many Glacier Valley

The park's most scenic corner, with the historic 1915 hotel on Swiftcurrent Lake and trailheads to Grinnell Glacier.

Half day · east side
Camp

Avalanche Campground

Riverside sites near the trailhead for Avalanche Lake, one of the busiest and prettiest corners of the west side.

Campers · book ahead
Bike

Going-to-the-Sun before opening

Cyclists get the road to themselves for a stretch each spring before it fully opens to cars. A rare, quiet way to see it.

Cyclists · early season
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Free AI Trip Planner

Plan Your Glacier Trip

Answer a few questions right here — we'll map your day, stop by stop, with a route, timings, weather, and a packing checklist grounded in real park data. No account, no leaving this page.

Free preview · no card required
Sponsored · Park Hub
Your adventure, printed
Field-guide posters and the passport book, from our shop.
When the Crowds ComeMonthly visitors · tap a year
Illustrative shape · wires to official NPS visitation stats · summer peaks shown in gold
The Crown of the Continent
"Wilderness is not a luxury but a necessity of the human spirit."
Edward Abbey
Glacier · Mile 03 · Trails & Viewpoints

Best Hikes in Glacier, by Difficulty

Every trail rated honestly, with distance, climb, and a note on where bear country really starts.

Trail of the Cedars

Easy
0.7 miflat~30 min

A boardwalk loop through old-growth cedar and hemlock, wheelchair accessible and shaded even on a hot day. No permit.

Avalanche Lake

Easy–Mod
4.5 mi+730 ft~3 hr

A steady climb through forest to a turquoise lake framed by waterfalls off the surrounding cliffs. No permit.

Hidden Lake Overlook

Easy–Mod
2.7 mi+550 ft~2 hr

From Logan Pass, a boardwalk-then-trail climb through mountain-goat country to an overlook of Hidden Lake below. No permit.

Highline Trail

Strenuous
11.8 mi+830 ft6–8 hr

A cliffside ledge trail with a cable handhold at the start, then miles of open alpine traverse below the Garden Wall. No permit.

Grinnell Glacier

Strenuous
10.6 mi+1,600 ft7–9 hr

A long climb past a chain of turquoise lakes to the receding glacier itself. A boat shuttle across Swiftcurrent and Josephine Lakes shortens it considerably. No permit.

Iceberg Lake

Moderate
9.7 mi+1,200 ft5–6 hr

A cirque lake that holds icebergs into midsummer, in a valley with one of the park's highest concentrations of grizzly activity. No permit.

Wilderness permits via Recreation.gov for overnight camping · ticketed Logan Pass shuttle required starting July 1 · no permit for day hikes

Glacier National Park at a Glance
1  Apgar Visitor Center
2  Lake McDonald
3  Avalanche Lake Trailhead
4  Logan Pass Visitor Center
5  Saint Mary Lake
6  Many Glacier Hotel
Stops shown in visit order. Build a plan above and this map updates to your exact stops.
Glacier · Mile 04 · The Crown's Wildlife

Wildlife in Glacier: Animals You Might See

Tap any animal to learn its story. Soon, the app will let you log what you spot and keep a life list for every park.

One of the densest grizzly populations in the Lower 48. Carry bear spray, hike in groups, and make noise on quiet trails.

The park's unofficial mascot, comfortable on ledges that look impossible and often right beside the Logan Pass boardwalk.

Shares the high cliffs with mountain goats but prefers grassier slopes. Rams spar hard enough to echo across whole valleys each fall.

Common in the wet meadows and beaver ponds of the west side, browsing willow up to their shoulders in summer.

Rides the ridge thermals in numbers each fall migration, making Glacier one of the best raptor-watching corridors in the country.

A large alpine marmot with a sharp, carrying whistle used to warn the colony of approaching eagles or bears.

A native cold-water trout now protected as threatened, needing water so cold and clean it survives in relatively few places left in the Lower 48.

Plant Life in Glacier: What Grows Here

Ancient, moisture-loving giants surviving in a few sheltered valleys on the park's wetter west side, some centuries old.

A tall lily relative that blooms unpredictably; some summers cover entire hillsides in white plumes, others show almost none.

Grows tall in sheltered valleys but twists into stunted, wind-flagged shapes right at the edge of treeline near Logan Pass.

One of the first flowers up after snowmelt, sometimes pushing bright yellow blooms through the last patches of retreating snow.

Scarlet spikes scattered through the high meadows in July, partly parasitic on the roots of nearby grasses and shrubs.

A keystone high-elevation tree now under serious threat from blister rust and beetles; its seeds are a critical grizzly food source.

Fun Facts About Glacier

Fact 01

Fewer than 30 glaciers remain of the roughly 150 that existed when the park was established in 1910, and most are a fraction of their historic size.

Fact 02

Triple Divide Peak sends water toward the Pacific, Atlantic, and Arctic Oceans, the only such point on the continent.

Fact 03

Going-to-the-Sun Road crosses Logan Pass at 6,646 feet and took eleven years to build, finished in 1932.

Fact 04

The park has one of the highest concentrations of grizzly bears in the Lower 48 states, alongside Yellowstone.

Glacier · Provisions
Gear for this parkvia AvantLink
Bear spray (required backcountry)REI
Bear bellBackcountry
3L hydration packOsprey
Stay nearbyvia Hipcamp
Forest sites near West Glacier
Ten minutes from the west entrance, river sound included, from $37 a night.
Free Glacier checklistdigital · $0
The printable trail and packing checklist in the field-guide style. Take it, join the trail list.
Glacier · Mile 05 · From the Field Journal

Go Deeper on Glacier

Stories, guides, and hard-won tips from the trail. The full Glacier deep dive lives on the journal.

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The field guide, in your pocket
Offline maps and your passport. Join the app waitlist.
Sponsored · Park Hub
Free Glacier checklist
The printable trail and packing list, in the field-guide style.
GlacierPark Hub · Collected
Your passport

One stamp,
one story.

Log the visit, keep your story, and watch the map of all sixty-three fill in behind you. Every stamp has a keepsake worth holding.

Glacier · Mile 06 · Where to Next

Keep the Journey Going

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Prints · pins · passport

Take Glacier home

Field-guide posters, enamel stamps, and the passport book to fill in.

Fifty-one parks remain
"The parks do not belong to one state or to one section... they belong as much to the man of Massachusetts, of Michigan, of Florida, as they do to the people of California, of Wyoming, and of Arizona."
Stephen Mather · first director of the National Park Service
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