Park Hub°
Passport
A Park Hub Field Guide
Lat 46.7859° N
Long 121.7368° W
Elevation1,610 – 14,410 ft

Washington · Stamp 16 / 63

Mount Rainier

National Park · Established 1899

An active volcano wearing more ice than any other peak in the Lower 48, visible from a hundred miles away on a clear day.

Area236,381 acres
TrailheadAshford, Washington
Visitors1.6M / yr
Scroll to begin the ascent
Live · No timed entry in 2026 · first-come parking Paradise & Sunrise both open 1 active alert 64°F · Paradise meadows Live layer, from the National Park Service
Best windowLate Jul–Aug for wildflowers · arrive before 8am Getting there1.5 hr from Tacoma · 2.5 hr from Seattle Fee$30 / vehicle · 3 days
★★★★★ 4.9 from 10 travelers 2 visitor stories 1.6M annual visitors Grounded in live NPS data
Rainier · Mile 01 · The Story

The mountain wearing
more ice than any other.

Rainier is a volcano first and a mountain second, an active stratovolcano carrying 26 named glaciers, more permanent ice than any other single peak in the contiguous United States. On a clear day it is visible from downtown Seattle, seventy miles away, standing so much taller than everything around it that early explorers had trouble believing it was real.

The wildflower meadows at Paradise and Sunrise are the payoff for anyone who times a summer trip right. For a few weeks each year, usually late July into August, the subalpine slopes erupt in lupine, paintbrush, and avalanche lilies with the glacier-draped summit standing directly behind them, a combination that draws photographers from around the world.

Come for the mountain. Stay for the two weeks in late summer when the meadows around it look unreal. Read the story, trust the live data above for what is open today, and when you leave, collect the stamp.

Product photo coming soon
From $11.98
Premium matte paper, museum-quality print. Ships in a protective tube. Price varies by size, chosen at checkout.
Get Your Mount Rainier Poster →
Of all the fire mountains which, like beacons, once blazed along the Pacific Coast, Mount Rainier is the noblest.
John Muir
Paradise · Wildflower Season
"The mountains are calling and I must go."
John Muir
Rainier · Mile 02 · The Essentials

Best Things to Do in Mount Rainier

Six ways to spend your time, from a wildflower meadow walk to a fire lookout with the mountain filling the whole sky.

See

Paradise meadows in bloom

Late July into August, the slopes above the visitor center fill with lupine, paintbrush, and avalanche lilies beneath the summit itself.

The signature sight
Drive

Sunrise, the highest drivable point

At 6,400 feet, the highest point in the park reachable by car, with sweeping views and trails in every direction.

Casual · road-trippers
Do

Walk the Skyline Trail

The signature Paradise loop through subalpine meadows and rocky alpine terrain, with the mountain close enough to feel oversized.

Half day · confident hikers
See

Reflection Lakes

A calm-water mirror of the summit on a still morning, right off the road with almost no walking required.

Everyone · 20 min
Camp

Cougar Rock Campground

Near the Wonderland Trail and a short drive to Paradise. Book ahead; Ohanapecosh is closed for rehab in 2026.

Campers · book ahead
Explore

Grove of the Patriarchs

Old-growth trees that escaped logging, some over a thousand years old, on a short loop with a suspension bridge crossing.

Families · 45 min
Free · Ready in Seconds
Free AI Trip Planner

Plan Your Mount Rainier 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 Summit · Twenty-Six Glaciers
"In every walk with nature one receives far more than he seeks."
John Muir
Rainier · Mile 03 · Trails & Viewpoints

Best Hikes in Mount Rainier, by Difficulty

Every trail rated honestly, with distance, climb, and a note on where the wildflowers actually peak.

Nisqually Vista Trail

Easy
1.2 mi+200 ft~1 hr

A gentle loop from the Paradise Visitor Center with views of the Nisqually Glacier and reliable wildflower meadows. No permit.

Myrtle Falls

Easy
0.8 mi+100 ft~30 min

A short, paved climb from Paradise to a 60-foot waterfall with the summit posed directly behind it. No permit.

Skyline Trail Loop

Moderate
5.5 mi+1,700 ft4–5 hr

The classic Paradise loop through peak wildflower meadows to Panorama Point, with the mountain never out of view. No permit.

Naches Peak Loop

Easy–Mod
3.4 mi+700 ft~2.5 hr

Circles Naches Peak near Chinook Pass with Tipsoo Lake views and some of the park's most reliable late-summer wildflowers. No permit.

Burroughs Mountain

Strenuous
9 mi+2,500 ft6–7 hr

From Sunrise across alpine tundra to a ridge with an eye-level view of the Emmons Glacier, the mountain's largest. No permit.

Permit · multi-day

Wonderland Trail

Extreme
93 mi+22,000 ft10–14 days

A full circumnavigation of the mountain through every ecosystem in the park. A wilderness permit lottery via Recreation.gov is required for the overnight backcountry camps.

No timed entry required in 2026 · wilderness permits via Recreation.gov for the Wonderland Trail and overnight camping · no permit for day hikes

Mount Rainier National Park at a Glance
1  Henry M. Jackson Visitor Center
2  Sunrise Visitor Center
3  Skyline Trailhead
4  Christine Falls
5  Grove of the Patriarchs
6  Mount Rainier Summit
Stops shown in visit order. Build a plan above and this map updates to your exact stops.
Rainier · Mile 04 · Life on the Volcano

Wildlife in Mount Rainier: 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.

Works the steep rock above treeline, most often spotted from a distance along the Skyline or Burroughs Mountain trails.

The most commonly seen large mammal in the park, grazing meadows near Paradise and Sunrise, particularly early and late in the day.

Common in the subalpine berry fields by late summer. Give any bear a wide berth and never approach one feeding.

A large alpine marmot with a sharp warning whistle, spending much of the summer sunbathing on rocks near meadow trails.

A bold, fluffy-looking jay that will investigate any unattended food at a picnic table. Keep everything sealed and packed away.

A distinct, high-elevation fox population found in this park and nearby Cascade peaks, rarely seen but occasionally spotted near Sunrise.

A native cold-water species that depends on the icy runoff from the mountain's glaciers, now listed as threatened across much of its range.

Plant Life in Mount Rainier: What Grows Here

The dominant color of Paradise in peak bloom, covering entire hillsides in July and August alongside paintbrush and bistort.

A white, star-shaped flower that pushes up through the last patches of melting snow, sometimes carpeting whole slopes in white before anything else blooms.

Bright red-orange spikes scattered through the meadows, partly parasitic on the roots of nearby lupine and grasses.

Dominates the forest belt just below the meadows, tolerant of the heavy snow loads that define Rainier's winters.

Washington's state tree, common in the lower, wetter forests around Longmire and the Grove of the Patriarchs.

A low, wiry shrub with small bell-shaped pink flowers, thriving in the harsh, wind-scoured tundra above the meadows.

Fun Facts About Mount Rainier

Fact 01

Mount Rainier carries 26 named glaciers, more permanent ice than any other single peak in the contiguous United States.

Fact 02

The mountain is an active volcano, part of the same Cascade chain that includes Mount St. Helens, and is monitored continuously for signs of unrest.

Fact 03

On a clear day, Rainier is visible from Seattle, Tacoma, and Portland, dominating the horizon from more than seventy miles away.

Fact 04

In 2026, Mount Rainier dropped its timed-entry system entirely after piloting it at Paradise and Sunrise since 2024, returning to first-come parking management.

Rainier · Provisions
Gear for this parkvia AvantLink
Layered jacket (alpine wind)REI
Trekking polesBackcountry
2L hydration packOsprey
Stay nearbyvia Hipcamp
Forest sites near Ashford
Fifteen minutes from the Nisqually entrance, pine shade included, from $35 a night.
Free Rainier checklistdigital · $0
The printable trail and packing checklist in the field-guide style. Take it, join the trail list.
Rainier · Mile 05 · From the Field Journal

Go Deeper on Mount Rainier

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

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

Rainier · Mile 06 · Where to Next

Keep the Journey Going

More from Park Hub
The App
Coming soon

Carry the field guide

Offline maps, your passport, and every park in your pocket on the trail.

The Book
Keepsake

The Park Hub field guide

The printed edition, part atlas, part journal, one story per park.

The Shop
Prints · pins · passport

Take Rainier home

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

Forty-seven 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
Begin your journey