2 Days in Glacier National Park

A realistic two-day plan for Montana's crown jewel, with the family in mind.

Snow-dotted mountains rising above a rocky alpine meadow filled with yellow glacier lilies near Logan Pass.
Glacier lilies near Logan Pass, along the Going-to-the-Sun Road. Photo: NPS Photo

Two days in Glacier is enough to see the headline stuff and leave wanting more, which is exactly the right amount of "more" to leave with. The park packs over 700 miles of trails, carved valleys, and that famous road between alpine meadows and turquoise lakes. You won't do it all in 48 hours, so this plan picks the highlights and keeps the driving sane for kids.

Before you go: the one thing that ruins trips here

Glacier's centerpiece is the Going-to-the-Sun Road, a 50-mile drive over Logan Pass on the Continental Divide. The catch: it doesn't fully open until late June or early July most years, and snow closes it again in fall. If you're visiting outside roughly July through mid-October, check the road status before you build any plan around it.

In peak summer (typically late June through early September), the park runs a vehicle reservation system for the Going-to-the-Sun corridor and Many Glacier. These are timed-entry tickets you book in advance on Recreation.gov, separate from your park entrance fee. Get them the moment they release. Entrance is $35 per vehicle for seven days. Arriving before 7am or after the afternoon cutoff usually sidesteps the reservation window, and early starts beat the crowds anyway.

Day 1: Going-to-the-Sun Road and Lake McDonald

Enter from the west at West Glacier and start with Lake McDonald, the park's largest lake. The colorful pebbles along the shore near Lake McDonald Lodge are a five-minute win with kids, with easy parking and no hiking required. The historic lodge lobby is worth a peek.

If the family still has energy, the Trail of the Cedars near Avalanche is a flat, accessible loop through old-growth forest, the easiest "wow" trail in the park.

2 Days in Glacier National Park
Photo: NPS Photo

Day 2: Many Glacier (or take it slow)

Many Glacier, on the park's east side, is where a lot of people quietly say their favorite scenery lives. Note that it's a 1.5-to-2-hour drive from the west-side towns, so plan to base over here for night one if you can, or treat day two as a longer day.

Short on time or energy? Spend day two slow on the west side instead: paddle or swim at Lake McDonald, do a ranger program, and let the Going-to-the-Sun Road be the trip's big swing.

Practical notes for families

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