3 Days in Olympic National Park: Coast, Rainforest, and Mountains

One park, three completely different worlds, and a plan that fits them into a long weekend

Ocher sea stars resting on rocks during low tide on a beach along the Olympic coast in Washington
Tide pools on the Olympic coast, one of the park's three distinct regions. Photo: NPS Photo/Bill Baccus

Olympic isn't one park so much as three stitched together: over 70 miles of wild coastline, old-growth temperate rainforest, and glacier-capped mountains. They're spread across nearly a million acres in Washington (WA), connected by the long loop of Highway 101. Three days is enough to see one slice of each, but you'll drive a lot, so the plan below groups things by region instead of zigzagging.

Before you go: the logistics that actually matter

Olympic is open 24 hours a day, year-round, though roads and facilities run seasonally. The entrance fee is $30 per private vehicle, good for seven consecutive days. There's no single entrance gate. Highway 101 wraps around the peninsula and you dip into the park at each region.

Day 1: The mountains at Hurricane Ridge

Start high. From Port Angeles, the road climbs to Hurricane Ridge, where on a clear day you're looking across at the glaciated peaks of the Olympic Mountains. It's the most accessible high country in the park, and the views start from the parking lot.

Kid pacing: the meadow loops are short and the elevation does the scenic work for you, so little legs get a big reward fast. Bring warm layers. It's noticeably colder up here than down at sea level.

3 Days in Olympic National Park: Coast, Rainforest, and Mountains
Photo: NPS Photo/Bill Baccus

Day 2: The rainforest and Lake Crescent

Day 2 trades altitude for green. West of Port Angeles, Lake Crescent sits deep and clear, ringed by old-growth forest.

If you want the full rainforest experience, the Hoh Rain Forest is the park's signature green cathedral, but it's a long detour southwest. Only add it if you're willing to give up most of the day to driving.

Day 3: The wild coast

Save the coast for last. Olympic's beaches feel like the edge of the world: sea stacks, driftwood logs the size of cars, and tide pools full of life.

Kid pacing: tide pools are the easiest sell of the whole trip. They're basically a natural aquarium. Keep an eye on the tide and incoming waves, and pack a towel for the inevitable wet feet.

Who this trip is for

Three days in Olympic works best if you accept the trade-off: you're sampling three regions, not deeply exploring one. If you'd rather slow down, pick two regions and skip the long drives. But if you want the full range (mountains, rainforest, and coast), this loop delivers a remarkable amount of variety for a long weekend. Watch for Roosevelt elk along the river valleys while you're at it.

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