Acadia National Park With a Dog

One of the few national parks where your dog is genuinely welcome.

Hikers on Acadia's rocky Atlantic coastline under a bright blue sky
Acadia's rocky coastline on Mount Desert Island, Maine. Photo: NPS / Kristi Rugg

Here’s the truth most national parks won't tell you: dogs are usually banned from the good trails. Acadia is the rare exception. Of its 158 miles of hiking trails and 45 miles of carriage roads, the overwhelming majority are open to leashed dogs, which makes this Maine coast park one of the best in the system for traveling with one.

The leash rule, and why it matters here

Acadia allows pets on a leash no longer than 6 feet. That's not a suggestion. It's enforced, and it's the deal that keeps the park dog-friendly in the first place. Retractable leashes locked out past six feet don't count. Keep your dog close on the carriage roads especially, where cyclists and horses share the path.

Across Acadia's 45 miles of carriage roads, leashed dogs are welcome everywhere. These crushed-gravel paths wind past Jordan Pond and through the woods on gentle grades, and they're the easiest, most stress-free way to cover ground with a dog. If you want a single low-effort plan, walk the carriage roads.

The dog-friendly hikes worth doing

These trails pulled from Acadia's own activity listings all allow leashed dogs:

The pattern is clear: easy coastal and pond trails are great for dogs; the summit scrambles are legal but hard. Match the hike to your dog's actual fitness, not your ambition.

Acadia National Park With a Dog
Photo: NPS / Kristi Rugg

Where dogs can't go

Acadia is generous, but not unlimited. The exceptions are specific and worth memorizing:

Dogs are also not allowed in public buildings, on ranger-led programs, or on the Island Explorer shuttle buses, so plan to drive yourself if you're bringing one.

Best time to go, and getting in

Late spring and September are the sweet spot for a dog: cooler temperatures, thinner crowds, and Sand Beach reopening to pets after September 8. Summer highs reach the upper 80s, which is a lot for a furry hiker on exposed pink granite. Carry water and start early. Fall foliage is spectacular but busy.

The standard entrance fee is $35 per private vehicle, valid seven days. If you plan to drive up Cadillac Mountain for sunrise or sunset, that stretch of road requires a separate timed-entry vehicle reservation in season. Book it ahead, because it sells out. The rest of the park needs no reservation. Hulls Cove Visitor Center in Bar Harbor is the place to start and grab a map.

Acadia gets around 4 million visits a year, so even a dog-friendly park feels crowded in July and August. Go shoulder season if you can, keep the leash at six feet, and pick up after your dog. That's the whole bargain that keeps Acadia open to them.

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