The Best Easy Hikes in Grand Teton
Short, scenic trails to lakes and overlooks, with real distances and actual difficulty.
Here's the good news about Grand Teton: the mountains have no foothills. The Teton Range jumps straight up from the valley floor, which means even a flat, short walk drops you in front of jagged peaks. You don't need to earn the view with a 12-mile slog. These are the easy ones that still feel like a big deal.
Lake Creek-Woodland Trail Loop: the genuinely easy one (3 miles)
If "easy" actually has to mean easy, start here. The Lake Creek-Woodland Trail Loop runs 3 miles round-trip with 770 feet of gain on a wide, mostly level path. It starts at the Laurance S. Rockefeller Preserve and loops out to the shore of Phelps Lake, where there's a bench and a quiet stretch of water with the range behind it.
- Distance: 3 mi round-trip loop
- Elevation gain: 770 ft (gentle, average 7% grade)
- Watch for: exposed roots and rocks in spots, fine for steady little legs but not great for stroller wheels
One catch worth knowing: the Rockefeller Preserve parking lot is small and fills early. The road in (Moose-Wilson Road) is narrow and closed to RVs and trailers. Get there before mid-morning or plan to come back.
Phelps Lake: same lake, a little more work (3.7 miles)
Want the lake without the full loop, or want to reach it a different way? The Phelps Lake Trail is 3.7 miles round-trip, out-and-back, with 1,080 feet of gain. The NPS rates it moderate, not easy. That gain comes in rolling ups and downs rather than one steady climb, so it nibbles at you. For a shorter taste, the Phelps Lake Overlook turns you around at the viewpoint above the water and cuts the day in half. Both leave from the Rockefeller Preserve, so the same early-parking warning applies.
Taggart Lake: the classic family payoff (about 3.8 miles)
Taggart Lake isn't in the NPS day-hike feed, but it's the trail most Teton regulars send families to, and the logistics matter. It's roughly 3.8 miles round-trip from the Taggart Lake Trailhead on Teton Park Road, with modest gain through a meadow that burned years ago and is now wide open, which means very little shade and a clear-eyed view of the peaks the whole way. The reward is a lake sitting right at the base of the mountains. Bring sun protection and water; the openness that makes the views great also makes a hot afternoon feel hotter.
Jenny Lake to Hidden Falls: let the boat do the climbing
The smartest "easy" move in the park is the Jenny Lake shuttle boat. From the south Jenny Lake boat dock, a short ferry ride across the lake drops you a roughly half-mile walk from Hidden Falls and Inspiration Point. You skip about two miles of lakeshore walking each way and still get a waterfall and a high overlook of the lake.
- With the boat: roughly 1 mile round-trip to Hidden Falls; a bit more, and steeper, to Inspiration Point
- Without the boat: closer to 5 miles round-trip around the lake, a fine walk but no longer "easy"
- Note: the shuttle is a paid concession with seasonal hours and lines mid-day; go early
Practical notes before you go
- Best time: Mid-July through September for snow-free trails. Snow lingers into June up high, and afternoon thunderstorms are common in July and August. Hike early and be off exposed shoreline by early afternoon.
- Getting in: Entrance is $35 per vehicle for 7 days. No timed-entry reservation to enter the park itself, but parking lots at the popular trailheads (Jenny Lake, Taggart, the Rockefeller Preserve) fill by mid-morning in summer.
- Altitude: The valley sits near 6,800 feet. Easy mileage can still leave you winded if you arrived from sea level yesterday. Slow down, drink more than you think.
- This is grizzly country. Grizzly and black bears live throughout the park, and moose are common near the lakes and along Moose-Wilson Road. Carry bear spray, keep kids close, and give wildlife a very wide berth.
- Dogs: Be honest with yourself here. Grand Teton's trails are closed to pets. Dogs are allowed only in campgrounds, parking lots, and within 50 feet of roads, on a leash. None of the hikes above are dog-friendly. Leave them home or board them in Jackson.
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