The Best Easy Hikes in Sequoia

Short walks to giant trees, meadows, and waterfalls, no big climb required.

A historic stairway leads to the top of Moro Rock with wide views from foothills to peaks in Sequoia National Park
A historic stairway leads to the top of Moro Rock, with views from foothills to peaks. Photo: NPS/Paul Johnson

Sequoia & Kings Canyon pack huge mountains, deep canyons, and the world's largest trees into one stretch of California's Sierra Nevada, and the good news is you don't have to be a serious hiker to see the best of it. Some of the most jaw-dropping spots here are short, flat, and reachable in an afternoon. Here are the easy walks worth your time, with real distances so you can plan around tired legs and short attention spans.

The short walks among the giant sequoias

This is what most people come for, and it's the easiest payoff in the park. Two trails stand out for being genuinely short:

Both sit in the Giant Forest area, near the Giant Forest Museum, a good spot to grab a map, use the restroom, and let the kids reset between stops.

Easy waterfalls and meadows in Kings Canyon

Drive north and the Cedar Grove / Road's End area along Highway 180 has some of the gentlest scenery-to-effort ratios in the whole park:

Worth knowing: in winter the Generals Highway between the two parks often closes, and Cedar Grove / Road's End is a seasonal area that shuts down with snow. This is a spring-through-fall plan.

The Best Easy Hikes in Sequoia
Photo: NPS/Rick Cain

A gentler option near the entrance

Coming up Highway 180 from the San Joaquin Valley, the Big Stump picnic area is the first natural place to stop and get your bearings after the drive. From here the Big Stump Trail runs a 2-mile route to the Mark Twain Stump, a sobering, kid-interesting look at logging history before the park was protected. It's a manageable walk and an easy way to break up the climb into the high country.

If you're basing yourself in the Mineral King area (a remote, steep corner of Sequoia), most trails there are long and punishing. The exception is the Cold Springs Nature Trail: a gentle 3-mile walk with about 500 feet of gain that gives you a taste of Mineral King's alpine landscape without the brutal switchbacks.

Practical notes before you go

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