Glacier National Park With Kids

A family-friendly plan for Montana's big-mountain park.

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

Glacier is a showcase of melting glaciers, alpine meadows, carved valleys, and spectacular lakes in the far northwest corner of Montana. It's genuinely one of the most beautiful parks in the country, and also one where the famous road takes real driving, the trails get long, and the weather changes its mind by lunch. The good news: you don't need to hike all 700-plus miles of trail to give kids a great day here.

The full picture: what Glacier is like with kids

The park's main event is the Going-to-the-Sun Road, a 50-mile cliff-hugging route that climbs over the Continental Divide at Logan Pass. It's spectacular, but it's slow: narrow, winding, and busy in summer. Plan on two to three hours just to drive it one way with stops, longer if you're nervous about edges. Break it up. Kids do far better with the road as a series of short adventures than as one long car ride.

Two more things to set expectations up front: the weather is variable and can be extreme, with warm sunny afternoons and sudden cold rain at the passes, so pack layers even in July. And this is serious bear country. Black and grizzly bears both live here. That's part of the magic, but it means staying together on trails, making noise, and keeping snacks zipped away.

Easy walks that pay off fast

You want short, flat, and scenic. Glacier delivers a few of those:

If you want one bigger goal hike for a family with grade-schoolers who hike regularly, Avalanche Lake (starting right off Trail of the Cedars) is the classic choice: a few miles round trip to a lake ringed by waterfalls.

Glacier National Park With Kids
Photo: NPS Photo

Wildlife, the Junior Ranger badge, and the dark sky

Glacier is excellent for kid-friendly wildlife spotting from safe distances. Rangers regularly point families toward bighorn sheep, elk, mountain goats, and birds like the white-tailed ptarmigan and Clark's nutcracker. The Logan Pass area is a reliable spot for goats and sheep in summer. Turn it into a checklist and kids will scan every meadow.

Grab a Junior Ranger booklet at any visitor center. It gives kids a mission and a badge, and it quietly teaches them the bear-safety and stay-on-trail rules you want them following anyway. Glacier also protects a genuinely dark night sky, so if you're staying late or camping, a few minutes of stargazing is worth the bedtime delay.

Getting in, timing, and the fine print

One practical move: there's a free park shuttle along the Going-to-the-Sun Road in summer. Using it for one leg lets you hike point-to-point instead of backtracking, and it spares everyone the white-knuckle parking hunt at Logan Pass.

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