Grand Teton for Non-Hikers

The Tetons, without the trek: what to see from the car and on flat ground

The Snake River bending below the jagged Teton Range in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming
The Snake River Overlook, where Ansel Adams shot his famous image of the range. Photo: NPS Photo / D. Lehle

Here's the good news if your knees, your kids, or your patience aren't up for a 10-mile day: Grand Teton is one of the most rewarding parks in the country for people who barely leave the road. The Teton Range jumps straight up out of a flat valley with no foothills, so the big views are right there from the pullouts. You can see the best of it in a day without a single switchback.

The scenic drives do most of the work

This is a park you can genuinely experience from a car seat. The main loop (the inner Teton Park Road along the mountains and the outer Highway 89 corridor through the valley) strings together nearly every famous view. Pack a few short stops onto that loop and you've seen the highlights.

Classic viewpoints with zero or near-zero walking

A few of the park's signature stops ask for a hundred yards of flat ground at most.

Grand Teton for Non-Hikers
Photo: NPS Photo / D. Lehle

If you want a little flat walking

Not a hike, but a stroll. These keep the effort low while still feeling like you got out of the car.

Practical notes

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