Is Crater Lake Dog-Friendly?

What you can and can't do with a dog at Oregon's deepest lake.

Crater Lake and Wizard Island seen from Discovery Point on the rim
Looking at Crater Lake and Wizard Island from Discovery Point. Photo: NPS Photo

Short version: yes, your dog is welcome at Crater Lake, but on a short leash, in a limited set of places. Like most national parks, Crater Lake keeps dogs to paved roads, parking lots, and developed areas, and off the trails entirely. The good news is that the single best thing about this park, the rim view, is something you can share with a dog from the car or a parking lot.

Where dogs ARE allowed

Pets must be leashed at all times (six feet or shorter), and they're permitted in the park's developed and paved areas. In practice, that means:

That's enough to see the lake. Pull off at Discovery Point or any rim overlook, leash up, and you'll get the same jaw-dropping caldera view as everyone else.

Where dogs are NOT allowed

This is the catch. Dogs are not permitted on park trails, and that rules out nearly all the hiking people come here for. No paws on the trail to Garfield Peak, Mt. Scott, Watchman Peak, or the Wizard Island summit. They're also off-limits on the Cleetwood Cove Trail, the only legal route down to the lakeshore, which means dogs can't go on the boat tours or anywhere near the water's edge.

Also off-limits for dogs:

Service animals, as defined by the ADA, are welcome where pets are not. Regular pets, however well-behaved, are not.

Is Crater Lake Dog-Friendly?
Photo: NPS Photo

How to actually do Crater Lake with a dog

Plenty of families pull this off. You just plan around the trail restriction. A realistic dog-friendly day looks like this:

If two adults are traveling, the simplest move is to tag-team: one person takes the kids down Cleetwood Cove or up Watchman Peak while the other stays with the dog at a viewpoint, then swap. Never leave a dog in a parked car. At this elevation, sunny days can heat a car fast even when the air feels cool.

A few logistics worth knowing

Bottom line: Crater Lake is a drive-up-and-gawk park more than a hike-with-the-dog park. If your trip is built around that one unforgettable view, a dog fits in just fine. If you were hoping to hike with them, you'll want a kennel day or a tag-team plan.

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