One Day in Glacier National Park

A focused, do-able route through Montana's high country: drive, walk, repeat.

Going-to-the-Sun Road curving through the St. Mary Valley with jagged peaks rising from a forested basin
Going-to-the-Sun Road threads the heart of the park. Photo: NPS Photo

Glacier is enormous: over 700 miles of trails, two faces split by the Continental Divide, and a road that takes its time. One day won't let you see all of it, and anyone who promises otherwise is lying. But one day, planned tightly around the Going-to-the-Sun Road, gives you the alpine meadows, the carved valleys, and the lakes that make this park famous. Here's how to spend it.

The route: Going-to-the-Sun Road, west to east

The park describes itself as "a showcase of melting glaciers, alpine meadows, carved valleys, and spectacular lakes," and the Going-to-the-Sun Road strings nearly all of it together in about 50 miles. That's your spine for the day. Drive it west to east, starting at the West Glacier entrance near Lake McDonald and finishing at St. Mary.

Two short walks worth the legs

You don't need a backcountry permit to feel like you earned the view. Two stops, both off the Going-to-the-Sun Road, do most of the work:

If you only have energy for one, the Hidden Lake meadows are the more distinctly Glacier experience. St. Mary Falls is the gentler insurance policy.

One Day in Glacier National Park
Photo: NPS Photo

Pacing it with kids

Glacier rewards a slow morning and an unhurried lunch. The driving is genuinely scenic, so the car time isn't dead time. Point out Heavens Peak, the waterfalls roadside, maybe a bighorn sheep or mountain goat near Logan Pass. Keep the actual hikes to one big one (Hidden Lake) and one small one (St. Mary Falls), and pad in a long stop at a lakeshore where kids can throw rocks. Grab a free Junior Ranger booklet at a visitor center; the rangers also run a kid-friendly podcast, Headwaters, that makes good car listening on the drive in.

Getting in, and when to go

The park is open 24 hours a day, year-round, and entrance is $35 per private vehicle for a seven-day pass ($25 in winter, November through April). Note that nonresident international visitors pay an additional fee on top of that.

A note on dogs

If you're hoping to bring the dog, plan around it realistically: like most national parks, Glacier does not allow pets on any trails, in the backcountry, or in buildings. Dogs are limited to roads, parking areas, drive-in campgrounds, and picnic spots, on a leash no longer than six feet. That means the two walks above (Hidden Lake and St. Mary Falls) are off-limits with a dog. A car-and-overlook day works; a hiking day does not.

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