What to See at Craters of the Moon

A half-day of lava cones, caves, and the darkest skies in Idaho.

A close-up of a folded, waving sea of black lava rock with mountains in the far distance
The largest young lava field in the lower 48 states. Photo: NPS / David Hunter

Craters of the Moon is a vast ocean of lava flows with scattered islands of cinder cones and sagebrush, a "weird and scenic landscape" where yesterday's volcanic events are likely to continue tomorrow. It's compact, it's strange, and it rewards a short stop far more than its remote location suggests. You can hit the highlights in three or four hours, and the kids will remember the lava tube long after they forget the visitor center.

Drive the Loop and climb Inferno Cone

The 7-mile Loop Road is the spine of a visit, and it's typically open from mid-April through late November as conditions allow. Pull off at the marked stops. They're close together and each one is a quick walk.

The single best view comes from Inferno Cone. It's a short, steep slog straight up a cinder slope with no switchbacks, which sounds worse than it is. Most people are at the top in 10 to 15 minutes. The reward is a 360-degree panorama across the whole Great Rift, with the Pioneer Mountains on one side and an endless black lava sea on the other. Bring water; the dark cinders bake in summer sun.

Walk the Spatter Cones and lava trails

What to See at Craters of the Moon
Photo: NPS / David Hunter

Go underground at Indian Tunnel

Craters' lava tubes are the part most people don't expect, and Indian Tunnel is the showpiece: a large, partially collapsed cave you can walk through with light spilling in from openings overhead. A few caves require some clambering and a real flashlight (phone lights are weak here). Two practical notes: you'll need a free cave permit from the visitor center, part of the white-nose syndrome screening to protect bats, and sturdy shoes matter because the lava is sharp. It's the highlight for most kids.

Stay after dark for the stars

Craters of the Moon was designated an International Dark Sky Park in 2017, and it's one of the best places in the country to stargaze. There's almost no light pollution for a hundred miles. On a clear, moonless night the Milky Way is genuinely jaw-dropping, and the park runs astronomy programs in summer. If you can swing a night here (or even just linger past sunset before driving on), do it. This is the reason to time your visit, not the lava.

Know before you go

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