Where to Stay Near Mount Rainier

A friendly look at gateway towns, in-park lodges, and campgrounds.

Mount Rainier glowing pink and gold at sunset above a forested valley
Mount Rainier rises to 14,410 feet, the most glaciated peak in the contiguous U.S. Photo: JD Hascup Photo

Mount Rainier is a big park with two main hubs (Paradise on the southwest side and Sunrise on the northeast), and they're nowhere near each other by road. Where you sleep mostly decides which half of the mountain you'll actually see. There's no town inside the park and no single "Rainier town" just outside it, so picking a base is the most important planning decision you'll make.

Start by picking a side: Paradise or Sunrise

The park's two showpieces are on opposite corners. Paradise, reached through the year-round Nisqually Entrance, has the famous subalpine wildflower meadows, Glacier Vista, and the most facilities. Sunrise, the highest point you can drive to, opens only late June to mid-October and reaches it through the White River Entrance on the northeast. Driving between the two takes a couple of hours each way on slow mountain roads, so most families pick one side and stay close to it rather than trying to bounce between them.

Quick note on access: the Carbon River corner is closed to vehicles in 2026 due to a bridge closure, and the high passes (Stevens Canyon, Chinook, Cayuse) close with the snow. If you're visiting outside July–September, double-check what's open before you book.

Gateway towns: where most families end up

Where to Stay Near Mount Rainier
Photo: NPS Photo

In-park lodges: history over convenience

The park has exactly two historic inns, both run by the concessioner, and they book out months ahead for summer weekends.

Bottom line: in-park inns are about the experience, not the comfort. If your crew needs a pool, a fridge, and reliable wifi, a gateway-town rental will serve you better.

Campgrounds: the most affordable way in

Camping is the budget-friendly option and puts you inside the park before the gates get busy. The developed campgrounds are first-come or reservable depending on the season, and they fill on summer weekends, so reserve early.

A few caveats: none of these have hookups or showers, sites are forested rather than scenic-overlook, and nights get cold at elevation even in July. For families that want a roof and a hot shower nearby, base in a gateway town and treat the campgrounds as a backup.

So where should you actually stay?

If it's your first visit and you want the iconic meadows, base in Ashford or splurge a night at the Paradise Inn. If you're chasing Sunrise's high-country views, stay in Enumclaw or camp at White River. Want old-growth forest and waterfalls with fewer crowds? Packwood or Ohanapecosh. And if you're visiting in winter, Longmire's National Park Inn is the only on-mountain lodging open.

Planning the trip? Nestward builds a day-by-day plan in minutes, free, no subscription. See how it works →