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Hiking Guide

WTA's hiking guide is the most comprehensive database of hikes in Washington, and comprises content written by local hiking experts and user submitted information. All data is vetted by WTA staff. This resource is made possible by the donations of WTA members.

We respectfully acknowledge the lands we are visiting are the homelands of Indigenous tribes of the Pacific Northwest, some of whom have reserved rights on these lands. Tribes continue to rely on and share in the management of these lands today. Please tread gently and treat these places with respect.

Results List

4206 Hikes

East Bank Baker Lake

North Cascades > North Cascades Highway - Hwy 20
 
Length
9.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
500 feet
Highest Point
1,000 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.74
(23 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Established campsites
  • Good for kids
  • Lakes
  • Mountain views
  • Old growth
  • Rivers
  • Waterfalls
This hike along Baker Lake is a busy, popular trail in summer. It is a nice off season walk though, and is perfect on a crisp, clear winter day. With the leaves off the trees, views that aren't possible in summer emerge; the surrounding peaks and the mossy green silhouettes of the leafless maple trees cover the hillside. A bonus any time of year are the many creeks, quaint bridges, large old-growth trees and of course, Mount Baker as the main attraction.
 
 

Aurora Divide

Olympic Peninsula > Northern Coast
 
Length
14.5 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
4,800 feet
Highest Point
4,750 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.20
(5 votes)
  • Dogs not allowed
  • Fall foliage
  • Mountain views
  • Old growth
  • Ridges/passes
  • Rivers
  • Waterfalls
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
The Aurora Divide Trail branches off the Barnes Creek Trail and steeply climbs to Aurora Ridge. Aurora Ridge offers sweeping views of Lake Crescent, Mount Baker, and more.
 
 

Augspurger Trail

Southwest Washington > Columbia River Gorge - WA
 
Length
15.5 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
4,400 feet
Highest Point
3,000 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.20
(5 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Mountain views
  • Rivers
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
The Auspurger Mountain and Dog Mountain trails share the same trailhead, but the Auspurger Mountain trail heads west while the Dog Mountain trail heads east.
 
 

Appleton Pass

Olympic Peninsula > Northern Coast
 
Length
31.5 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
10,300 feet
Highest Point
5,150 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.67
(6 votes)
  • Dogs not allowed
  • Established campsites
  • Fall foliage
  • Mountain views
  • Old growth
  • Ridges/passes
  • Waterfalls
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
This long route from Madison Falls on the Elwha River offers some rewarding diversions along the way, but much of the payoff is in the last 1.5 miles with sweeping views as one ascends the meadows and traverses the switchbacks to Appleton Pass.
 
 

Yacolt Burn State Forest - Appaloosa Trail

Southwest Washington > Lewis River Region
 
Length
6.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
850 feet
Rating
Average rating:
5.00
(1 vote)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Good for kids
A connector trail that goes from the west side of the 25-mile Tarbell Trail Loop to the east side and one of the latest of the Department of National Resources (DNR) trail projects in the historic Yacolt Burn State Forest of southwest Washington.
 
 

Ape Caves

South Cascades > Mount St. Helens
 
Length
2.8 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
350 feet
Highest Point
2,450 feet
Rating
Average rating:
4.56
(61 votes)
  • Dogs not allowed
The full experience at Ape Cave includes the easy exploration of a spacious lava tube, followed by more difficult travel through a smaller, longer, and more rugged lava tube to an exit. Then, enjoy an easy return hike winding through shady forest and crusty lava formations.
 
 

Ape Canyon

South Cascades > Mount St. Helens
 
Length
11.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
1,400 feet
Highest Point
4,200 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.62
(8 votes)
  • Dogs not allowed
  • Mountain views
  • Old growth
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
Climb through dense old-growth forest to a barren cinder plateau that bursts with wildflowers and unobstructed views.
 
 

Antoine Peak Conservation Area - Emerald Necklace

Eastern Washington > Spokane Area/Coeur d'Alene
 
Length
8.5 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
1,152 feet
Highest Point
3,240 feet
Rating
Average rating:
5.00
(1 vote)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Wildlife
The Emerald Necklace trail from Trentwood is one of Spokane's newest trails, built with the help of WTA volunteers and the Evergreen Mountain Bike Alliance's eastern chapter.
 
 

Antoine Peak Conservation Area

Eastern Washington > Spokane Area/Coeur d'Alene
 
Length
15.0 miles of trails
Highest Point
3,366 feet
Rating
Average rating:
5.00
(2 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Good for kids
  • Mountain views
  • Summits
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
Acquired in four phases through Spokane County’s Conservation Futures Program, with additional funding secured through the Washington State Recreation and Conservation Office, the Antoine Peak Conservation Area offers fantastic views overlooking Liberty Lake, the Spokane Valley, and north to Mount Spokane and the Selkirk Range.
 
 

Anti-Aircraft Peak Loop

Issaquah Alps > Cougar Mountain
 
Length
4.75 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
450 feet
Highest Point
1,380 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.14
(22 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Good for kids
  • Mountain views
  • Ridges/passes
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
Hike a loop around Anti-Aircraft Peak in the Cougar Mountain Regional Wildland Park. Hike past sites associated with coal and clay mining, and a former 1950s-era anti-aircraft missile installation. Enjoy good forest trails, some seasonal wildflowers, and a million-dollar view.
 
 

Angry Mountain

South Cascades > Goat Rocks
 
Length
16.8 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
3,409 feet
Highest Point
6,049 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.33
(9 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Mountain views
  • Ridges/passes
  • Summits
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
Looking for adventure and solitude? Angry Mountain is the destination for you, though trail conditions may make put you in the mood the mountain is named for. It's a steep, challenging climb from Forest Road 21, but the payoff comes miles later, when you finally gain the ridge crest separating two glaciated valleys.
 
 

Youth-on-Age Interpretive Trail

North Cascades > Mountain Loop Highway
 
Length
0.25 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
0 feet
Rating
Average rating:
2.67
(6 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Good for kids
  • Old growth
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife

This trail is closed until further notice.

A paved interpretive trail on the Mountain Loop Highway near Verlot. Perfect for exploring children and curious adults, an extra add-on after a longer hike or a leg stretch during a driving tour of the area.
 
 

Yellow Aster Butte

North Cascades > Mount Baker Area
 
Length
7.5 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
2,550 feet
Highest Point
6,150 feet
Rating
Average rating:
4.53
(80 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Mountain views
  • Ridges/passes
  • Wildflowers/Meadows

Visitors to this trail must pack out all human waste and not bury it.

Find supreme wildflower gardens and a high-country plateau speckled with shimmering tarns-but that's not all. Spectacular alpine vistas abound too-of Baker, Shuksan, and all those rugged and craggy peaks straddling the 49th parallel. Yellow Aster Butte may be a misnomer (those yellow-petaled delights are actually daisies), but you definitely don't want to miss hiking here.
 
 

Wynoochee Lake

Olympic Peninsula > Olympia
 
Length
12.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
1,100 feet
Highest Point
950 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.00
(9 votes)
  • Lakes
The trail around Wynoochee Lake is a pleasant stroll through second growth forest with a lush understory. As with many “lakeshore” trails, the trail is not actually near the lakeshore. While the lake is generally out of sight, it does allow the possibility of a hike/canoe biathlon, if you can find a partner with a canoe. Wynoochee Lake is smaller and calmer than some of the lakes in Washington, making this a nice option.
 
 

Woods Creek

South Cascades > White Pass/Cowlitz River Valley
 
Length
1.8 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
296 feet
Highest Point
1,135 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.14
(7 votes)
  • Fall foliage
  • Old growth
Woods Creek is a 1.5 mile, compact gravel, wheelchair accessible trail that loops through five habitat areas. You can extend this hike, by taking the 1-mile side trail, Old Growth Loop #247A.
 
 

Wonderland Trail

Mount Rainier Area
 
Length
93.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
22,000 feet
Highest Point
6,750 feet
Rating
Average rating:
5.00
(4 votes)
  • Dogs not allowed
  • Established campsites
  • Lakes
  • Mountain views
  • Old growth
  • Ridges/passes
  • Rivers
  • Waterfalls
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
The Wonderland Trail is a 93-mile hiking trail that encircles Washington's most famous volcano. Each year, hikers vie for permits to embark on a backpacking trip on it, with only a handful scoring the permits to undertake this strenuous hike.
 
 

Wonderland Trail - Mowich Lake to Sunrise via Spray Park

Mount Rainier Area > NW - Carbon River/Mowich
 
Length
20.5 miles, one-way
Elevation Gain
8,000 feet
Highest Point
6,750 feet
Rating
Average rating:
4.50
(2 votes)
  • Dogs not allowed
  • Established campsites
  • Fall foliage
  • Lakes
  • Mountain views
  • Old growth
  • Rivers
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife

The Fairfax Bridge (3 miles south of Carbonado) is closed to all vehicle and pedestrian traffic until further notice due to safety concerns. The Wonderland Trail is inaccessible from Mowich Lake due to the bridge closure.

This 20-mile section of the longer 93-mile Wonderland Trail covers the northern section of the loop from Mowich to Sunrise, utilizing the Spray Park alternate.
 
 

Wolf Creek

North Cascades > Methow/Sawtooth
 
Length
21.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
4,270 feet
Highest Point
5,738 feet
Rating
Average rating:
2.86
(7 votes)
  • Established campsites
  • Mountain views
  • Old growth
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
At the end of the Wolf Creek Trail lies a magnificently remote place: Gardner Meadows, a subalpine valley of old growth firs and myriad other plant and animal life. Once the snow melts, it is a bonanza of wildflowers and a haven for Columbian ground squirrels, birds, deer, and other animals.
 
 

Windy Pass

North Cascades > Pasayten
 
Length
7.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
1,300 feet
Highest Point
6,900 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.94
(17 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Good for kids
  • Mountain views
  • Ridges/passes
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
Experience a breathtaking section of the PCT packaged into a great dayhike.
 
 

Wind River Arboretum

Southwest Washington > Columbia River Gorge - WA
 
Length
2.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
40 feet
Highest Point
1,200 feet
Rating
Average rating:
5.00
(1 vote)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Good for kids
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
Visit a historic arboretum on connected paths that form a 2 mile interpretive trail, with the option to do shorter loops.
 
 

Wind Mountain

Southwest Washington > Columbia River Gorge - WA
 
Rating
Average rating:
5.00
(2 votes)
An old trail on Wind Mountain winds through land owned by various agencies. Storm damage and lack of maintenance has made this trail increasingly difficult, and the various land agencies encourage hikers to visit other Columbia Gorge hikes as an alternative to Wind Mountain.
 
 

Winchester Mountain

North Cascades > Mount Baker Area
 
Length
3.4 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
1,300 feet
Highest Point
6,521 feet
Rating
Average rating:
4.39
(33 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Lakes
  • Mountain views
  • Ridges/passes
  • Summits
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
The trail up to Winchester Mountain is less than two miles long and only 1300 feet of elevation gain, with access to a lookout at 6500 feet with outstanding 360 degree views. What’s the catch? The road.
 
 

Williams Creek

North Cascades > Methow/Sawtooth
 
Length
14.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
3,600 feet
Highest Point
6,500 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.75
(4 votes)
  • Established campsites
  • Fall foliage
  • Lakes
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
To see beautiful Williams Lake, set in a meadow basin with pockets of larch trees, a hiker must earn it. The shallow gradient trail takes 7 miles to gain 3600 feet and is mostly on a fire-scorched, sun-baked south facing slope where the sparse shade offers a welcome respite from the heat.
 
 

Whittier Ridge-Lakes Loop

South Cascades > Mount St. Helens
 
Length
14.3 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
3,800 feet
Highest Point
5,840 feet
Rating
Average rating:
4.00
(9 votes)
  • Dogs not allowed
  • Established campsites
  • Lakes
  • Mountain views
  • Ridges/passes
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
“Most Difficult”. If you can accept and safely navigate what that means, the Whittier Ridge Trail offers you an airy and ruggedly scenic connection between the Boundary Trail and the Lakes Trail, for an 8.5-mile loop, part of a 14.3-mile “lollipop” day hike.
 
 

White River to Sunrise

Mount Rainier Area > NE - Sunrise/White River
 
Length
5.8 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
2,100 feet
Highest Point
6,400 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.00
(6 votes)
  • Dogs not allowed
  • Established campsites
  • Mountain views
  • Wildlife

White River Road has closed for the winter season.

A short but steep climb on the Wonderland Trail from a campground in Mount Rainier National Park to the Sunrise Visitor Center area.
 
 

White Chuck Bench

North Cascades > Mountain Loop Highway
 
Length
11.6 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
600 feet
Highest Point
1,600 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.21
(19 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Good for kids
  • Mountain views
  • Rivers
  • Waterfalls
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
Hike a beautiful, flat 5.8 mile walk (one way) in the woods along the White Chuck River. The trail has been cleared its entire length thanks to WTA trail crews.
 
 

Whistle Punk Trail

Southwest Washington > Columbia River Gorge - WA
 
Length
1.5 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
174 feet
Highest Point
1,270 feet
Rating
Average rating:
2.50
(4 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Good for kids
  • Old growth
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
In logging's heyday, whistle punks were men tasked with operating the signal that let other loggers know a log had been hooked up and was ready to be moved. Using interpretive signage, this trail illustrates what was like to be on a logging show, from the crew, to the cook, to camp.
 
 

Whipple Creek Park

Southwest Washington > Vancouver Area
 
Length
3.1 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
110 feet
Highest Point
200 feet
Rating
Average rating:
4.00
(7 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Good for kids
A deep-forest experience without the drive. Whipple Creek Park is a 300-acre green oasis in the midst of farmlands to the west of the Clark County Fairgrounds.
 
 

West Fork Teanaway River

Snoqualmie Region > Salmon La Sac/Teanaway
 
Length
9.6 miles, one-way
Elevation Gain
2,800 feet
Highest Point
5,750 feet
Rating
Average rating:
2.40
(5 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Established campsites
  • Good for kids
  • Mountain views
  • Ridges/passes
  • Rivers
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
Hiking through a deep canyon with a riparian zone, old-growth, and cliffs, this dramatic trail parallels the river with several crossings. In places, it climbs high above the river to avoid cliffs and other obstructions in the deep, rugged canyon.
 
 

West Fork Pasayten River

North Cascades > Pasayten
 
Length
33.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
2,400 feet
Highest Point
7,200 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.40
(5 votes)
  • Established campsites
  • Mountain views
  • Ridges/passes
  • Rivers
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
Hike through alpine meadows and descend into a valley following the West Fork Pasayten River.