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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

4211 Hikes

Saint Edward State Park

Puget Sound and Islands > Seattle-Tacoma Area
 
Length
3.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
400 feet
Highest Point
400 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.95
(40 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Good for kids
  • Lakes
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
Hike through a diverse century-old second-growth forest with a dense canopy to the undeveloped shoreline of Lake Washington. This historic 316-acre state park, nestled in the midst of the Seattle metropolitan area, has playground facilities for children, picnic areas, trails for mountain bikers and fields for sports teams as well.
 
 

North Shorewood Park

Puget Sound and Islands > Seattle-Tacoma Area
 
Rating
Average rating:
0.00
(0 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Good for kids
  • Wildlife
At first glance, this small neighborhood park may not seem to have any trails -- the playground and picnic tables are most prominent, as is the off-leash dog park.
 
 

Larrabee State Park - North Lost Lake Trail

Puget Sound and Islands > Bellingham Area
 
Length
9.2 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
1,100 feet
Rating
Average rating:
4.00
(3 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Good for kids
  • Mountain views
  • Rivers
  • Waterfalls
One of the best ways to access the heart of Chuckanut Mountain is via the North Lost Lake Trail, entering from the Interurban Trail at Arroyo Park.
 
 

North Lake

North Cascades > Methow/Sawtooth
 
Length
10.6 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
2,220 feet
Highest Point
5,840 feet
Rating
Average rating:
5.00
(6 votes)
  • Lakes
  • Mountain views
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
Hike in to a small lake at the head of a valley with good campsites and many possibilities for exploration. Along the way, see the difference between the 2018 Crescent Mountain Fire impacted forest and the old growth forest.
 
 

North Fork Tieton to Tieton Pass

South Cascades > Goat Rocks
 
Length
10.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
2,500 feet
Highest Point
1,600 feet
Rating
Average rating:
2.67
(6 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Mountain views
  • Rivers
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
This trail offers a nice wander through the woods to a low pass. While it's short on views, it offers an extended forested wander where you can creekhop to your heart's content.
 
 

North Fork Sullivan Creek

Eastern Washington > Selkirk Range
 
Length
5.7 miles, one-way
Elevation Gain
3,600 feet
Highest Point
6,600 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.50
(4 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Mountain views
  • Ridges/passes
  • Summits
Tucked deep into the heart of the infrequently-visited Colville National Forest is the North Fork Sullivan Trail. This trail has no trailhead of its own, but climbs steadily from its junction with the Halliday and Red Bluff Trails to Crowell Ridge, where you'll enjoy expansive views of the surrounding area.
 
 

North Fork Silver Creek Trail

Eastern Washington > Selkirk Range
 
Length
7.7 miles, one-way
Elevation Gain
4,078 feet
Highest Point
7,308 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.40
(5 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Mountain views
  • Old growth
  • Ridges/passes
  • Summits
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
The longer, more scenic approach to Abercrombie Mountain, North Fork Silver Creek Trail is worth the extra effort involved for a hike to eastern Washington's second highest summit.
 
 

North Fork Quinault River and Halfway House

Olympic Peninsula > Pacific Coast
 
Length
10.2 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
300 feet
Highest Point
800 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.36
(11 votes)
  • Dogs not allowed
  • Established campsites
  • Good for kids
  • Mountain views
  • Old growth
  • Rivers
  • Waterfalls

The temporary bridge on North Shore Road has been removed for winter. The Graves Creek and North Fork trailheads are currently inaccessible due to both North Shore and South Shore roads being closed.

The hike to Halfway House follows the first five miles of the North Fork Quinault River along the same route taken by the Press Expedition of 1890. The trail passes through superb lowland rainforest before entering the canyon of the Quinault. Halfway House makes a good picnic spot for day hikers and is also a great camp site for backpackers on a longer journey.
 
 

North Fork Loop

South Cascades > White Pass/Cowlitz River Valley
 
Length
2.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
400 feet
Highest Point
1,800 feet
Rating
Average rating:
0.00
(0 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Established campsites
  • Fall foliage
  • Good for kids
  • Old growth
  • Rivers
  • Wildlife
Visitors to the North Fork Loop Trail will see several different forests and enjoy views of the lush Cispus Valley. The trail is adjacent to the North Fork of the Cispus River, and departs from the North Fork campground, making it a great option for people staying there.
 
 

North Fork Bridge Creek

Central Cascades > Entiat Mountains/Lake Chelan
 
Length
6.5 miles, one-way
Elevation Gain
1,473 feet
Highest Point
4,099 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.75
(4 votes)
  • Dogs not allowed
  • Established campsites
  • Lakes
  • Mountain views
  • Rivers
  • Waterfalls
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
The North Fork of Bridge Creek is a tucked-away gem of a hike in the North Cascades National Park. Accessible from both the Stehekin valley and Highway 20, many people blaze past this side trip on their way along the Pacific Crest Trail (PCT). But if you choose to explore this branch, you'll be rewarded with stunning mountain valleys at the base of Mount Logan, one of many striking peaks in the North Cascades. Of course, you'll have to share the trail with brush, bugs, and maybe even bears to get there.
 
 

Noisy Creek

North Cascades > Mount Baker Area
 
Length
11.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
20 feet
Rating
Average rating:
0.00
(0 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Good for kids
  • Old growth
  • Rivers
  • Wildlife
Hikers on the Noisy Creek trail can view exceptional old growth trees and also serves as the start of a cross country route into Noisy Diobsud Wilderness.
 
 

Noble Knob

Mount Rainier Area > Chinook Pass - Hwy 410
 
Length
5.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
950 feet
Highest Point
6,011 feet
Rating
Average rating:
4.30
(44 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Good for kids
  • Mountain views
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
This hike up to a former lookout site provides spectacular views of Mount Rainier and the surrounding landscape.
 
 

No Name

Issaquah Alps > Cougar Mountain
 
Length
0.2 miles, one-way
Elevation Gain
22 feet
Highest Point
1,072 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.50
(4 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Good for kids
  • Old growth
A short connector trail between Bear Ridge and Shangri La trails that creates a loop out of the two. Also connect to Red Cedars via the No Name Trail.
 
 

Neiderprum Trail

North Cascades > Mountain Loop Highway
 
Length
2.65 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
2,400 feet
Highest Point
3,200 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.25
(4 votes)
A steep climber's trail with a gorgeous payoff. Wait until the end of summer before attempting, due to snow staying late in high elevations.
 
 

Newberry Hill Heritage Park

Olympic Peninsula > Kitsap Peninsula
 
Length
13.0 miles of trails
Elevation Gain
250 feet
Highest Point
350 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.71
(7 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Good for kids
  • Lakes
  • Old growth
  • Rivers
  • Wildlife
This little gem of a park is located in Kitsap County, at the west end of Newberry Hill Road right before the T to Seabeck Highway.
 
 

Navaho Pass

Snoqualmie Region > Salmon La Sac/Teanaway
 
Length
11.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
3,000 feet
Highest Point
6,000 feet
Rating
Average rating:
4.06
(47 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Established campsites
  • Mountain views
  • Ridges/passes
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife

9.3.25: The trail is closed until further notice due to the Labor Mountain Fire.

Navaho Pass is an excellent introduction to the Teanaway area. Rife with wildflowers, fascinating geology, and just enough elevation gain to keep it interesting, this hike has just about everything that the Teanaway is known for.
 
 

Narbeck Wetland Sanctuary

Puget Sound and Islands > Seattle-Tacoma Area
 
Length
2.0 miles of trails
Elevation Gain
0 feet
Highest Point
0 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.31
(13 votes)
  • Good for kids
  • Lakes
  • Wildlife
Just adjacent to the Boeing campus in Everett, Narbeck Wetland Sanctuary is a great place for a short nature walk in town or a leg-stretcher after work. In fact, you may completely forget you're near an busy part of town when you're in the heart of the sanctuary.
 
 

Narada Falls

Mount Rainier Area > SW - Longmire/Paradise
 
Length
0.2 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
100 feet
Highest Point
4,650 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.75
(8 votes)
  • Dogs not allowed
  • Good for kids
  • Rivers
  • Waterfalls
If you’ve been to Mount Rainier’s Paradise, you may be familiar with Narada Falls, and the short hike down to its popular viewpoint. But are you aware of the other trails this short hike connects to? Do you wonder what "Narada" means? Read on to find out.
 
 

Nada Lake

Central Cascades > Leavenworth Area
 
Length
10.6 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
3,600 feet
Highest Point
5,200 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.78
(9 votes)
  • Dogs not allowed
  • Established campsites
  • Lakes
  • Mountain views
The Snow Lakes trail is known mostly as the long, gradual way into the Enchantments; but Nada Lake (and nearby Snow Lake) is a worthwhile — if deceptively grueling — destination in its own right. The narrow isthmus between the lakes offers a majestic view across the water to the towering heights of McClellan Peak.
 
 

Naches Trail

Mount Rainier Area > Chinook Pass - Hwy 410
 
Length
5.7 miles, one-way
Elevation Gain
2,600 feet
Highest Point
5,100 feet
Rating
Average rating:
0.00
(0 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Wildlife
The Naches Trail takes visitors along the same route that pioneers took in horse drawn wagons in the 1800s. It is now a hiking trail that leads to a scenic meadow and a historic cabin.
 
 

Murhut Falls

Olympic Peninsula > Hood Canal
 
Length
1.6 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
250 feet
Highest Point
1,050 feet
Rating
Average rating:
4.07
(28 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Good for kids
  • Old growth
  • Waterfalls
This short trail in the Hood Canal Ranger District on the east side of the Olympics takes hikers to a relatively unknown waterfall that delivers its reward -- a captivating 130-foot plunging waterfall -- in just under a mile.
 
 

Moran State Park - Mountain Lake

Puget Sound and Islands > San Juan Islands
 
Length
3.9 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
300 feet
Highest Point
950 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.71
(14 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Good for kids
  • Lakes
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
The loop around Mountain Lake is the perfect way to spend a relaxing day on Orcas Island. If part of your crew is interested in the more challenging Mount Constitution, this is a good way to while away the time that they're trekking to the top.
 
 

Mount Zion

Olympic Peninsula > Hood Canal
 
Length
4.6 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
1,300 feet
Highest Point
4,274 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.42
(24 votes)
The trip to Mount Zion is straightforward and short; a steep hike through fir, hemlock cedar, salal, and, the main attraction for many visitors, tall groves of wild rhododendrons. Views from the top are limited, but a little ridgeline wandering to the south afford the intrepid better views of the Olympic Mountains.
 
 

Mount Townsend

Olympic Peninsula > Hood Canal
 
Length
8.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
3,010 feet
Highest Point
6,260 feet
Rating
Average rating:
4.37
(72 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Mountain views
  • Old growth
  • Summits
  • Waterfalls
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
Mount Townsend offers rhododendrons in May and June, wildflowers June through August, then berries in August and September and fall colors in, well, fall. Add in old growth, some tucked away waterfalls, and a windswept, turtleback summit with views north across the Strait and San Juans, west and south into and along the Olympics and east across the Sound to the Cascades, and you've got the perfect year-round hike.
 
 

Mount St. Helens - Worm Flows Route

South Cascades > Mount St. Helens
 
Length
12.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
5,699 feet
Highest Point
8,364 feet
Rating
Average rating:
4.69
(32 votes)
  • Mountain views
  • Summits

The rim is extremely unstable. Please stay well back from the edge.

The Worm Flows Climbing Route, from Marble Mountain Sno-Park, is the most direct route to the summit of Mount St. Helens during the winter season. Ice axe, crampons, and avalanche awareness are necessary when attempting to summit St. Helens in the winter. Skis with climbing skins or snowshoes with cleats are also highly recommended.
 
 

Mount Spokane State Park - Trail 110

Eastern Washington > Spokane Area/Coeur d'Alene
 
Length
7.5 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
1,750 feet
Highest Point
5,000 feet
Rating
Average rating:
4.00
(4 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Old growth
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
Trail 110 is one of the core trails within Mount Spokane State Park, beginning just inside the park entrance and providing access to numerous connector trails. Hike it as an out-and-back to learn the intersections, then explore the connecting trails to form loop routes.
 
 

Mount Spokane State Park - Trail 100

Eastern Washington > Spokane Area/Coeur d'Alene
 
Length
7.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
650 feet
Highest Point
4,526 feet
Rating
Average rating:
3.33
(3 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Old growth
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
Accessible from two trailheads, shady Trail 100 provides respite from both the heat of summer and the winds of winter along its approximately 3.5-mile length.
 
 

Mount Spokane State Park - Trail 131

Eastern Washington > Spokane Area/Coeur d'Alene
 
Length
1.0 miles, one-way
Elevation Gain
550 feet
Highest Point
5,119 feet
Rating
Average rating:
0.00
(0 votes)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Mountain views
  • Old growth
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
A year-round hike, Trail 131 is the main snowshoe access trail to Bald Knob Campground and connecting trails.
 
 

Mount Spokane State Park - Three Peaks Loop

Eastern Washington > Spokane Area/Coeur d'Alene
 
Length
12.6 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
2,858 feet
Highest Point
5,883 feet
Rating
Average rating:
4.00
(1 vote)
  • Dogs allowed on leash
  • Fall foliage
  • Mountain views
  • Old growth
  • Summits
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
Three peaks in a day! It's completely doable thanks to this loop that takes you on a tour of Mount Kit Carson, Day Mountain, and Mount Spokane. Plus there is plenty to see along the way -- don't forget your camera!
 
 

Mount Pugh

North Cascades > Mountain Loop Highway
 
Length
11.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
5,300 feet
Highest Point
7,201 feet
Rating
Average rating:
4.42
(40 votes)
  • Fall foliage
  • Lakes
  • Mountain views
  • Old growth
  • Ridges/passes
  • Summits
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife
Mount Pugh -- also known by its native name "Da Klagwats" -- has one of the most spectacular viewpoints in the North Cascades, offering a vista that includes Glacier and Sloan Peak, Mounts Baker, Shuksan, and Rainier, the Olympics, Monte Cristo, Three Fingers, and White Chuck. The first fire lookout here was established in 1916; a lowly tent perched on the peak until a cabin with a cupola was built in 1922. This was hit by lightning in 1927 and a second lookout was built, but it was subsequently destroyed in 1965 and never rebuilt. Remains of these structures can still be seen on the mountain, when you can tear yourself away from the view.