Alaska State Parks

Explore Alaska State Parks

Tidewater glaciers, 4,000 bald eagles, and midnight sun — 120+ units across 3.3 million acres

Explore Parks
120+
State Parks
3.3 million acres
Total Area
3+ million
Annual Visitors
Chugach State Park
Top Rated

State Parks Map

Interactive map of all Alaska state parks

Outdoor Adventures
Water Activities
Winter Sports
Accommodation
Wildlife & Nature
Relaxation
Water Sports
Park Amenities

Passes & Fees

Most Alaska state park units charge a $5 daily parking fee. An Annual Day-Use Parking Pass costs $60 for the calendar year. An Annual Boat Launch Pass is $150. Note that some parks (Eagle River Nature Center, Arctic Valley) do not accept state park passes. Camping fees range from $10–$35/night. Public-use cabin rentals are $25–$75/night.

Parks by Region

Southcentral — Anchorage & Kenai

Chugach State Park is the flagship — a 495,000-acre wilderness at Anchorage’s backdoor where grizzly bears, moose, and Dall sheep roam among glaciers. Flattop Mountain, the state’s most-climbed peak, offers 360° views of the city, Cook Inlet, and Denali. Kachemak Bay State Park across from Homer is a roadless wilderness of glaciers, old-growth Sitka spruce, and tide pools accessible only by boat. Captain Cook State Recreation Area features Cook Inlet beaches with volcano views.

Interior — River Valleys & Gold Country

Denali State Park provides a less crowded alternative to its famous National Park neighbor, with direct views of Denali (20,310 ft) from the viewpoint trail and Byers Lake campground. Big Delta State Historical Park preserves Rika’s Roadhouse, a restored 1910 Alaska goldfield stopover on the Valdez-Fairbanks Trail. Chena River State Recreation Area offers the Angel Rocks trail and nearby Chena Hot Springs.

Southeast — Inside Passage

Chilkat State Park near Haines overlooks glacial fjords with the world’s largest gathering of bald eagles (up to 4,000 in November). Point Bridget State Park near Juneau features coastal meadows, bear-watching, and public-use cabins. Coastal parks throughout Southeast are accessible primarily by boat or floatplane.

Northern & Western

Arctic regions feature state park units with extreme wilderness — no roads, no services, just raw Alaska. Most visitors experience these areas via guided tours or bush planes.

Best Parks by Activity

Best for Hiking

  • Chugach State Park — Flattop Mountain and Crow Pass Trail
  • Denali State Park — Kesugi Ridge with Denali views
  • Kachemak Bay — Grewingk Glacier Trail (boat access)
  • Chena River SRA — Angel Rocks to Chena Hot Springs

Best for Wildlife Viewing

  • Chilkat State Park — Thousands of bald eagles (October–February)
  • Chugach State Park — Grizzly bears, Dall sheep, moose
  • Kachemak Bay — Sea otters, puffins, harbor seals
  • Wood-Tikchik State Park — Remote wilderness salmon and bears

Best for Glaciers

  • Chugach State Park — Multiple accessible glaciers
  • Kachemak Bay State Park — Grewingk Glacier lake
  • Denali State Park — Ruth Glacier viewpoints
  • Shoup Bay State Marine Park — Tidewater glacier by kayak

Best for Cabins & Solitude

  • Kachemak Bay — Waterfront public-use cabins
  • Nancy Lake State Recreation Area — Lake cabin system
  • Point Bridget State Park — Coastal cabins near Juneau
  • Shoup Bay — Remote fjord camping

Best Time to Visit

Season Highlights
Spring (Apr–May) Longer days, bear emergence, migrating birds
Summer (Jun–Aug) Midnight sun, peak hiking, salmon runs, 20+ hrs daylight
Fall (Sep–Oct) Northern lights, tundra foliage, eagle gathering at Chilkat
Winter (Nov–Mar) Northern lights, ski touring, dog mushing, frozen landscapes

FAQs

How large is the Alaska state park system?

At 3.3 million acres across 120+ units, it’s the largest state park system in America — larger than Connecticut and Rhode Island combined.

Can I see the Northern Lights from Alaska state parks?

Yes — fall and winter (September–March) offer aurora viewing, especially at interior parks like Chena River SRA. Minimal light pollution makes state parks ideal viewing locations.

Do I need a boat to reach some Alaska state parks?

Yes — Kachemak Bay, Shoup Bay, and many Southeast Alaska parks are roadless and accessible only by boat, floatplane, or water taxi.

What is the most accessible Alaska state park?

Chugach State Park, right at Anchorage’s doorstep, offers world-class wilderness just minutes from the city — from the popular Flattop Mountain trail to backcountry glaciers.

Start Your Alaska Adventure

Alaska’s state parks encompass 3.3 million acres of the most spectacular wilderness on Earth — tidewater glaciers, 4,000 bald eagles at Chilkat, grizzly bears in Chugach, and midnight sun hiking at Denali. Whether you’re summiting Flattop Mountain above Anchorage or kayaking to a remote fjord cabin, the Last Frontier’s parks deliver adventure on a scale found nowhere else.

All State Parks in Alaska

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