
Olympic National Park
Rainforests, mountains and coastlines in one diverse wilderness
Olympic National Park packs three ecosystems into one massive wilderness area on Washington's Olympic Peninsula. You'll find temperate rainforests dripping with moss in the Hoh Valley, alpine peaks in the Olympic Mountains, and 73 miles of rugged Pacific coastline. It's one of the few places where you can hike through old-growth forest in the morning and watch sunset from a driftwood-strewn beach by evening. The park covers nearly a million acres, so planning is essential — you can't see it all in a weekend, and you shouldn't try.
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Money-Saving Tips
- 1.Buy the America the Beautiful Annual Pass ($80) if you're visiting more than one national park this year — it pays for itself after three visits
- 2.Camp instead of staying in lodges to save $150+ per night — even basic sites put you closer to the trails
- 3.Pack your own lunch for day hikes — the lodge restaurants charge $15-20 for sandwiches you can make for $5
- 4.Fill up your gas tank in Port Angeles before entering the park — no gas stations inside and limited options on the peninsula
- 5.Bring a National Parks Senior Pass if you're 62+ for lifetime free entry and 50% off camping fees
- 6.Visit in late September for lower accommodation rates and fewer crowds while still getting decent weather
Travel Tips
- •Download offline maps before you go — cell service is spotty throughout most of the park
- •Check road conditions on the NPS website before driving — winter storms can close Hurricane Ridge Road with little notice
- •Bring cash for entrance fees at some stations — not all accept cards, especially during off-season
- •Start early for popular trails like Hurricane Ridge — parking lots fill up by 10am during summer weekends
- •Always check tide tables before hiking coastal sections — some areas are impassable at high tide
- •Bring layers even in summer — temperatures can drop 30 degrees between sea level and Hurricane Ridge
- •Stop at visitor centers first for current trail conditions and wildlife activity updates
- •Book accommodations 6+ months ahead for summer visits — options fill up fast on the Olympic Peninsula
Frequently Asked Questions
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