Strenuous hiking trails in Arizona
2 trails rated expert across Arizona state parks, national forests, and recreation areas.
Expert hiking trails in Arizona go beyond a typical day hike. Long mileage, big elevation, exposure, technical footing, and serious weather windows define the experience in the desert southwest.
Trail Compass currently indexes 2 expert-rated routes in Arizona, totalling roughly 33 trail miles. The average expert trail in this state is about 16.5 miles long, which is a useful starting point when you are sketching a weekend.
Across the desert southwest, the most reliable hiking season is late October through early April; summer heat regularly exceeds 100°F and makes mid-day hiking genuinely dangerous. Shoulder-season visits can deliver beautiful empty trails but tilt the difficulty upward — short days, possible snow, and unstaffed entry stations all add friction.
Expect wildlife typical of the desert southwest: desert bighorn sheep, jackrabbits, roadrunners, collared lizards, and the occasional rattlesnake basking on warm rock. The risk of a serious encounter is low, but the cost of getting it wrong is high — give animals space, store food correctly, and never approach a young animal even if no parent is visible.
How to use this page: every trail listed below links through to a full guide with distance, elevation gain, route type, best-season notes, wildlife expectations, parking guidance, and nearby attractions. Combine this filter with the Trail Compass park pages to plan a trip around a specific Arizona destination.
All expert trails in Arizona
| Trail | Park | Length | Elevation | Route |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| North Kaibab Trail to Roaring Springs | Grand Canyon National Park | 9.4 mi | 3,050 ft | Out & Back |
| Rim-to-Rim | Grand Canyon National Park | 23.5 mi | 5,800 ft | Point-to-Point |
Other difficulty tiers in Arizona
Easy trails in Arizona Moderate trails in Arizona Hard trails in Arizona