Glacier Bay National Park · Alaska
Glacier Bay Meadow Loop
A 1.26 mi loop with 153 ft of elevation gain — Trail Compass difficulty rating Easy.
Overview
Glacier Bay Meadow Loop is a 1.26 mi hiking route inside Glacier Bay National Park in Alaska. The trail climbs roughly 153 ft from trailhead to high point and is logged as a loop in the Trail Compass directory. At a steady walking pace it works out to about 42 minutes on trail, though most parties add time for photos, snack breaks, and the inevitable view-stopping moments along the way.
Difficulty rating
Trail Compass classifies Glacier Bay Meadow Loop as easy. The combination of 1.26 mi of distance and only 153 ft of elevation gain means the route stays well within reach for new hikers, families with school-age kids, and visitors looking for a low-commitment way to step into the subarctic Alaska wilderness. Footing is generally good, route-finding is straightforward, and the trail is wide enough that two parties can pass without anyone stepping into vegetation.
Best season to hike
Best season for Glacier Bay Meadow Loop in the subarctic Alaska wilderness is generally mid-June through early September; outside that window, daylight, snowpack, and river crossings become serious limiters. Local conditions can shift quickly — cold snaps, wildfire smoke, blowdown, river crossings, or trailhead-road closures all happen — so confirm the current status with the managing agency for Glacier Bay National Park before you commit to a long drive.
Wildlife to expect
Wildlife on this route reflects the surrounding subarctic Alaska wilderness: hikers regularly report sightings of grizzly and black bears, moose along the river bottoms, Dall sheep on the high ridges, caribou herds, and bald eagles overhead. Give every animal a wide berth — a hundred yards minimum for bears and any predator, the length of a soccer field for hooved animals during rut. Keep food sealed, never feed wildlife, and store anything scented inside a vehicle when you park at the trailhead.
Parking & trailhead access
Trailhead access for Glacier Bay Meadow Loop is usually straightforward, with marked parking near the route start. On peak summer and holiday weekends the lot can still fill, so consider an early-morning visit or a weekday trip if you want a quieter experience. Confirm any day-use fees and pass requirements with the Alaska agency that manages Glacier Bay National Park.
What to bring
For a hike of 1.26 mi with roughly 153 ft of elevation gain, plan on about 42 minutes on trail at a steady pace. Carry at least a liter of water for every two miles, more in summer or above treeline. Pack real food if your turnaround is past midday, sun protection, a light insulating layer, and a map (paper or downloaded). Footwear should match the surface — trail runners are fine on smoother sections, while rocky or rooty ground favors a stiffer hiking shoe or light boot.
Nearby attractions
Nearby in Glacier Bay National Park you can extend the day with shorter walks near the visitor center, picnic stops at established overlooks, and connector trails that link into the broader Alaska park network. The Trail Compass park page for Glacier Bay National Park lists every other indexed trail in the same boundary, which is the fastest way to find a complementary hike — pair this route with something shorter and gentler if you have a mixed-fitness group.
Local tips
A few tips that hold up across the subarctic Alaska wilderness: If parking looks impossible, do not invent a spot on the road shoulder; rangers in Alaska routinely tow, and the next-closest legal lot is usually just a mile or two away. Leave No Trace applies on every Trail Compass-listed route — stay on the established tread, pack out everything including food scraps, and give wildlife the room they need to ignore you.
About this listing
Trail Compass aggregates publicly available park and trail information so that you can compare options before heading out. Distances, elevation profiles, and difficulty ratings come from official park sources where available, supplemented by community contributions and OpenStreetMap data. Always confirm seasonal closures, permit requirements, and current safety alerts directly with Glacier Bay National Park before your trip.