Moderate hiking trails in North Dakota
1 trails rated moderate across North Dakota state parks, national forests, and recreation areas.
Moderate hiking trails in North Dakota typically run between three and seven miles with meaningful but manageable elevation gain. They reward reasonable fitness with real views — overlooks, lakes, ridge sections, and signature features of the Great Plains, Black Hills, and badlands.
Trail Compass currently indexes 1 moderate-rated routes in North Dakota, totalling roughly 4 trail miles. The average moderate trail in this state is about 4.3 miles long, which is a useful starting point when you are sketching a weekend.
Across the Great Plains, Black Hills, and badlands, the most reliable hiking season is May through October; summer thunderstorms build fast and lightning is the primary objective hazard on exposed grassland. 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 Great Plains, Black Hills, and badlands: pronghorn, bison herds inside protected reserves, prairie dogs, golden eagles, and rattlesnakes in the warmer months. 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 North Dakota destination.
All moderate trails in North Dakota
| Trail | Park | Length | Elevation | Route |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Theodore Roosevelt Old Mine Trail | Theodore Roosevelt National Park | 4.26 mi | 773 ft | Out & Back |