Steep rock cliffs sheltering a quiet coastal cove in Kenai Fjords National Park

Kenai Fjords National Park FAQ

Common questions answered — from the best time to visit and getting there from Anchorage to boat tours, Exit Glacier, hiking and wildlife near Seward, Alaska.

Quick answers to the questions travelers ask most about visiting Kenai Fjords National Park. Each answer links to a fuller guide where there's more to say.

Planning your visit

Planning your visit

Mid-May to September, peaking June through August. Visitor centers open Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day, boat tours run daily in summer, and the Exit Glacier road is open to cars from roughly mid-May to late October. May and September are quieter shoulder months. See the best time to visit guide.

No. Kenai Fjords charges no entrance fee and does not sell or require any park passes, so an America the Beautiful pass is not needed. Costs are optional extras like a boat tour, cabin or camping.

One day covers a half-day cruise plus a walk at Exit Glacier. Two days adds the full-day fjord cruise or the Harding Icefield Trail. Three or more allows sea kayaking, a coastal cabin and the Alaska SeaLife Center. Two nights in Seward is a common recommendation.

For most travelers, yes: few places combine calving tidewater glaciers, abundant marine wildlife and a walk-up glacier within a day or two of Anchorage. The main caveat is weather — cruises can be cool, wet and occasionally rough.

The land is open year-round, but it functions as a summer destination. From about late October to mid-May the Exit Glacier road is closed to cars and boat tours don't run.

Getting there

Getting there

Drive the Seward Highway about 126 miles (around 2.5 hours) south to Seward; the Alaska Railroad Coastal Classic also runs Anchorage–Seward in summer only (in 2026, May 15 to September 13). From Seward, Exit Glacier is by road and the fjords by boat. See getting there.

Yes. Reach Seward by train or shuttle van; a seasonal Exit Glacier shuttle runs from Seward; and boat tours depart within walking distance of downtown.

Drive Herman Leirer Road (Exit Glacier Road) off mile 3 of the Seward Highway about 8.4 to 8.6 miles, or take the seasonal shuttle. The road is closed to cars from about late October to mid-May. See Exit Glacier.

Boat tours

Boat tours

Effectively yes. Exit Glacier is the only part reachable by road; the fjords, tidewater glaciers and marine wildlife are reached only by water. See boat tours explained.

A 6 to 7.5 hour Kenai Fjords National Park cruise, which reaches the Aialik Bay tidewater glaciers and typically produces whale and other wildlife sightings.

The NPS advises choosing a shorter Resurrection Bay cruise or taking motion-sickness medication before you depart, not after you feel unwell. Resurrection Bay is sheltered; the open crossings to Aialik and Northwestern can be rough.

Both are active tidewater glaciers in Aialik Bay that calve ice. Half-day and 6-hour cruises usually visit one (captain's choice); 7.5-hour cruises visit both; the longest cruises reach Northwestern Fjord's three glaciers.

Exit Glacier & hiking

Exit Glacier & hiking

Yes. Easy, partly paved trails from the nature center lead to glacier viewpoints, including a roughly 1-mile Glacier View Loop. See Exit Glacier.

Strenuous: about 8.2 miles round trip, roughly 1,000 feet of gain per mile, 6 to 8 hours. Snow lingers on the upper trail into late June or July, and black bears are common. Bring warm layers, rain gear, sturdy boots and 2 or more liters of water.

The Nature Center and restrooms are wheelchair accessible, and the paved lower Glacier View Loop has an accessible viewing scope.

Wildlife

Wildlife

On the water: humpback whales, orcas, sea otters, Steller sea lions, harbor seals, and tufted and horned puffins. On land near Exit Glacier: black bears and mountain goats. Gray whales pass in spring. See the wildlife calendar.

Humpbacks April to October (best mid-May to mid-August); orcas year-round (best mid-May to June); gray whales in spring only (roughly March to May).

Tufted puffins arrive around mid-May and horned puffins about a week later, with the heaviest nesting at the Beehive Islands in the Chiswells; they are around into August.

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Kenai Fjords tours & experiences

Other experiences you might enjoy — glacier and wildlife cruises, sea kayaking and flightseeing from Seward and Aialik Bay.

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