Fog-draped sea stacks and snow-dusted mountains in Kenai Fjords National Park

Plan Your Visit to Kenai Fjords National Park

Everything you need to plan a Kenai Fjords trip, in one place: when to go, how to reach Seward, which boat cruise to take, and where to stay — with links to the full guide for each.

FreePark entrance fee
126 miSouth of Anchorage
Jun–AugPeak season
By boatMain way into the park
SewardYour basecamp
Start Here

How to plan a visit to Kenai Fjords National Park

Planning a Kenai Fjords trip comes down to a few decisions: when to go, how to get to Seward, which boat cruise to take, what else to add, and where to stay. Below is the short version of each, plus a link to the full guide. There is no entrance fee, the season runs mid-May to September, and a day cruise from Seward is the one thing nearly everyone does.

Start by checking live availability for the featured Kenai Fjords cruise, then work through the five planning steps.

At a Glance

Kenai Fjords trip planning at a glance

The essentials in one place — the rest of this page and the full guides go deeper.

Planning questionShort answer
Entrance feeNone — no park pass required
Where it isJust outside Seward; 126 miles (~2.5 hours) south of Anchorage
SeasonMid-May to September; peak June–August
Getting thereSeward Highway (year-round) or Alaska Railroad (summer; 2026 May 15–Sep 13)
Main way into the parkA boat tour from Seward — the fjords have no road; Exit Glacier is reached by road
How many days1 day minimum; two nights in Seward recommended
Typical cruise cost~$99 half-day to ~$309 full-day (2026, per adult)
Where to staySeward — hotels, camping, coastal cabins ($75/night) or the in-park lodge
What to packRain gear, warm layers, sturdy shoes, binoculars, motion-sickness meds
Step by Step

Your Kenai Fjords planning checklist: 5 steps from Anchorage to the fjords

Work through these in order, or jump to any full guide.

1

Pick your season

Aim for June to August for full services, daily tours and up to ~18–20 hours of daylight; May and September are quieter and cheaper; March–May is the only window for gray whales. The Exit Glacier road is closed to cars from about late October to mid-May. See the best time to visit →

2

Get to Seward

Drive the Seward Highway ~126 miles (2.5 hours) south of Anchorage, or take the Alaska Railroad Coastal Classic in summer (2026: May 15–September 13). No car? Trains, shuttle vans and the seasonal Exit Glacier shuttle all work. See getting there →

3

Choose a boat cruise

This is the one thing nearly everyone does. A half-day Resurrection Bay cruise (~4 hours, from ~$99) stays in calm water for wildlife; a full-day cruise (6–8.5 hours, ~$239–$309) reaches the tidewater glaciers of Aialik Bay and Northwestern Fjord. Prone to seasickness? Choose the bay trip, or take medication before departure. Compare boat tours →

4

Add Exit Glacier & activities

Walk the easy trails at Exit Glacier (the only road-accessible part of the park) or hike the strenuous Harding Icefield Trail (~8.2 miles round trip). Add sea kayaking in Aialik Bay, flightseeing over the icefield, or a free ranger walk. See things to do → and day-by-day itineraries →

5

Book where to stay

Base in Seward for two nights. Options run from free walk-in tent sites and $25–$70 municipal RV/tent sites to $75/night coastal public-use cabins (booked on recreation.gov), Seward hotels, and the all-inclusive in-park Glacier Lodge. Summer books up — reserve ahead. See where to stay →

Budget

How much does a Kenai Fjords trip cost?

The park itself is free; your budget is mostly the cruise and where you sleep.

Cost2026 range (per adult, indicative)
Park entranceFree — no fee, no pass
Half-day Resurrection Bay cruise~$99–$149
Full-day glacier cruise (6–7.5 hr)~$239–$269
Northwestern Fjord cruise (8.5 hr)~$309
Exit GlacierFree; seasonal shuttle ~$30 round trip
CampingFree (Exit Glacier walk-in) to $25–$70 (Seward municipal)
Coastal public-use cabin$75 per night
In-park Glacier LodgeAll-inclusive, from ~$2,175 for two nights

Cruise prices are indicative 2026 starting fares (Major Marine Tours), excluding tax and harbor fees; confirm current prices when you book.

Know Before You Go

Hours, packing, access & permits

The practical details that catch first-time visitors out.

Hours & visitor centers

The Kenai Fjords Visitor Center (Seward small boat harbor) and the Exit Glacier Nature Center are generally open Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day. The park land is open year-round, but the Exit Glacier road closes to cars from about late October to mid-May.

What to pack

  • Waterproof rain gear and warm layers
  • Hat and gloves for the deck near the ice
  • Sturdy, rubber-soled shoes; binoculars
  • Motion-sickness medication; sunglasses & sunscreen

Permits & reservations

No entrance fee or park pass, and no permit for day visits or boat tours. Coastal public-use cabins are booked on recreation.gov (the season opens January 1, three-night limit); the Exit Glacier Campground is first-come, first-served.

Accessibility

The Exit Glacier Nature Center and restrooms are wheelchair accessible, and the paved lower Glacier View Loop has an accessible viewing scope. Major cruise boats note accessible restrooms on board; the Harding Icefield Trail and outer coast are not accessible.

Weather

Summer daytime temperatures run from the mid-40s to the low 70s°F, with frequent rain even in peak season. Build a flexible day into your trip, since weather can delay or cancel boat tours.

Services & connectivity

Cell service is limited beyond Seward. Fuel, groceries, dining and outfitters are all in Seward; there are no services in the fjords or at Exit Glacier beyond the nature center.

Orientation

Where Kenai Fjords is

Seward sits on Resurrection Bay; Exit Glacier is a short drive north of town, and the fjords open to the south.

Book It

Kenai Fjords tours & experiences

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

Browse all Seward & Kenai Fjords tours

FAQ

Planning questions

There's no entrance fee. Your main cost is a boat cruise — roughly $99 for a half-day Resurrection Bay trip up to about $309 for the 8.5-hour Northwestern Fjord cruise (2026, per adult, excluding tax). Exit Glacier is free, or about $30 round trip on the seasonal shuttle. Camping ranges from free (Exit Glacier walk-in sites) to $25–$70 (Seward municipal) or $75 a night for a coastal cabin; Seward hotels and the in-park Glacier Lodge cost more. See where to stay →

No entrance fee or park pass, and no permit for day visits or the boat tours. The coastal public-use cabins are reserved on recreation.gov (the season opens January 1, with a three-night limit), and the Exit Glacier Campground is first-come, first-served. Book summer cruises and Seward lodging well ahead.

Waterproof rain gear and warm layers even in summer, a hat and gloves for the deck near the ice, sturdy rubber-soled shoes, binoculars, sunglasses and sunscreen, and motion-sickness medication if you're prone to seasickness. Summer daytime temperatures run from the mid-40s to the low 70s°F, and rain is common. See the safety guide →

Partly. The Exit Glacier Nature Center and restrooms are wheelchair accessible, and the paved lower Glacier View Loop has an accessible viewing scope. Major cruise boats note accessible restrooms on board. The Harding Icefield Trail and the outer coast are not accessible.

The Kenai Fjords Visitor Center at Seward's small boat harbor and the Exit Glacier Nature Center are generally open from Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day. The park land is open year-round, but the Exit Glacier road is closed to cars from about late October to mid-May. Check current hours before you go.

For summer (June–August), book boat cruises and Seward lodging weeks to months ahead, as popular tours and rooms sell out. Coastal cabins open for reservation on January 1 and go quickly. The shoulder months of May and September are easier and cheaper. See itineraries →

Ready to book?

Pick your season, choose a cruise, and leave a flexible day for the weather.

Compare Boat Tours