Snowy peaks glowing at sunset above the calm water of Resurrection Bay near Seward

Seward: Your Kenai Fjords Basecamp

The gateway town to the park is worth time of its own — the Alaska SeaLife Center, a walkable harbor and downtown, and some of the Kenai Peninsula's best hikes, about 2.5 hours south of Anchorage.

Seward is the gateway to Kenai Fjords, and most visitors base themselves here. Beyond the fjord day cruises and Exit Glacier, the town offers the Alaska SeaLife Center, a compact harbor and historic downtown, and hikes ranging from the brutally steep Mount Marathon to an easy coastal walk toward Caines Head. It sits about 126 miles (2.5 hours) south of Anchorage, and two nights here is a common recommendation.

You could treat Seward purely as a launch point, but the town rewards a slower visit — especially on a rainy day, or before and after a cruise. Here's what to do when you're not on the water.

The Main Attraction

The Alaska SeaLife Center

On the Seward waterfront at 301 Railway Avenue, the Alaska SeaLife Center is the state's only public aquarium — and a working marine research and wildlife-rehabilitation center, home to a stranding network that rescues injured marine animals.

Inside you can watch puffins, Steller sea lions, sea otters and octopus, get hands-on at touch tanks, and book close-up encounter programs. It's open year-round, makes an easy rainy-day or pre-cruise stop, and has a café and gift shop on site. Check current hours and admission before you go.

In Town

The harbor & historic downtown

Two walkable hubs, about 1.5 miles apart along Resurrection Bay.

The small boat harbor

Where the cruises depart

  • Launch point for every Kenai Fjords day cruise and many charters
  • Home to the Kenai Fjords National Park Visitor Center
  • Restaurants, outfitters and the Alaska Railroad depot nearby
  • The cruise-ship terminal sits at the head of the bay — see our cruise-port guide

Historic downtown

About 1.5 miles south of the harbor

  • Shops, galleries, breweries and dining
  • One of the region's largest collections of public murals
  • The Alaska SeaLife Center anchors the waterfront
  • Mile 0 of the historic Iditarod Trail
Get Outside

Hikes & outdoors near Seward

From a leg-burning summit to an easy shoreline stroll.

SpotWhat it isEffort / notes
Mount MarathonA 3,022-foot peak straight above town; site of a famous Fourth of July raceStrenuous, steep — for fit hikers
Tonsina Point & Caines HeadCoastal trail from Lowell Point into Caines Head State Recreation Area, with WWII fort ruinsModerate; parts are tide-dependent — check tides
Two Lakes ParkAn easy wooded loop right in townEasy, family-friendly
Lowell PointA beach and small community south of town; a water-taxi launchEasy; short drive from downtown
Exit GlacierThe national park's road-accessible glacier and the Harding Icefield TrailEasy to strenuous — see Exit Glacier

Trail conditions, tides and access change — check locally before setting out, and see our safety guide.

Basecamp

Using Seward as your base

Seward is about 126 miles (2.5 hours) south of Anchorage on the Seward Highway, and the Alaska Railroad's Coastal Classic connects the two in summer. It's a small, walkable town, so once you arrive you can reach the harbor, downtown and the SeaLife Center on foot, and use the seasonal shuttle or a short drive for Exit Glacier.

Most itineraries build in a fjord cruise plus Exit Glacier, then use spare time for the SeaLife Center and a hike. Two nights in town is the common recommendation — see where to stay for hotels, cabins and camping, and our itineraries for day-by-day plans.

FAQ

Seward questions

Most visitors take a Kenai Fjords day cruise and visit Exit Glacier. In town, the Alaska SeaLife Center is the main attraction, with a walkable harbor and historic downtown of shops, murals and dining. Nearby hikes include the steep Mount Marathon and the coastal trail toward Caines Head, and fishing charters and flightseeing depart from Seward too.

For most visitors, yes — it's Alaska's only public aquarium and also a marine research and wildlife-rehabilitation center. You can see puffins, sea lions, sea otters and octopus, and it's a good rainy-day or pre-cruise stop on the Seward waterfront. It's open year-round; check current hours and admission before you go.

The best-known is Mount Marathon, a very steep climb straight up from town and the site of a famous Fourth of July race. For a gentler coastal walk, the trail from Lowell Point past Tonsina Point into Caines Head State Recreation Area follows the shore (parts are tide-dependent). Two Lakes Park is an easy in-town loop, and Exit Glacier has the area's marquee hikes.

About 126 miles, or roughly 2.5 hours, south of Anchorage on the Seward Highway. The Alaska Railroad's Coastal Classic also connects the two in summer. Staying two nights in Seward is a common recommendation.

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

Base yourself in Seward

Combine a fjord cruise, Exit Glacier and the SeaLife Center over a relaxed two nights in town.

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