TrailAvalanche Peak Trailhead 5N2
4.5-mile out-and-back; 2,100 ft gain. Relentless climb with a true summit payoff.

Bunsen Peak is a 4.6-mile day hike with a serious 1,300-foot elevation gain in Yellowstone's northern section. The trail climbs through forest and meadow via relentless switchbacks to an alpine summit offering panoramic views of Swan Lake Flats, the Gallatin Mountains, Blacktail Deer Plateau, and the Yellowstone River Valley. Grizzly bears frequent this area—noise discipline is mandatory. This is a moderately strenuous ascent; expect 3-4 hours round-trip if you're fit.
Moderately strenuous—lung-buster
Panoramic summit views across northern Yellowstone. 360-degree vistas of Swan Lake Flats, Gallatin Mountains, Blacktail Deer Plateau, and Yellowstone River Valley. Alpine terrain with serious exposure.
• The false summit at treeline will trick you—the real summit is another 0.3 miles through alpine scrub • Bring bear spray and know how to use it; this is legitimate grizzly habitat • The gravel parking lot is genuinely small; arrive early or accept being turned away • Summer afternoon thunderstorms develop fast at this elevation; summit and descend before 2:00 PM • The ridge descent is steep and loose in places; don't rush
Summer and Fall
Not recommended for young children. The 1,300-foot elevation gain is serious; switchbacks are relentless. Grizzly bear presence requires constant supervision and noise discipline. Only suitable for fit children (10+) with hiking experience and adult supervision.
Hikers praise the summit views and north park panorama, but warn that the elevation gain is brutally steep and the descent is harder than expected. Grizzly bear precautions are essential. Popular and crowded in summer.
No permits required
No shuttle system
Grizzly bears frequent this area—mandatory noise discipline and bear spray. Steep exposure with unprotected terrain. Alpine weather develops fast; afternoon thunderstorms are common. Loose scree on descent is slippery when wet. Lightning risk at high elevation. Steep switchbacks on descent punish tired knees.
Steep exposed switchbacks, scrambling near summit, loose terrain—not wheelchair or stroller accessible
Not recommended for young children. The 1,300-foot elevation gain is serious; switchbacks are relentless. Grizzly bear presence requires constant supervision and noise discipline. Only suitable for fit children (10+) with hiking experience and adult supervision.
Mammoth Campground (5 miles north), Mammoth Visitor Center, lodging and dining at Mammoth area
Hikers praise the summit views and north park panorama, but warn that the elevation gain is brutally steep and the descent is harder than expected. Grizzly bear precautions are essential. Popular and crowded in summer.
" Hikers praise the summit views and north park panorama, but warn that the elevation gain is brutally steep and the descent is harder than expected. Grizzly bear precautions are essential. Popular and crowded in summer."
Yes, grizzlies frequent this area. Carry bear spray, make constant noise (talk, clap, sing), and hike with a partner if possible. Bear bells are insufficient.
Not ideal. You're climbing into grizzly country with significant exposure at altitude. Partners provide both safety and communication redundancy. At minimum, file a trip plan.
Trekking poles are strongly recommended, not optional. The descent is steep and loose. Bear spray is essential. Sturdy boots required—no trail runners. Bring a headlamp; start before 6 AM.
You need to be comfortable with sustained uphill over 2+ miles. If you can't do 30 minutes of stairs without stopping, this will hurt. It's not technical, but it's a serious grind.
No sources on the trail. Carry 2-3 liters minimum depending on temperature. High elevation plus exposure equals increased thirst. A typical hiker drinks 1L per hour on this climb.
Yes, if you want genuine panoramic summit views of northern Yellowstone. The views justify the pain. But you're climbing for views, not a leisurely forest walk.
Busy in summer, especially 7-11 AM. Arriving by 6:30 AM helps. Early fall (late September through October) is quieter. Come expecting company in peak season.
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