Mallard Lake Trail

Mallard Lake Trail

Trails
Last Updated: June 2026

Distance

7 mi

Elevation Gain

500 ft

Est. Time

3–4 hours if fit and moving steadily; 5–6 hours with breaks, thermal feature stops, and photography.

Route Type

Out-and-back

Dogs Allowed

No

Best Season

Late June through September; most reliable weather and full service. Road access guaranteed mid-April through early November per park conditions.

Overview

About This Trail

This 7-mile moderately easy day hike combines hydrothermal features with genuine alpine scenery. You'll cross the Firehole River, pass Pipeline Hot Springs, and trek rolling hills of partially-burned lodgepole pine to reach Mallard Lake. The final payoff is an alpine lake surrounded by open rocky terrain—earned through steady climbing and constant vigilance for bears. It's accessible to most fit hikers, but sun exposure and distance demand genuine respect.

Highlights

Difficulty Level

Moderately easy, but 7 miles demands fitness and hydration discipline.

Trail Highlights

Mallard Lake itself is the payoff—an alpine lake surrounded by open rocky terrain. The journey includes thermal features (Pipeline Hot Springs) and a river crossing that test your footing and bear awareness.

Insider Tips

• The 'false summit' at Mile 5 will trick you—the lake is another 0.5 miles. Keep your grit. • Elk congregate at dawn and dusk in meadows; this is prime bear attractant country. • The Pipeline Hot Springs area is thermally unstable—never leave the trail. • The descent is faster but brutal on knees; take your time and use poles. • Sunrise hikes beat crowds and brutal midday heat. • The burned forest sections are disorienting; carry a map and use it. • Start early and commit to a turnaround time—don't chase daylight into dusk.

Best Season to Hike

Late June through September; most reliable weather and full service. Road access guaranteed mid-April through early November per park conditions.

Hiking Tips

  • Make continuous noise—this is active grizzly and black bear country. Talk, clap, or carry a bear bell.
  • Bring 2–3L water minimum; no reliable sources until Mallard Lake. Filter or purify any backcountry water.
  • Tighten your boots before the descent—loose footing on rocky final miles is a twisted ankle waiting to happen.
  • Respect thermal features: Pipeline Hot Springs can cause severe burns; stay on trail, don't deviate.
  • Bring a map and compass even if the trail is marked—the burned forest can disorient you.
  • Use trekking poles for the Firehole River crossing; slippery rocks are no joke.

Family Info

Older children (10+) can manage the distance with proper breaks and hydration. River crossing requires careful footing; younger kids need adult support. Full sun on rocky final miles is tough for small children. Grizzly/black bear risk requires mature judgment and discipline about making noise.

What Hikers Say

Most hikers report this as a solid moderately easy day hike with genuine payoff at the lake. Common feedback: sun exposure on final miles is real, 7 miles demands fitness discipline, and bear activity requires serious noise discipline. Crowds are lighter than Old Faithful main attractions, but July–August mornings fill the trailhead early.

ℹ️ Data Sources
🏞️ National Park Service 📝 YourNPGuide Editorial

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