Full Moon Hikes at Mount Rainier

Full Moon Hikes at Mount Rainier

Trails
Last Updated: June 2026

Distance

1 mi

Elevation Gain

400 ft

Est. Time

30 minutes (Box Canyon) to 3 hours (Nisqually Vista). At night, add 25-50% for caution, darkness adaptation, and photography.

Route Type

Out-and-back

Dogs Allowed

No

Best Season

Spring through Fall (May-September recommended). Paradise trails open spring-fall only; Stevens Canyon summer-only. Longmire accessible year-round but winter snow increases hazard.

Overview

About This Trail

Mount Rainier under full moonlight transforms the park into an otherworldly nocturnal landscape—waterfalls, glaciers, and old-growth forest glow under natural light. Multiple paved options (0.3-2 miles) serve different risk appetites: Trail of Shadows is flat and forested, Paradise trails are steeper and more exposed. Difficulty: Low to moderate terrain, extreme nighttime risk. You'll face bears, cold, darkness disorientation, and snow until June. This demands headlamps, groups, and absolute respect for mountain night rules.

Highlights

Difficulty Level

Moderate (options range from flat walks to steep ascents; nighttime adds technical difficulty)

Trail Highlights

The supreme payoff: Mount Rainier's summit bathed in moonlight—the rarest light show in the park. On clear nights, scan the mountain for Camp Muir headlamps (mountaineers ascending). Myrtle Falls waterfall glows under moonlight. Subalpine meadows and old-growth forest transform into ethereal landscapes. This is immersive nocturnal wilderness, not a casual evening stroll.

Insider Tips

• Red headlamp ONLY—white light destroys night vision adaptation. Train your eyes 20-30 minutes in moonlight before heavy navigation. • Listen to forest soundscape: owl calls, rushing water (Box Canyon river), wind in trees orient you when vision fails. • On Nisqually Vista, scan the mountain for Camp Muir climbers' headlamps at night—visible on clear evenings. • Avoid Nisqually Vista and Myrtle Falls before late June due to snow; stick to lower Longmire trails if season is early. • Box Canyon trail: best short night hike with river soundscape. Quietest, least crowded option. • Pack a second headlamp as backup—when your primary fails (and it will), you're stranded in darkness. • Trekking poles prevent slips on steep/snowy descents more reliably than sure-footing.

Best Season to Hike

Spring through Fall (May-September recommended). Paradise trails open spring-fall only; Stevens Canyon summer-only. Longmire accessible year-round but winter snow increases hazard.

Hiking Tips

  • Hike ONLY in groups—bears hunt at night; make constant noise.
  • Red headlamp preserves night vision; white light only when essential.
  • Carry 2L+ water minimum—dehydration kills faster at night.
  • Bring trekking poles for steep/snowy descent stability.
  • Pack the 10 Essentials plus a backup headlamp (failures happen).
  • Scout the trail in daylight if unfamiliar—never pioneer at night.
  • Avoid Paradise trails if snow-covered (slipping hazard magnified).
  • Set a hard turnaround time: return before full dark if unsure of route.

Family Info

Children allowed only with mandatory adult supervision at night. Paradise trails have steep drop-offs—hand-holding required for kids. Trail of Shadows and Box Canyon are shorter/safer for families. No wheeled devices on unpaved sections. Short attention spans and night fatigue are real risks—choose 0.3-0.7 mile routes for kids under 12.

What Hikers Say

Night hikers report that Mount Rainier under moonlight is worth every ounce of risk management and caution. Terrain difficulty is low-to-moderate (paved trails), but darkness transforms a casual walk into a mentally demanding expedition—hypervigilance, cold stress, and bear awareness extract a real cost. Experienced night hikers say the summit view under moonlight justifies the grit required; first-timers should start with flat trails (Trail of Shadows) before attempting steeper Paradise routes.

ℹ️ Data Sources

Information is compiled from official sources, verified traveler reviews, and editorial research. Learn how YourNPGuide works →