Hiking the Bear Creek Overlook Trail in the Bitterroot Mountains of Montana

Distance: 5.2 miles / 8.4 km

Personally, I have held few hikes with such high regard as the Bear Creek Overlook Trail in the Bitterroot Mountains of Montana.

By this, I mean that if I had a top five list of the best hikes in the world, it would go Pēpēʻōpae, Awaʻawapuhi, the Weeping Wall, the Kalalau Trail, and the Bear Creek Overlook!

Bear Creek Overlook Trailhead Parking

Parking for the trail is located at the very end of the long and bumpy Bear Creek Overlook Trail Road.

Most 2WD cars should be able to make the drive, granted that the road is snow-free. However, please note that the road from the pavement to the trailhead is a long 5.8-mile (9.3 km) drive on mostly single-lane windy road, with steep drop-offs on one side.

Google Maps Directions: Bear Creek Overlook Trailhead

Bear Creek Overlook Trailhead Parking

Bear Creek Overlook Trailhead Parking

 

Hiking Checklist - Bitterroot Mountains

The Bitterroot Mountains in Montana is both black bear and grizzly country. Therefore, you should be hiking with bear spray for your own safety.

Hiking the Bear Creek Overlook Trail

The Bear Creek Overlook Trail begins directly adjacent to the parking area, as shown in the photo below.

Bear Creek Overlook Trailhead

At the initial split following the trailhead, go left to stay on the Bear Creek Overlook Trail.

The path to the right is a shortcut for the switchbacks, but it is not the established trail made the National Forest Service.

Go Left

After the initial split, the Bear Creek Overlook Trail climbs a series of 22 switchbacks from the trailhead to the overlook.

Although that may sound like a lot, the hike up the Bear Creek switchbacks climbs one of the gentlest slopes, making the Bear Creek Overlook one of the best effort-to-reward trails I’ve ever hiked!

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

One of my favorite things about a trail like the Bear Creek Overlook is that you don’t know what you’re hiking up to until the end, which makes the viewpoint one of the best surprises when you finally arrive!

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Toward the upper switchbacks, you’ll likely notice the trees thinning out up the hillside, which is a nice mental checkpoint that you’re getting close to the overlook.

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Bear Creek Overlook Trail

Bear Creek Overlook

At the very end of the trail, you arrive at the stunning Bear Creek Overlook, which overlooks both the North Fork and Bear Creek.

Additionally, the ridge line at the very back of the two valleys marks the Montana-Idaho border.

Bear Creek Overlook

Alternatively, you can scramble up the peak to the right of the official trail, as shown in the photos below.

Personally, this upper viewpoint at the Bear Creek Overlook is one of my favorite places to watch sunset, and it’s always a hike that I will revisit every time I come back to Glacier National Park.

Scrambling Up

Bear Creek Overlook

Warning

While the Bear Creek Overlook is one of the most beautiful hikes in the world, it can also be one of the most dangerous.

Every cliff along the edge of the overlook is a place where you cannot afford to fall, as it would almost certainly result in death.

I say this to say: enjoy the beautiful views, but be careful along these dramatic cliffs. The end of the official trail is actually an overhanging cliff that you cannot see until you’re standing on the upper viewpoint shown above.

Bear Creek Overlook

Safety

Other than common safety while hiking in black and grizzly bear territory, the most significant thing to note about safety is the cliffs that I talked about above.

The Bear Creek Overlook is truly amazing, but it may not be the best hike for young kids due to the high consequences of falling.

@noahawaii

Hi,

Iʻm a self-taught adventure photographer living on the island of Oʻahu.

@noahawaii

https://noahlangphotography.com/
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