The best alpine lakes on the West Coast don’t have a parking lot next to them

Anyone can photograph a lake from a scenic pullout. The good ones make you work for it first — miles of climbing, a few hundred feet of elevation gain past the point where most people quietly turn back, and no guarantee of a parking spot even if you make it.

Washington, Oregon, and California each hide one of these. Different mileage, different permit rules, different amount of suffering — but every single one hands back a lake that looks like it’s been color-corrected. Here’s what each climb actually costs.


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Lake Ingalls, Washington — the one with Mount Stuart staring back

This is the step-up hike in the Alpine Lakes Wilderness, and it earns its “hard” rating honestly. Via the Esmeralda Basin trailhead, it runs about 9.1 miles round trip with 2,857 feet of climbing — figure on 6 to 6.5 hours moving at a normal pace.

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The reward is a turquoise lake sitting directly beneath Mount Stuart’s north face, arguably the single most dramatic backdrop in the Cascades. Go now for wildflower-heavy meadows on the approach, or hold off until October if you’d rather see the surrounding larches turn gold. It’s Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest land, so a Northwest Forest Pass needs to be on your dash — this one’s national forest, not national park, so that’s the pass that actually applies here.

Washington is for Adventure put together a full rundown of the state’s toughest alpine lake climbs if you want more options once you’re in the area.

Green Lakes, Oregon — the one that added a permit

Ask a Bend local for a hike recommendation and Green Lakes comes up almost every time. Round trip, it’s about 9.3 miles with roughly 1,177 feet of gain — moderate next to the other two on this list, and very doable in a half day if you keep a steady pace.

The payoff is glassy, glacier-green water sitting right at the base of Broken Top, with South Sister rising behind you on the way in. Between June 15 and October 15, day use requires a Central Cascades Wilderness Permit, separate from parking and booked through Recreation.gov — this trailhead runs on a daily quota, so grab your date the moment it opens rather than sorting it out at the trailhead. You’ll still need a Northwest Forest Pass on top of that; the wilderness permit doesn’t cover parking.

Oregon is for Adventure broke down exactly how the new permit system works, worth a read before you commit to a date.

Clear blue alpine lake surrounded by pumice covered moraine, fir

Canyon Creek Lakes, California — the one where nobody checks your paperwork

This is the gut-check of the three. Canyon Creek Lakes Trail in the Trinity Alps Wilderness runs 15.6 miles round trip with 2,942 feet of elevation gain — figure on 8 hours or more, especially once you start stopping for the waterfalls along the way, and you will stop for the waterfalls along the way.

Here’s the twist: day hikers don’t need a permit at all. Wilderness permits in the Trinity Alps are free and self-issued at the trailhead, but they’re only required if you’re camping overnight near the lakes — a real contrast to Oregon’s quota system a few hundred miles north. Trinity Alps sits deep in fire country, so a quick check of current conditions before you commit to the drive is worth the two minutes it takes.

Caribou Lake, Trinity Alps, California

Lake Ingalls has the better view. Green Lakes is the easier win. Canyon Creek Lakes is the one that’ll make you feel it the next morning. Which one’s earning your boots first?

Trip tips: grab a rental car to reach these trailheads, lock in your hotel before the good rooms are gone, or skip both and book a camper van instead.

Rules and fees change — always confirm current requirements before you go.

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