Canada · Northwest Territories

Mackenzie River Ice Road

Drive the frozen Mackenzie when winter makes the highway

Expert

When the Mackenzie River freezes solid each January, it becomes the longest ice road in North America — a 200-kilometer frozen highway connecting Inuvik to Aklavik across the Northwest Territories. You’ll drive directly on river ice thick enough to support transport trucks, passing through a landscape so remote that caribou tracks often outnumber tire marks. The route follows the meandering river channel through the Richardson Mountains, with the Peel River junction marking the halfway point where ice conditions can shift dramatically.

This is expert-level winter driving demanding proper arctic gear, emergency supplies, and understanding of ice conditions. Your rig needs block heaters, synthetic fluids, and emergency bivouac equipment. The road operates only from mid-January through March when ice thickness hits 60+ centimeters — too early risks breaking through, too late means spring breakup. What you get is an experience few will ever have: driving where no road should exist, across one of Canada’s most powerful rivers in complete arctic silence.

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Trail Specs

Difficulty
Trail Type
Surface
Features, ,
Length (miles)124 mi / 200 km
Duration1 day
Max elevation (ft)250 ft
Best seasonJanuary-March
Minimum vehicleAny vehicle with winter prep
Nearest townInuvik, Northwest Territories
Land managerGovernment of Northwest Territories
Permit requiredNo
Cell serviceNone
Water crossingsNo
Dispersed campingNo
Start coordinates
End coordinates
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Official: Expert

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