Athabasca Glacier Road
Touch ancient ice on North America's wildest glacier approach
The old Athabasca Glacier access road branches from Highway 93 just north of the Icefield Centre, following the historic route used by early mountaineers and researchers to reach the glacier toe. While tourist buses now take the main route, this rough track requires navigating loose moraine, crossing glacial meltwater channels that shift daily, and picking through rockfall debris from the surrounding peaks. The final kilometer climbs over unstable glacial till to within 200 meters of the ice, where you can touch North America’s most accessible glacier remnant.
Expert-level driving with constant route-finding through changing terrain – what’s passable in morning may be underwater by afternoon as glacial melt peaks. Modified 4WD with rock sliders essential, plus recovery gear and experience reading glacial terrain. Best attempted July-August when temperatures stabilize meltwater flow patterns. Parks Canada requires permits for backcountry access beyond marked boundaries. The reward is standing beside 10,000-year-old ice in one of the planet’s most dramatic mountain amphitheaters, but this isn’t a trail for beginners.
Trail Specs
| Difficulty | Expert |
|---|---|
| Trail Type | Technical 4x4 |
| Surface | Rock |
| Features | High Altitude, Scenic, Water Crossings |
| Length (miles) | 8 mi / 13 km |
| Duration | Full day |
| Max elevation (ft) | 7400 ft |
| Best season | July-August |
| Minimum vehicle | Modified 4WD with armor |
| Nearest town | Jasper, AB |
| Land manager | Parks Canada |
| Permit required | Yes |
| Cell service | None |
| Water crossings | Yes |
| Dispersed camping | No |
| Start coordinates | |
| End coordinates | |
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| Find on Google | Search on Google → |
Location
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