Grouse Creek Road
Idaho's loneliest road to the Canadian border
Grouse Creek Road cuts 35 miles north from the Moyie River through Idaho’s most isolated country to literally nowhere—the Canadian border fence and a locked gate. Built in the 1960s to service a proposed molybdenum mine that never materialized, this forgotten Forest Service road climbs through dense cedar and hemlock forests with zero services and sketchy creek crossings. The highlight comes at mile 28 where you ford the South Fork of Smith Creek—no bridge, just rocks and hope your differential seals hold.
This is solid intermediate 4WD territory requiring high clearance and decent tires. Two significant water crossings and loose shale sections keep things interesting but won’t break a competent driver. Best tackled May through October when snow clears from the 5,200-foot pass. No cell service, no facilities, no other humans—just you and 70 square miles of roadless wilderness. Dispersed camping is excellent along the creek bottoms, and you’ll earn serious bragging rights for reaching the northernmost drivable point in Idaho.
Trail Specs
| Difficulty | Moderate |
|---|---|
| Trail Type | Backcountry |
| Surface | Dirt |
| Features | Camping, Remote, Water Crossings |
| Length (miles) | 35 mi / 56.3 km |
| Duration | Full day |
| Max elevation (ft) | 5280 ft |
| Best season | May-October |
| Minimum vehicle | High-clearance 4WD |
| Nearest town | Moyie Springs, Idaho |
| Land manager | Idaho Panhandle National Forest |
| Permit required | No |
| Cell service | None |
| Water crossings | Yes |
| Dispersed camping | Yes |
| Start coordinates | |
| End coordinates | |
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| Find on Google | Search on Google → |
Location
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