By Michael Lanza
After more than three decades of exploring all over Yosemite on numerous backpacking trips, Iβve learned two big lessons about it: First of all, few places inspire the same powerful combination of both awe and adventure. And Yosemiteβs backcountry harbors such an abundance of soaring granite peaks, waterfalls, lovely rivers and creeks, and shimmering alpine lakesβplus, over 700,000 acres of designated wilderness and 750 miles of trailsβthat you can explore Americaβs third national park literally for decades and not run out of five-star scenery.
Yosemite exceeds expectations in many ways, including this truth: Its reputation for crowds just doesnβt square with the reality of backpacking throughout most of the park. Yes, Yosemite Valley sees insane numbers of tourists, and a few of the parkβs trailsβlike the Mist Trail and Half Domeβare among the most popular in the country.
But most of the parkβs backcountry isnβt crowded. I once interviewed a retired backcountry ranger whoβd worked for 37 years in Yosemite, 25 years as wilderness manager, and had hiked every trail in Yosemite βprobably about 10 times.β He told me that only about 10 percent of the parkβs hundreds of miles of trailsβfrom Happy Isles to Donohue Pass (mostly the John Muir Trail) and the Sierra High Camps loopβaccounts for about 80 percent of all trail use. Little Yosemite Valley alone accounts for almost 20 percent. And the average length of backpacking trips is just two nights.
Consequently, he said, βThere are areas of the park where you will see very few people.β
Wander into the parkβs vast backcountry and you will find some of the very best scenery in Yosemiteβalong with a surprising degree of solitude.
This article describes the 10 best backpacking trips in Yosemite, from the core between Yosemite Valley and Tuolumne Meadowsβincluding Half Domeβto the John Muir Trail, the Clark Range and southeast corner, and the vast wilderness of northern Yosemite. These trips range in length from roughly 30 miles to nearly 90 miles, and from beginner friendly to serious adventures in the parkβs wildest corners.
Iβve backpacked all of these tripsβand others across Yosemiteβover more than three decades of getting to know this park very well, including the 10 years I spent as a field editor with Backpacker magazine and even longer running this blog.
Each trip described below has a link to a story about it that provides more detail (reading those stories in full, including key trip-planning details, requires a paid subscription), and some descriptions have a link to one of my three Yosemite e-guides, which provide much more detail on how to plan and prepare for that trip.
See my expert e-guides to three great backpacking trips in Yosemiteβincluding βThe Best First Backpacking Trip in Yosemiteββand my Custom Trip Planning page to learn how I can help you plan any of these classic adventures, variations of them, another Yosemite trip, or any trip you read about at The Big Outside.
Please tell me what you think of the trips described below, share your questions, or suggest your own favorite backpacking trip in Yosemite in the comments section at the bottom of this story. I try to respond to all comments.
Plan your next great backpacking adventure in Yosemite and other flagship parks using my expert e-guides.
Understanding Yosemiteβs Wilderness Permit System
In Yosemite, wilderness permit reservations are issued based on daily trailhead quotas on the number of people, which vary between trailheads, with special rules for backpacking the John Muir Trail. For trips from April 28 through Oct. 22, 60 percent of trailhead quotas can be reserved through a rolling lottery at recreation.gov that begins on the Sunday up to 24 weeks in advance of the date you want to start hiking and runs for a week, with the lottery for each specific window of dates closing at 11:59 p.m. the following Saturday.
Planning a backpacking trip? See βBackpacking Yosemite: What You Need to Knowβ
and βHow to Plan a Backpacking Tripβ12 Expert Tips.β
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The remaining 40 percent of permits are made available at recreation.gov at 7 a.m. Pacific Time up to seven days in advance of a trip start date. But popular trailheadsβincluding Happy Isles in Yosemite Valley and most of the trailheads in the Tuolumne Meadows areaβwill often fill during the first lottery week that dates become available. There are lower-demand trailheads in the park where you can more likely reserve a permit without applying 24 weeks in advance.
See βHow to Get a Yosemite or High Sierra Wilderness Permitβ and my β10 Tips For Getting a Hard-to-Get National Park Backcountry Permit.β
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Yosemiteβs Best Backpacking Trips
Little Yosemite Valley and Half Dome
Letβs acknowledge this up front: Any list of Yosemiteβs best backpacking trips must include this route from the parkβs most popular trailhead to its most popular backcountry camp and the summit so famous and popular that the park requires a permit for hiking the cable route up it whether while backpacking or on a dayhike.
Many thousands of people attempt the strenuous hike up Half Dome, about 16 miles round-trip with almost 5,000 feet of elevation gain and loss from the Happy Isles Trailhead in Yosemite Valley, in one big day. Backpacking it as an overnighter with a camp in Little Yosemite Valley spreads out the effort over two daysβa more reasonable objective for many hikers.
Having the camp also makes it easier to reach the 8,800-foot crown of Half Dome ahead of the wave of more than 200 dayhikers permitted to hike Half Dome each day, enjoying something closer to solitude for the incomparable view of Yosemite Valley and 360-degree panorama of a big swath of the parkβs mountains.
From Happy Isles, ascend the Mist Trail past 317-foot Vernal Fall and 594-foot Nevada Fall to reach Little Yosemite Valley. Dayhike Half Dome from your camp, and then descend the northernmost leg of the John Muir Trail back to Happy Islesβor skip Half Dome and turn this into an easy overnight of under 10 miles total, ideal for beginner backpackers or families with young kids. And understand: This is the hardest wilderness permit to get in Yosemite.
Read more about this hike in my blog post βWhere to Backpack First Time in Yosemite,β and find much more detailed information on how to plan this trip, including variations of this route and insider tips in getting a permit for it, in my e-guide βThe Best First Backpacking Trip in Yosemite.β
I can help you plan any trip you read about at my blogβand I know the tricks for getting a Yosemite wilderness permit. Click here to learn more.
Yosemite Valley to Half Dome, Clouds Rest, and Sunrise
Planning your first backpacking trip in Yosemite and want to hit all the famous highlightsβon a route thatβs also beginner-friendly? Take this 37.2-mile hike from Happy Isles Trailhead in Yosemite Valley.
Essentially an extended version of the above hike, this route from the Happy Isles Trailhead loops through the core of the park, including the Mist Trail past Vernal and Nevada Falls, the cable route up Half Dome, the spectacular summit of Clouds Rest, a section of the John Muir Trail, and a view of the Cathedral Range from your campsite at Sunrise.Β
Probably the most popular backpacking trip in Yosemite of more than one or two nightsβranked behind its shorter variation to Little Yosemite Valley and Half Dome (above)βit usually includes at least one night at Little Yosemite Valley. Expect a lot of competition for this permit and plan alternative routes in case you donβt get it.
Read more about this hike in my blog post βWhere to Backpack First Time in Yosemite,β and find much more detailed information on how to plan this trip, including variations of this route and insider tips in getting a permit for it, in my e-guide βThe Best First Backpacking Trip in Yosemite.β
See also my tips on hiking Half Dome.
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Tuolumne Meadows to Tenaya Lake
The roughly 30-mile traverse from the Rafferty Creek Trailhead at the eastern end of Tuolumne Meadows to the Sunrise Lakes Trailhead at Tenaya Lake features not only those two amazing spots, but the panorama of mountains from Vogelsang Pass, the beautiful canyon of the Merced River, the view of the Cathedral Range from Sunrise, and relatively quiet sections of trail.
This hike passes three of the parkβs High Sierra CampsβVogelsang, Merced Lake, and Sunriseβwhere you can stay in tent cabins and have all meals prepared for you, or stay in DIY backpacker campgrounds. This route is popular because itβs relatively accessible, scenic, and offers the convenience of using the free shuttle buses that operate between trailheads throughout the Tuolumne area.
This is described as an alternative route in my e-guide βThe Best First Backpacking Trip in Yosemite,β which provides a wealth of information on how to prepare for and take a backpacking trip in Yosemite.
Planning your next big adventure? See βAmericaβs Top 10 Best Backpacking Tripsβ
and βTent Flap With a View: 25 Favorite Backcountry Campsites.β
The High Sierra Camps Loop
One of the parkβs most popular and scenic multi-day hikes, this roughly 47-mile loop from Tuolumne Meadows offers a signature Yosemite experience on a highlights tour around the Cathedral Range to the five High Sierra Camps: Glen Aulin, May Lake, Sunrise, Merced Lake, and Vogelsang.
Youβll enjoy views of granite domes and Cathedral Peakβs distinctive sharp profile; overlooks of the magnificent Grand Canyon of the Tuolumne River and several waterfalls, including 594-foot Nevada Fall from a perch near its brink; gorgeous May Lake, Tenaya Lake, and Merced Lake; wildflower-choked meadows and crystalline creeksβand a surprisingly amount of solitude on sections of the loop, considering its easy access from several points.
There are ways to shorten the loop or lengthen it, options for side hikes to more lakes, waterfalls, and summitsβincluding two of the best in Yosemite, Mount Hoffmann and Clouds Restβand create alternate routes or start and finish from various trailheads, all of which can help you obtain a highly coveted wilderness permit. Itβs also a beginner-friendly hike feasible for families and new backpackers, with amenities like toilets in all the backpacker campgrounds adjacent to the High Sierra camps (and the option of booking tent cabins in a High Sierra camp for every night and carrying only a daypack).
See photos and more about this area of the park in my stories βWhere to Backpack First Time in Yosemiteβ and βBest of Yosemite: Backpacking South of Tuolumne Meadows,β and find more detailed information on planning variations of this route in my e-guide βThe Best First Backpacking Trip in Yosemite.β
See some of Yosemiteβs best scenery on βThe 12 Best Dayhikes in Yosemite.β
Tuolumne Meadows to Yosemite Valley
Something of a classic ultra-dayhike or trail runβbecause itβs so darn beautiful but also predominantly downhill going in this directionβthe approximately 19-mile traverse from the Cathedral Lakes Trailhead in Tuolumne to the Happy Isles Trailhead in Yosemite Valley follows an easy section of the John Muir Trail below the distinctive spire of Cathedral Peak; offers a choice between camping by or visiting the Cathedral Lakes or overlooking the meadows of Sunrise and the Cathedral Range; plus a chance to hike the cable route up Half Dome; and a second camp at Little Yosemite Valley before descending to the Valley via either the Mist Trail or JMT to the Valley.
Take the less-direct but thrilling detour from Sunrise to the 9,926-foot summit of Clouds Rest, one of the very best mountaintops in all of Yosemite (and far less busy than Half Dome), adding more than three miles and over a thousand feet of uphill and downhill. You will also have to choose between descending the more direct but steeper Mist Trail pass Nevada and Vernal Falls or the slightly longer and still scenic John Muir Trail, which bypasses the waterfalls.
This traverse requires a lengthy shuttle, but you can make the logistics much shorter and easier by finishing at the Sunrise Lakes Trailhead beside Tenaya Lake instead. And you could still hike Clouds Rest from the backcountry camp at Sunrise.
This hike crosses the popular area of the park described in my blog post βWhere to Backpack First Time in Yosemite.β See also my e-guide βThe Best First Backpacking Trip in Yosemite.β
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Yosemite Valleyβs North Rim to Ten Lakes Basin
The 45-mile near-loop from Tioga Road may best illustrate the opportunities Yosemite offers to enjoy some of the parkβs marquis scenery without running into conga lines of backpackers or dayhikers. The route scampers along one rim of Yosemite Valleyβincluding one of the best Valley overlooksβand explores a lakes basin at 9,000 feet before finishing at one of the parkβs prettiest lakes.
A friend and I spent our first evening in the backcountry alone atop a dome, soaking in a horizon that spanned from Half Dome to El Capitan and beyond; our second night beside a beautiful creek after a day of seeing few other people; and our third evening overlooking a lake, while hiking for hours at a time each day in solitude. And yet, almost incomprehensively, this area doesnβt see nearly the same demand for a coveted wilderness permit as Yosemiteβs most popular trailheads. You could say this hike is hiding in plain sight.
I wrote about this trip in my feature story βYosemiteβs Best-Kept Secret Backpacking Trip,β which includes my tips on planning it yourself.
If you want to thru-hike the JMT, see βHow to Get a John Muir Trail Wilderness Permitβ
and βThru-Hiking the John Muir Trail: What You Need to Know.β
See βBackpacking Yosemite: What You Need to Know,β βHow to Get a Yosemite or High Sierra Wilderness Permit,β and all stories about backpacking in Yosemite National Park at The Big Outside.