Glacier National Park Elopement Planning

Hiking On Your Elopement Day

How to plan enough time to hike and get married in Glacier National Park — with the trail, ceremony timing, photos, travel, light, parking, and every moving piece accounted for.

Published: May 14th, 2026 | Written By Aundrea Eaton

Before you lace up the boots

Hiking and getting married takes more planning than people expect.

If you are dreaming of an elopement that combines adventure with intimacy, hiking in Glacier National Park offers a uniquely thrilling and remote setting for your wedding day.

A short hike in Glacier National Park can be a perfect choice if you want a remote and adventurous location. The thrill of the unknown, combined with the joy of hiking, can make your wedding day feel unique.

The specific trail you choose will significantly influence our time for pre-ceremony preparations and after-hike documentation.

Planning a day that includes a hike involves more than you might expect. It requires careful consideration of stops, breaks, photo opportunities, travel time between locations, and coordinating with the lighting and sunset.

To simplify this, I plan out the route and timing for my couples. This blog post is designed to help you understand the amount of time you might need if you are considering a hiking elopement.

The point of this guide: to help you plan your hike and ceremony timing so the adventure, the logistics, and the documentation all have enough room.

A unique experience

A hiking elopement is special because it is not a standard wedding day.

A hiking elopement is truly a one-of-a-kind experience. The day is not built around standing still. You are moving through the park, reacting to weather, terrain, water, views, and the feeling of being somewhere that takes a little more effort to reach.

A hike that typically takes two hours to complete might easily extend to a minimum of four hours when you factor in photo stops, breaks, scenic views, changes in elevation, and the logistics of managing a wedding dress in the wilderness.

This unique adventure is what makes a hiking elopement so special and memorable. The timeline just needs to be honest enough to hold it.

A hiking elopement should feel adventurous. It should not feel like you are racing a stopwatch in formalwear.

Suggested hikes and estimated times

Realistic hiking times for Glacier elopement days.

To give you an idea of what to expect, here are some hikes I have personally guided couples on, complete with estimated times that include photo stops, breaks, scenic views, and changes in elevation.

Bridal Party on the shore of Avalanche Lake viewing waterfalls in Glacier National Park
West Glacier

Avalanche Lake

Estimated Time4 Hours
Trail TypeOut & Back
DifficultyModerate
Elevation Gain748 ft

Avalanche Lake is a stunning hike accessible starting in May. Early in the season, parts of the trail may be muddy, and it is mostly shaded.

Parking is scarce in the afternoons, though it generally opens up around 5 PM. If you plan to hike here, it is advisable to focus on nearby West Glacier locations.

While Avalanche Lake itself is not a permitted ceremony location, there are authorized ceremony sites close to this trailhead.

Explore Avalanche Lake Trail on AllTrails
Bride and groom standing in Virginia Falls during a Glacier National Park hiking elopement
St. Mary

3 Falls — St. Mary, Baring & Virginia Falls

Estimated Time4 Hours
Trail TypeOut & Back
DifficultyEasy
Elevation Gain710 ft

This trail offers views of three waterfalls and typically has ample parking when starting at Sun Point. It is an easy hike featuring numerous scenic stops, where wildlife sightings are common.

Should Going-to-the-Sun Road be closed, you can access this trail by taking Highway 2 around the park.

The trail and falls are not permitted ceremony locations, but Sun Point is.

Explore Virginia Falls on AllTrails
Hidden Lake Overlook trail at Logan Pass in Glacier National Park
Logan Pass

Hidden Lake Overlook

Estimated Time4 Hours
Trail TypeOut & Back
DifficultyModerate
Elevation Gain580 ft

This trail presents a challenging ascent and is subject to unpredictable weather changes. It is popular and often crowded, making parking difficult to find until after 6 PM.

Be aware that the trail may close unexpectedly due to bear activity. If you choose this trail, it is prudent to have a backup plan; the falls in St. Mary are the closest alternative trail.

Access to this trail is only possible after July once Going-to-the-Sun Road fully opens. If there is heavy snowpack in July, the trail may remain closed. The best time to hike here is from late July to September.

Hidden Lake Overlook is not a permitted ceremony location.

Explore Hidden Lake on AllTrails
Lake Josephine in Many Glacier for a Glacier National Park hiking elopement
Many Glacier

Lake Josephine

Estimated Time3 Hours
Trail TypeLoop
DifficultyEasy
Elevation Gain249 ft

This trail is relatively easy, but it is best tackled in the evening to avoid the challenges of limited parking and high foot traffic. Weather conditions here can change unexpectedly.

For a shorter hike, you can take a boat across the lake. Alternatively, you can start at Many Glacier Hotel for a full out-and-back hike, or begin at the hotel and complete the entire loop.

There are several routes available to reach this location. This trail is only accessible during the summer or late spring months after Many Glacier Road opens.

Lake Josephine is an officially permitted ceremony location.

Explore Lake Josephine on AllTrails
Johns Lake Loop near Lake McDonald in Glacier National Park
West Glacier

Johns Lake Loop

Estimated Time2.5 Hours
Trail TypeOut & Back
DifficultyEasy
Elevation Gain183 ft

This trail offers a very easy loop with multiple routes available. You have the option to hike the road in winter, turning it into an out-and-back hike, or complete the full loop.

During winter, the trail is accessible starting from Lake McDonald Lodge. In the summer months, parking is available closer to this location, effectively cutting both the trail length and time in half.

While this trail itself is not a permitted ceremony location, Lake McDonald Lodge Beach is.

Explore Johns Lake Loop on AllTrails

Choosing your main location

Your trail should match the main area of your wedding day.

Choosing your trail within Glacier National Park should be based on where the main area for your wedding will take place. This helps with timing and coordination.

These are the main areas you can choose from:

West Glacier / Lake McDonald
Logan Pass / Going-to-the-Sun Road
Two Medicine
St. Mary
Many Glacier / Swiftcurrent
Polebridge / Bowman Lake

Multiple main locations

Yes, you can do multiple areas. No, it is not a small timeline.

Can couples do multiple areas during their wedding day? Absolutely.

But you need to consider all parts of your day, such as pre-ceremony coverage, ceremony timing, post-ceremony activities, travel times, sunset times, parking, trail access, breaks, and how much time you need to move between regions without turning the day into a rush.

If you want to include multiple main locations and a hike, you are looking at 12–16 hours to ensure you have enough time for everything.

Multiple locations can work beautifully. The timeline just needs to respect the size of Glacier.

Real-life example

Sarah & Matt’s West Glacier elopement.

Sarah and Matt chose West Glacier as their primary location for their elopement. Their day was packed with visits to Apgar, Sandy Beach, Lake McDonald Lodge, and a hike on Johns Lake Loop.

Concentrating all activities within West Glacier allowed us to cover everything in just under 13 hours.

Below is a detailed timeline of their wedding day, showing how we fit multiple locations into one seamless schedule.

Sarah & Matt’s Elopement Timeline

8:00 AM

Aundrea arrives at Whitefish Lake Lodge.

Pre-Ceremony

Sarah and Matt enjoyed some pre-ceremony downtime, getting ready and hanging out. They opted out of a documented first look.

10:15 AM

Departure from the lodge.

10:30 AM

Breakfast at Lula’s Café.

11:30 AM

Departure from Whitefish toward Glacier National Park.

12:00 PM

Arrival at West Glacier.

12:00 PM

Quick photo session by the West Glacier sign.

12:30 PM

Arrival at Sandy Beach for the ceremony setup.

12:30 PM

Chilled champagne by the lake and a short walk along Sandy Beach.

1:30 PM

Wedding ceremony.

1:45 PM

Picnic and intimate celebration along the shores of Lake McDonald.

1:45 PM

Champagne toast and intimate celebration.

2:00 PM

Departure for Johns Lake Loop Trail.

2:00 PM

Travel time: 30-minute drive from Sandy Beach to Johns Lake Loop Trail.

2:30 PM

Start of hike at Johns Lake Loop Trail.

4:00 PM

Sunset observation.

4:00 PM

Due to cloudy weather, extra time was spent capturing spontaneous couple’s photographs.

4:30 PM

Departure from Glacier Park.

4:30 PM

Quick packing and departure within 10 minutes post-hike.

5:00 PM

Visit to Glacier Distilling.

5:00 PM

Sarah and Matt enjoyed whisky and FaceTimed family and friends to share their elopement news.

6:00 PM

Stop at Dewdrop Inn.

7:00 PM

Departure from Dewdrop Inn.

7:30 PM

While waiting to be seated, they enjoyed a drink at the bar, signed their marriage license, and recreated the photo from when they first met.

7:30 PM

Dinner at Abruzzo in Whitefish.

8:30 PM

Farewells were exchanged as they were seated for dinner, marking the end of the documented day.

8:30 PM

Aundrea departs.

Planning your hike

Add buffer time before and after the trail.

When planning your hike, consider the total time needed for the trail itself. Then add extra time before and after.

Before the hike, add at least 30 minutes for bathroom breaks and preparations. This gives you time for shoes, water, layers, hair, makeup, final packing, and making sure nothing important gets left behind.

After the hike, schedule another 30 minutes to cool down, take a break, eat, stretch, decompress, check makeup and hair, and reset before the next part of the day.

Proper planning helps the day feel relaxed and enjoyable instead of rushed and chaotic.

The timeline below is designed specifically for a hiking elopement. It does not include time needed for pre-ceremony documentation, the ceremony itself, or post-ceremony activities beyond the listed evening plan.

The hike is not the only thing happening. You are still getting married. The timeline has to hold both.

Timeline example #2

Sun Point ceremony with Virginia Falls hike.

1:00 PM

Arrive at Sun Point Parking Lot.

1:30 PM

Start hike to Virginia Falls.

5:30 PM

End hike.

7:30 PM

Ceremony at Sun Point.

8:00 PM

Sunset couple’s photographs at Sun Point.

9:30 PM

Sunset.

10:00 PM

End evening.

When you should not hike

Some days are already full without adding a trail.

Avoid hiking if you are planning a day that already includes a Going-to-the-Sun Road tour or multiple events like a bonfire, drinks, dinner, and extensive travel.

This is not about saying you cannot do it. It is about being honest about the amount of time, movement, and energy the full day requires.

To give you an idea of what a heavily packed day looks like, here is a detailed timeline with a Jeep Adventure, multiple locations, a hike, sunset photographs, and late-night plans.

Timeline example #3

A full-day Jeep Adventure, hike, sunset, and bonfire.

9:00 AM

Aundrea arrives. Final preparations and packing the Jeep occur during this time, including a checklist to make sure nothing is forgotten.

9:45 AM

Depart for Glacier Park, traveling from Columbia Falls to West Glacier. Drive time is about 30 minutes.

10:30 AM

First look and couple’s photos at Lake McDonald.

11:00 AM

Depart for the ceremony.

12:30 PM

Arrive at Big Bend for a 20-minute ceremony and photographs, totaling about 45 minutes to 1 hour.

1:30 PM

Couple’s photos. Allow 15 minutes between locations and 20 minutes at each location, totaling about 1 hour of photos and 45 minutes of driving.

3:30 PM

Arrive at Sun Point Parking Lot to prepare for the hike. Allow 30 minutes for bathroom breaks and final preparations.

4:00 PM

Start hike to Virginia Falls. This takes approximately 4 hours and includes viewing three waterfalls along the way. The Sun Point trailhead offers better parking and scenic variety.

8:00 PM

End hike. Take time to pack up the car, check makeup and hair, and stretch.

8:30 PM

Arrive at Sun Point for sunset photographs, typically lasting about an hour.

10:00 PM

End sunset photographs.

11:30 PM

Arrive in Coram for a bonfire and brews.

1:00 AM

End of the evening. Drop-off at lodge or Airbnb in Columbia Falls.

This day totals 16 hours of photography coverage with a Jeep Adventure. That requires real planning, not wishful thinking.

A day like this illustrates the extensive planning required for a full day of activities, travel, hiking, sunset timing, and documentation throughout Glacier National Park.

Final thought

Hiking can be unforgettable when the timeline is built correctly.

Hiking on your elopement day in Glacier National Park can add an unforgettable adventure to your wedding experience. With proper planning and the right information, your day can feel seamless, grounded, and genuinely enjoyable.

The key is not cramming in a hike because it sounds good. The key is choosing the right trail, building the right timeline, and making sure every part of the day has enough space to actually happen.

Ready to start planning your adventure?

Reach out to explore your options, choose the right trail, and build a Glacier elopement day that gives you room to hike, get married, celebrate, and actually enjoy the whole damn thing.

Start Planning

Glacier National Park, nestled in the heart of Montana’s Rocky Mountains, is an increasingly popular destination for couples who want their wedding day to feel different from a traditional venue wedding. With breathtaking landscapes, diverse wildlife, and untouched natural beauty, it is easy to see why more couples are choosing this location for a day built around scenery, experience, and photographs that actually hold the weight of the place.

Unmatched Locations

Glacier gives you real range.

One of the main reasons Glacier National Park works so well for wedding photography is the range of landscapes inside the park. You are not locked into one backdrop, one look, or one predictable version of mountain scenery. Glacier covers over a million acres and includes lakes, forests, alpine passes, wildflower meadows, mountain roads, rocky shorelines, and dramatic valleys.

That variety matters because the location can shape the whole feeling of the day. Some couples want something quiet and reflective. Some want big mountain drama. Some want water, movement, wind, weather, and a little unpredictability. Glacier gives you room to build around that instead of forcing every wedding into the same visual formula.

Iconic Location

Lake McDonald

If you have seen a photo of Glacier National Park, there is a good chance you have seen Lake McDonald. Its clear water, colorful pebble beaches, and mountain reflections make it one of the most recognizable areas of the park. It is calm, accessible, and visually strong without needing much added to it.

Iconic Location

Logan Pass

Logan Pass sits along Going-to-the-Sun Road and gives you one of the most dramatic accessible mountain environments in the park. In the summer, it can include sweeping views, wildflower meadows, alpine terrain, and a completely different feeling than the lake-level locations.

Iconic Location

Many Glacier

Many Glacier is one of the most dramatic areas of the park. It has glacial lakes, rugged mountains, and a more remote alpine feeling than some of the west-side locations. For couples who want a setting that feels grand, layered, and wild, Many Glacier is hard to beat.

Glacier’s biggest strength is not one single location. It is the range. The park can look soft, dramatic, rugged, quiet, expansive, or intimate depending on where you go, when you go, and how the day is structured.

Seasons In GNP

It does not look the same all year.

One of the standout features of Glacier National Park is how much the landscape changes throughout the year. A summer wedding in Glacier does not feel like a fall wedding. A fall wedding does not feel like winter. The same location can photograph completely differently depending on light, access, weather, color, and season.

This matters because couples often imagine Glacier as one fixed thing. It is not. The park has different moods throughout the year, and each season comes with its own benefits, limits, and planning requirements.

Spring + Summer

Color, access, and long light

Spring and summer bring color, access, and long light. Valleys and meadows come alive, wildflowers start showing up in different areas, and higher elevation locations become more realistic once roads and trails open. Longer days also give you more flexibility with timing.

Fall

Warm color and less pressure

Fall brings warmer color, softer light, and less pressure than peak summer. The foliage can shift into reds, oranges, yellows, and deeper earth tones, creating a completely different visual feel than the bright greens of summer.

Winter

A completely different Glacier

Winter in Glacier is a different world. Snow changes the entire park. The contrast between white snow, dark trees, and rugged mountains can be striking, quiet, and visually powerful.

Each season changes the whole experience. Spring and summer bring longer light and more access. Fall brings color and a quieter atmosphere. Winter brings drama, snow, and a more contained version of the park.

Adventure Opportunities

Build the day around more than the ceremony.

Glacier National Park gives you the option to make the wedding day feel like an actual experience, not just a ceremony followed by portraits. You can keep it simple, or you can build in movement, exploration, and activities that make the day feel more personal.

That might mean hiking to a view, kayaking on a lake, exploring different regions of the park, taking time for a picnic, or choosing a location that requires a little more effort to reach. The point is not to make the day harder. The point is to build a day that actually fits the two of you.

Adventure Activity

Hiking

Glacier has over 700 miles of hiking trails, ranging from easy walks to challenging backcountry routes. Hiking can create access to quieter views, more layered scenery, and locations that feel less built around convenience.

Adventure Activity

Kayaking

Kayaking can add a completely different perspective to a Glacier wedding day. Lakes like Lake McDonald or Two Medicine can give you water, movement, and a slower rhythm.

Adventure Activity

Helicopter Tours

For couples who want something more expansive, helicopter tours can offer access to views and terrain that are otherwise difficult to reach. Aerial perspectives can show the scale of the mountains, glaciers, valleys, and surrounding landscape.

Adventure wedding photography requires more than someone who can take a good photo. Your photographer needs to understand movement, timing, weather, terrain, light, comfort, safety, and how to keep the day from becoming chaotic.

Privacy And Intimacy

Find a spot that feels more private.

One of the biggest advantages of getting married in Glacier National Park is the amount of space available. Unlike a traditional venue, the park gives you the possibility of finding locations that feel quieter, more personal, and more connected to the landscape.

That does not mean every location will be private. Glacier is popular, and some areas are busy for good reason. But with the right planning, timing, and location strategy, it is possible to build a day that feels less exposed and more connected.

Secluded Location

Bowman Lake

Bowman Lake is tucked away in the northwestern part of the park and feels more remote than many of Glacier’s most recognizable locations. The lake is surrounded by forest and mountains, creating a quieter setting.

Secluded Location

Two Medicine

Two Medicine sits in the southeastern part of the park and offers dramatic scenery with a different feel from the west side. It includes lake views, mountain backdrops, and a quieter atmosphere than some heavily visited areas.

Secluded Location

Hidden Meadows And Trails

Beyond the well-known locations, Glacier has smaller meadows, trails, overlooks, and less obvious areas that can work beautifully for portraits or private-feeling moments.

Privacy in Glacier is not just about finding an empty place. It is about building the day in a way that gives you room to breathe, move, and be present without feeling like the entire park is watching.

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"My wife and I were in the mist of planning our vow exchange to Glacier National Park and we wanted everything to be picture perfect. Literally and figuratively. I found Aundrea through Google and decided to reach out after extensively looking at her page. And I have to say, it was the best and easiest choice we could have ever made. Not only is her work OUT OF THIS WORLD AMAZING, but SHE is amazing. Being a lesbian couple, we knew some photographers might try to capture stagnant shots to avoid any awkwardness during the shoot, but I can confidently say, Aundrea's inclusivity actually made me cry following our shoot. She made us feel so extremely loved and beautiful. We cannot thank her enough for everything she did for us. When we show people our photos, they always notice the detail and color in her work and always say, 'These don't even look real!! They look like they could be in a magazine or something!'. And they are not wrong."

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Lisa and Mikey

"My husband and I eloped to Montana in August 2021. We chose MT because I stumbled onto Aundrea's site and instantly fell in love with her documentary/candid style. On our first FaceTime call she made us feel at ease and assured us she would help every step of the way. Needless to say, Aundrea exceeded every expectation, reassured every worry, and truly helped us plan our intimate elopement. She helped with the little details I got stuck on, had fantastic recommendations, and even picked up the flowers the morning of. By the time we finally met Aundrea, we felt like we had known her forever. It was just my husband and I the day of, and Aundrea was the friend we needed as our day unfolded. She caught every moment without feeling like there was a camera in our faces which was super important for us. Aundrea was an integral piece of our elopement and whole Montana trip. Lastly, we could not be more obsessed with our photos. They are phenomenal and breathtaking. Most importantly, they are us."

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Riley and Ashton

"If you are looking to elope in the Glacier National Park area - Aundrea is hands down the BEST photographer you could pick! Outside of her amazing photography skills, she knows the surrounding area and park like the back of her hand. She helped plan & create the perfect day for our elopement - from location scouting before our big day, driving us to and from locations, to coming prepared with everything from shoeshine and snacks - on top capturing every little moment during the day. And outside of being such a talented photographer - she is one of the best people you'll ever meet. We instantly connected beyond photographer and client. I couldn't recommend her more! Anyone who is looking for a photographer in Western Montana should hire Aundrea."

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