Visiting Katmai National Park and Preserve: The Complete Guide for 2024
- Jennifer Melroy
- Last Modified January 23, 2024
- First Published on August 29, 2021
Post Summary: Visiting Katmai National Park
Have you ever seen a photograph of a brown bear standing at the top of a waterfall with a fish jumping into the bear’s mouth? Odds are that this photo was taken at Brooks Falls in Katmai National Park. Today, Katmai is world-renowned for its Alaskan Brown Bear viewing but the bears had little to do with this region gaining National Park status. Katmai National Park was created due to the extraordinary volcanic eruption known as Novarupta which occurred on June 6th of 1912. This event was one of the largest eruptions in recorded history and it left behind a crater six miles long and two miles wide. Novarupta’s total volume was five times greater than Mount Saint Helens’ 1980 eruption!
Katmai National Park is a remote Alaskan National Park and it isn’t the easiest National Park to visit but don’t let that stop you from visiting. In this guide, I’ll give you an overview of visiting Katmai National Park and give you some hints and tricks for planning your visit.
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The Quick Guide to Visiting Katmai National Park and Preserve
Map of Katmai National Park and Preserve
Click on the Katmai Map above to download the official brochure map. If you’d like a PDF copy of this Katmai Map click here.
Katmai National Park and Preserve Basics
Region: Alaska / West Coast / Pacific / Pacific Northwest / Pacific-West
Total Size: 4,093,228 acres (6,396 sq miles) (16,565 sq km)
Park Size: 3,674,529 acres (5,741 sq miles) (14,870 sq km)
Preserve Size: 418,699 acres (654 sq miles) (1,694 sq km)
Location: Lake and Peninsula, Kodiak Island, Kenai Peninsula, and Bristol Bay boroughs
Closest Cities: King Salmon, Alaska
Busy Season: June to September
Visitation: 84,167 (in 2019)
How much does Katmai National Park and Preserve Cost?
Katmai National Park and Preserve does not charge an entrance fee.
When is Katmai National Park and Preserve Open?
Katmai National Park and Preserve is open year-round.
Are dogs allowed in Katmai National Park and Preserve?
Yes, pets are allowed in Katmai National Park, but they are not allowed in Brooks Camp (this includes service animals). Please note that this park has an incredibly high concentration of Alaska Brown Bears. You are responsible for your pet’s safety and the park bears may see your pet as a threat or food.
Where are Katmai National Park and Preserve’s visitor centers?
King Salmon Visitor Center – Open Year Round
Brooks Camp Visitor Center – May to September
Robert F. Griggs Visitor Center – May to September
Land Acknowledgments for Katmai National Park and Preserve
The National Park known as Katmai National Park and Preserve sits on Alutiiq (Sugpiaq) and Yup’ik/Cup’ik land.
Thank you to the Native Land Digital for making the Indigenous territories accessible to all. They have mapped the known territories to the best of the current knowledge and is a work in progress. If you have additional information on the Indigenous nations boundaries, please let them know.
Native Land Digital is a registered Canadian not-for-profit organization with the goal to creates spaces where non-Indigenous people can be invited and challenged to learn more about the lands they inhabit, the history of those lands, and how to actively be part of a better future going forward together.
When was Katmai National Park Created?
On June 6, 1912, Novarupta volcanoes erupted. The eruption was heard almost 750 miles away in Juneau. In 1915, the first of 5 National Geographic Society expeditions arrived in the area to explore and survey. The following year, the expedition discovers a valley filled with fissures and fumaroles from that great eruption. They named this Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes. These early explorers pushed to have this Valley and surrounding mountains protected. While they pushed to have the area declared a National Park but the legislation wasn’t likely to pass. After a bit of negotiation, President Woodrow Wilson created Katmai National Monument on September 24, 1918. The initial monument only included Mount Katmai, the valley, and the most of Iliuk Arm of Naknek Lake. No park rangers were assigned to the park at this time.
Katmai National Monument was expanded in 1931 and was the largest NPS unit at the time. This expansion included what would become Brooks Falls. Even as the park was expanded, Katmai still didn’t have any park rangers. It was 1937 before the first Park Ranger would visit. It took the ranger a month to get to Katmai from Denali National Park. He spent exactly one day in the monument. By the late 1930’s, poaching was becoming a problem and in the 1950s, efforts were made to establish visitor services.
Katmai was expanded several more times before in being elevated to Katmai National Park and Preserve on December 2, 1980 as part of the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA)
The purpose of Katmai National Park and Preserve is to protect, study, and interpret active volcanism surrounding the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, extensive coastal resources, habitats supporting a high concentration of salmon and brown bears, and an ongoing story of humans integrated with a dynamic subarctic ecosystem.
Katmai National Park and Preserve Foundation Document
Why is Katmai a National Park and a National Preserve?
I’ll make the long story as short as I can here. Basically, National Park and Preserves areas where they wanted a National Park but still wanted to allow sport hunting. Typically, sport hunting is allowed only in the National Preserve section. With the exception of Katmai, all Alaskan National Park and Preserves allow subsistence hunting by local rural residents.
There are 8 National Park and Preserves, 4 National Monument and Preserve, and 1 National Historical Park and Preserve in the National Park System. Five of these 8 units are technically two National Park Service units managed as a single unit with the exception of sport hunting. Congress were idiots and like to make everything as confusing as possible in respect to the National Park System. So they made Oregon Caves National Monument and Preserve, Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and Preserve, and New River Gorge National Park and Preserve, one unit instead of two.
If you are trying to visit all the National Parks and are a purest about standing within the boundaries of each unit, you will need to visit both the Katmai National Park and Katmai National Preserve section. Personally, I’m could care less if you want to count a single visit to Brooks Falls as a visit to both units. You do you.
Fun Facts about Katmai National Park
- The highest point in Katmai National Park is Mount Denison which is 7,606 feet (2,318 m) above sea level.
- The lowest point in Katmai National Park is Shelikof Strait which is 0 feet (0 m) above sea level.
- Katmai by the numbers
- 36.6 miles of paved roads
- 5 miles of hiking trails
- 497 miles of coastline
- 527 archeological sites
- Volcanoes of Katmai National Park (and last known eruption date)
- Mount Katmai (June to July 1912)
- Novarupta (June to October 1912)
- Trident Volcano (July 1974)
- Mount Mageik (500 BCE ± 50 years)
- Mount Martin (February 1953)
- Fourpeaked Mountain (September 2006)
- Mount Douglas (Holocene period)
- Mount Griggs (1790 BCE ± 40 years)
- Snowy Mountain (1710 ± 200 years)
- Mount Denison (Unknown, probably Holocene period)
- Mount Kukak (Unknown)
- Devils Desk (Unknown)
- Mount Kaguyak (3850 BCE)
- Mount Cerberus (Unknown)
- Falling Mountain (Unknown)
- Mount Kejuli (Unknown)
- Katmai Wildlife by the numbers
- 29 mammal species
- 137 bird species
- 24 freshwater fish species
- 4 anadromous fish species
- 1 amphibian species
When to Visit Katmai National Park
Katmai National Park Visitation
While Katmai National Park is open year-round, 99% of visitors and all in-park visitor services are only open from May to September.
Katmai National Park Weather
Katmai National Park is located at the crossroads of the Pacific Ocean and the Bering Sea divided by Aleutian Range. The Aleutian Range acts as a barrier between the warmer and wetter Pacific Ocean region and the cooler temperatures of the Bearing Sea. For this reason, the interior of the park’s weather is similar to King Salmon, AK and the coastal regions are similar to Kodiak Island.
No matter what, one should dress in layers and be ready for a range of conditions in Katmai National Park.
King Salmon, AK Weather
Kodiak, AK Weather
How to Get to Katmai National Park and Preserve
Katmai National Park and Preserve is one of a handful of National Parks you can’t drive directly to. There are no roads connecting the park to the Alaskan mainland road system which connects into Canada and the lower 48. Realistically, you either have to fly or take a boat to get to Katmai National Park. There isn’t a way around this.
Flying to Katmai National Park
Flying is the easiest and most popular way to get to Katmai National Park. If you are planning to day trip to Katmai, you can arrange flights from Anchorage, King Salmon, Homer, Port Alsworth, and other small towns in the area. Most of these flights will take you to Brooks Camp but you can make arrangements to fly into other sections of the park.
Anchorage Flight Providers
Homer Flight Providers
- Bear Viewing in Katmai National Park
- Adventure Airways
- Beluga Air
- Beryl Air
- Bald Mountain Air Service
- Emerald Air Service
King Salmon Flight Providers
Port Alskworth Flight Providers
If you are looking to spend a couple of days in Brooks Camp. Your best option is to fly from Anchorage to King Salmon and from King Salmon to Brooks Camp. If you want to make things simple book everything through Katmai Air. If you are looking to save a little money it is usually cheaper to book a seat on Alaskan Airlines or Ravn Airlines regularly scheduled air service to King Salmon. These flights run about $450 if booked a couple of months in advance and I recommend using Alaska if you can. From there book a Katmai Air flight into Brooks Camp.
If you are looking to visit a different part of the park, you can reach out to any authorized flight service to make your flight arrangements.
Ferry Service to Katmai
Katmai Water Taxi offers service from King Salmon to Brooks Camp via water taxi. Water taxis depart King Salmon every two hours from 6:00 am to 6:00 pm. Water taxis depart Brooks Camp every two hours from 7:00 am to 7:00 pm (9:00 pm in June and July). The boat trip will take you on a scenic ridge across Naknek Lake. The trip takes about 45 mins.
PLEASE NOTE: If planning on using the water taxi GET TRAVEL INSURANCE. I always recommend travel insurance but this is the ONLY tour company I have ever known in Alaska that doesn’t do weather cancellation refunds for when you get weathered out and can’t reschedule. Which I find to be a shitty businesses practice.
In June 2021, I meet several people who were booked with them and had a negative experience both in the 2020 COVID Pandemic cancellations and 2021. Our flight from Anchorage to King Salmon was delayed and they missed their scheduled water taxi. Due to weather, the water taxis were canceled for the day we arrived and the following day. Assuming the weather improved, they would be left with a day trip to Brooks instead of two nights. Katmai Air worked with them to fly them out but Katmai Water Taxi basically told them to pound sand.
Personally, I use World Nomad Travel Insurance for all my trips. It covers high adventure activities like hiking and backpacking plus trip interruption and most of my gear.
Where to stamp your National Parks Passport Book in Katmai National Park?
The National Park Passport Book is the BEST and cheapest National Park souvenir. Every National Park Obsessed person should have one of these books.
If you are new to the National Parks, you can learn more about the National Parks Passport program here or jump right in by ordering:
- The ever-popular Classic National Parks Passport
- Get 15% Off Your Next Order at the America’s National Parks Online Store with Code: NATIONALPARKOBSESSED at Checkout
- Or get the National Park Obsessed’s National Park Passport & Journal
IMPORTANT: Do NOT stamp your government-issued passport.
There are seven official stamps for Katmai National Park. Here is the list of National Park Passport Stamps you can get in Katmai National Park:
- Brooks Camp, AK (National Park & Preserve)
- Brooks Camp, AK (NP & PRES)
- Homer, AK
- King Salmon, AK (National Park & Preserve)
- King Salmon, AK (NP & PRES)
- Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes (NP & P)
- Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes (NP & PRES)
Bonus Stamps
- Katmai 1918-2018
- Image of Flying Goose
Katmai National Park Passport Stamp Locations
Here are all the locations to find the Katmai National Park Passport Stamps. Not every stamp is available at every location.
- Alaska Islands and Oceans Visitor Center (USFWS)
- Brooks Camp Visitor Center
- King Salmon Interagency Visitor Center
- Robert F. Griggs Visitor Center
National Park Obsessed’s Detailed Guides to Katmai National Park and Preserve
General Information on Visiting Katmai National Park and Preserve
Katmai National Park Lodging
National Parks Near Katmai National Park
Katmai National Park and Preserve is not connected to the road system and is only accessible via boat or plane. This park is often visited in connection with the other National Parks of Alaska.
National Parks visited in connection with Katmai
- Alagank Wild River
- Lake Clark National Park and Preserve
- Aniakchak National Monument and Preserve
- Kenai Fjords National Park
- Denali National Park and Preserve
- Wrangell – St. Elias National Park and Preserve
National Park Service units within an 8 hours drive
- Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve
- Kobuk Valley National Park
- Noatak National Preserce
- Cape Krusenstern National Monument
- Bering Land Bridge National Preserve
- Yukon-Charley Rivers National Preserve
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Pin for Later: Visiting Katmai National Park and Preserve: The Complete Guide (2021 Update)
Jennifer Melroy
Hi, I'm Jennifer!
Welcome to the wonderful world of National Parks. I'm here to help you plan your NEXT amazing adventure through the United States National Parks and beyond. I want the national parks to be accessible to all.
I live in Tennessee, and when I'm home, you can find me hiking in the Smokies and the Cumberland Plateau.
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Last Updated on 23 Jan 2024 by Jennifer Melroy