Unofficial Lake Louise Guide

Plain of Six Glaciers Trail

Plain of Six Glaciers

The Plain of Six Glaciers trail is widely considered the reward-to-effort king of the Lake Louise area. Unlike the steeper, more enclosed Lake Agnes trail, this hike offers expansive alpine vistas, the sound of active glaciers, and a direct link to the golden age of Canadian mountaineering.

Terrain. The first 2 km follow a flat gravel path along the north shore of Lake Louise. Beyond the lake the trail becomes a steady, moderate climb on well-defined dirt and rock; no scrambling, but it is rocky and can be slippery when wet. The final kilometre to the Abbot Pass viewpoint follows a narrow lateral moraine with steep drop-offs. Many hikers stop at the Plain of Six Glaciers Tea House; the official End of Plain (Abbot Pass viewpoint) is another 1.3 to 1.5 km further and worth it for a front-row view of the Victoria Glacier’s crevasses and the historic Abbot Pass Hut on the col at 3,410 m.

Teahouse. Built in 1927 by the Canadian Pacific Railway and Swiss Guides; family-owned since 1959. Cash only (CAD or USD); plan $30 to $50 per person. Satellite connections are unreliable at altitude. Opens June 1; closes after Canadian Thanksgiving. Homemade chocolate cake, vegetable chili, and tea biscuits with jam. See the Plain of Six Glaciers Tea House article for full details.

2026 logistics. Parking at Lake Louise is nearly impossible; the lot often fills by 4:00. Use the Parks Canada shuttle from the Park and Ride at the Lake Louise Ski Resort. Reservations open April 15, 2026 at 8:00 MT; 40% of tickets release then, 60% release 48 hours before departure. Best months: late July through August. Aim for the 6:30 or 7:00 shuttle to beat heat and crowds. Bear spray is mandatory; this is a primary grizzly corridor. Trekking poles help on the rocky moraine descent. Bring layers; temperatures drop near the glacier. See Summer logistics for the full 2026 checklist.

Avalanche safety. Travel is usually not recommended until June or July. The middle section passes beneath massive avalanche chutes; even after the trail is clear of snow, wet avalanches can release from higher elevations during spring melt. Once on the trail, avoid stopping for breaks or picnics within the debris paths of these chutes. Keep moving until you reach the open moraine or the teahouse.

Scenery and wildlife. Six glaciers visible: Victoria, Lefroy, Aberdeen, Popes, Upper Victoria, and Lower Lefroy. Victoria and Lefroy are the most prominent and often audible as they crack and shift. Look for pikas and hoary marmots in the moraine; grizzly bears in the subalpine forest; mountain goats on the ridges of Mount Lefroy.

See the Lake Louise Lakeshore Trail for the approach, and the summer trail page for stats and nearby trails.