Colorado's Best Hiking by Region
Colorado's hiking is stratified by elevation. Front Range trails around Boulder and Denver are accessible year-round. The Rockies — Rocky Mountain NP, Summit County, the San Juans — open fully by July and close with first heavy snow in October. Knowing which region suits your timing matters more than picking a specific trail.
Front Range (Denver / Boulder / Colorado Springs)
Closest to population centers, accessible most of the year. Rocky terrain, some significant elevation gain despite lower starting altitude. Good for acclimation hikes before heading deeper into the mountains.
| Trail | Length | Gain | Difficulty | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Royal Arch (Chautauqua, Boulder) | 3.3 mi RT | 1,360 ft | Moderate | Iconic boulder arch, crowded on weekends |
| Manitou Incline (Manitou Springs) | 1.8 mi RT | 2,011 ft | Strenuous | Steep railway tie stairs, requires reservation |
| Barr Trail to Barr Camp (Pikes Peak) | 12.6 mi RT | 3,750 ft | Strenuous | Full summit is 26 mi RT — Barr Camp is 6.3 mi in |
| Roxborough State Park Loop | 3.1 mi | 400 ft | Easy | Dramatic red rock formations, family-friendly |
Rocky Mountain National Park
Colorado's crown jewel for hiking. Permits required for most summer access (Bear Lake Corridor zone, May–October). Book via Recreation.gov months in advance. Over 350 miles of trails across alpine tundra, glacial lakes, and elk meadows.
| Trail | Length | Gain | Difficulty | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Emerald Lake Trail | 3.6 mi RT | 605 ft | Moderate | Passes Nymph & Dream Lakes. Bear Lake permit req. |
| Sky Pond via Glacier Gorge | 9.0 mi RT | 1,780 ft | Strenuous | Waterfall scramble to glacial tarn. Spectacular. |
| Bear Lake Loop | 0.8 mi | 20 ft | Easy | Flat, accessible. Bear Lake permit required. |
| Loch Vale to The Loch | 5.4 mi RT | 940 ft | Moderate | Glacier Gorge TH permit. Beautiful mountain valley. |
San Juan Mountains (Silverton / Telluride / Ouray)
The most dramatic scenery in Colorado. Higher peaks, more remote, genuinely technical terrain above class 2. The July wildflower bloom here rivals anything in the Rocky Mountain West. Fewer permit headaches than RMNP.
| Trail | Length | Gain | Difficulty | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ice Lake Trail (Silverton) | 7.7 mi RT | 2,600 ft | Strenuous | Most photogenic alpine lake in Colorado |
| Blue Lakes Trail (Mt. Sneffels) | 6.0 mi RT | 1,500 ft | Moderate | Wildflowers in July, Sneffels Wilderness |
| Yankee Boy Basin (Ouray) | 4.0 mi RT | 900 ft | Easy | 4WD road access adds options. Best wildflowers. |
| Handies Peak (San Juans) | 5.4 mi RT | 2,340 ft | Moderate | 14er with one of the best summit views in CO |
Aspen / Maroon Bells Area
World-famous for the Maroon Bells reflection, but there's far more hiking here. Vehicle reservations required for Maroon Bells Road (mid-June through Labor Day). The Four Pass Loop is one of the premier backpacking routes in the country.
| Trail | Length | Gain | Difficulty | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maroon Lake Scenic Trail | 1.8 mi RT | 80 ft | Easy | The iconic Maroon Bells photo. Vehicle reservation req. |
| Crater Lake Trail (Maroon Bells) | 3.6 mi RT | 500 ft | Easy | Wildflowers and views of both Bells. Great for families. |
| Four Pass Loop | 26 mi loop | 8,200 ft | Strenuous | 4-day backpacking classic. Four 12,000+ ft passes. |
| Hanging Lake (Glenwood Canyon) | 2.6 mi RT | 1,000 ft | Moderate | Timed entry permit year-round. Turquoise waterfall lake. |
Sample 3-Day Colorado Hiking Itinerary: San Juan Mountains
3 Days in the San Juans — August, Moderate/Strenuous Fitness
Who This Planner Is Built For
Beginner hikers visiting Colorado
Altitude is the biggest surprise for first-timers. Even fit hikers from sea level struggle at 10,000–12,000 ft. PeakPlan builds beginner itineraries that sequence hikes from lower elevation to higher, includes acclimatization time, and recommends trails with clear paths and reliable signage. No class 3 scrambles for people who asked for "a nice hike."
Intermediate day hikers
You can comfortably do 8–10 miles with 2,500 ft of gain. PeakPlan targets the second tier of Colorado trails — the ones that aren't on every "best of" list but are genuinely spectacular. Ice Lake, Sky Pond, St. Mary's Glacier, Lost Man Loop near Aspen, and Wheeler Trail near Taos all fit this profile.
Backpackers planning multi-day routes
Colorado's wilderness is vast enough that you'll have it largely to yourself on most routes outside the Four Pass Loop and popular RMNP backcountry zones. PeakPlan builds multi-day backpacking routes with permit logistics, resupply notes, and bail-out options for routes in the Weminuche, Flat Tops, Rawah, and Indian Peaks Wilderness areas.
Families with kids
Families need specific logistics: flat-ish trails, shorter distances, bathroom access, and elevation that won't cause altitude sickness in young children. PeakPlan knows which Colorado hikes are genuinely kid-friendly — Sprague Lake (RMNP), Maroon Lake Trail, Brainard Lake Recreation Area — vs. which trails only look short but are brutally steep.
Permit & Safety Guide for Colorado Hikers
Colorado's afternoon thunderstorms are predictable and deadly. From late June through August, build-up starts around 10–11am and storms hit 1–4pm. The rule: be below treeline by noon, ideally with summit in hand by 11am. This shapes every PeakPlan itinerary — we always recommend pre-dawn starts for high-elevation routes.
Permit Quick Reference
- Rocky Mountain NP timed entry — Bear Lake Corridor and park-wide permits via Recreation.gov. May–October, 5am–6pm. Book 6 months in advance.
- Maroon Bells vehicle reservation — Required mid-June through Labor Day. Arrive before 7am to skip the system. Shuttle from Aspen Highlands available.
- Hanging Lake — Timed entry year-round. Book via Recreation.gov 1 week in advance. Limited capacity — book early.
- Weminuche Wilderness backcountry — No permit required for day hikes. Overnight self-registration at trailheads. Wag bags required near Chicago Basin.
- Indian Peaks Wilderness — Overnight permit required June 1–Sept 15. Day hiking permit-free.
- Most USFS trails — No permit. Leave No Trace practices required. Some trailhead parking fees ($5–$10).
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