Photo: Alaska Railroad/Facebook

Riding the Alaska Railroad Is a Fun and Beautiful Way To See the 49th State

Train Travel Alaska, United States
Photo: Alaska Railroad/Facebook
Anne Z. Cooke
May 21, 2021

Alaska cruises are a popular way to visit Alaska, but all you really see from the ships is the coast and there’s not much time to explore beyond the ports of call. If you want to see what it’s like in the middle of the state without having to tire yourself driving hundreds of miles, consider riding the Alaska Railroad through Southcentral Alaska.

Southcentral Alaska is brimming with thick forests and wind-blown ponds. Snow-capped peaks fill the horizon and rivers sparkle, rushing down through stream-carved gorges and past rocky cliffs. Marshy lakes meet green fields and brown hills. The Alaska Range can be seen even on misty days with Mount Denali standing higher than the rest at 20,320 feet.

Riding the Alaska Railroad comes complete with comfortable seats, big windows, and dome cars so transparent that except for the occasional click-clack of the wheels, you might think you’re floating.



Alaska Railroad tickets and perks

Train

Photo: Alaska Railroad/Facebook

Adventure Class tickets offer the basic comforts: spacious seats, the freedom to walk through the cars, scenery shared in the Vista Dome, and a café where you can buy lunch. GoldStar-class tickets cost more, but also offer dinner and two drinks in the dining car, plush forward-facing seats, outdoor viewing platforms, glass domes, and onboard tour guides who are ready to answer all kinds of questions.

The best Alaskan train tours

The Alaska Railroad has five routes:

  • The Coastal Classic
  • The Denali Star
  • The Glacier Discovery
  • The Hurricane Turn
  • The Aurora Winter
The two main routes for visitors to Alaska, however, are the Coastal Classic from Anchorage to Seward and the Denali Star from Anchorage to Fairbanks.

Trains from Anchorage to Seward

The Coastal Classic is 120 miles long and was built between 1903 and 1910. This is the route to take if you have just one day. Leaving early and heading south through the Kenai Peninsula to Seward, on Resurrection Bay, it leaves at 6:00 PM the same day.

If you decide to try the Coastal Classic, be ready for a 6:45 AM departure. The leisurely pace is specifically designed to give passengers time to absorb all of the landscape and to snap photos. The views from the train are both varied and exceptional.

After Whittier, the train turns east, goes passed Skookum and Spencer Glaciers, and then turns south along the Placer River through the Chugach National Forest. Look west toward thick forests and a cluster of lakes and you’re likely to spot fishermen casting for trout.

Alaska Railroad train and scenery

Photo: Alaska Railroad/Facebook

If the light is right, you might see bears or moose in the forest they call home. And it’s a beautiful home at that. For proof, just look to the narrow creeks that wind through marshy fields and the hundreds of low hills punched up like sandcastles on a beach.

The Kenai Mountains are to the east on this route. The range runs north and south for 45 miles and divides the peninsula from Prince William Sound. The ancient ice that swaths the summit is the Sargent IceField, a blanket of separate glaciers jammed up against each other and pushing over the edges.

The train eventually meets the highway and the two run parallel down into Seward, the peninsula’s oldest town. Settled during the 1896 gold rush, Seward is the port where many Alaska-bound gold miners disembarked on the voyage north from Seattle. Today, it’s where visitors come to fish, kayak, to explore the downtown’s narrow streets, and to dine on fresh halibut and salmon.

Tours here include the Chumash Heritage Museum and the Alaska SeaLife Center, a museum, marine-life laboratory, and zoo, all in one. But for most visitors, the star attraction is a tour of Kenai Fjords National Park and one of the three- to six-hour wildlife cruises that explore it from Resurrection Bay.

On a bad day you’ll see whales, orcas, salmon, otters, porpoises, bears, seals, and sea lions. On a good day you’ll see twice as many, swimming in groups, breathing mist into the air, somersaulting on the surface, or clambering up on the coastal rocks for a sunbath.

Keep an eye peeled for birds, including bald eagles perched near the top of the tallest trees, and auklets, marbled murrelets, and puffins nesting on rocky cliffs.

Trains from Anchorage to Fairbanks

The Denali Star route covers 356 miles of track laid between 1914 and 1923. It runs north to Denali National Park and on to Fairbanks, the gateway to the Arctic. If you’re looking for a real adventure (and have at least three days to spare), this is the route to choose.

Running north and south on alternate days between Anchorage and Fairbanks, it stops at Denali National Park & Preserve, both going and coming. This national park and its many miles of stupendous wilderness are not something to miss.

When you look at the Denali Star’s schedule, you’ll see that it sometimes stops in Wasilla and Talkeetna, and that it makes whistle stops along the tracks near Hurricane as part of public service. Though introducing Alaska to visitors is important, the Alaska Railroad’s mandate is also to help people who live beyond the roads but need groceries or a doctor.

Alaska Railroad train and scenery

Photo: Alaska Railroad/Facebook

If you’re going on to Fairbanks, don’t get off at Denali National Park. But if you’ve come just for the ride and the scenery, get off at the Denali National Park train station, stay overnight in a hotel, and take the next day’s train back to Anchorage. In that case, remember to make a hotel reservation before you arrive. Lodges and hotels fill up quickly in summer.

The more days you have in Denali, the better the experience. If you’re planning to camp or explore some of the park’s many trails, visit the National Park Visitor Center and learn the rules for bear encounters. Expect to take one or more bus tours, as they’re the only way to get past the entrance area and reach the interior. Denali National Park operates some free tours, but commercial tour companies offer more choices, from simple activities like wildlife viewing to river rafting and glacier hiking.

After the Denali Star leaves the park, it heads north to Fairbanks. The town is famous for ice sculptures and the northern lights, but there’s far more to see. After taking the Fairbanks “City Highlights” tour, walk through Pioneer Park and to the University of Alaska for a look at the campus.

From there, stop at the Museum of the North. Don’t miss the Aurora Ice Museum, either. You should also consider a day trip to Chena Hot Springs where you can rent snow machines for a deep slosh through miles of drifts and take a long hot soak before taking the train back to Anchorage.

On the way back from Fairbanks, take another look at the Alaska state map. Southcentral Alaska, viewed from the dome car and the windows, feels awfully large to most people. But it’s really just a small portion of this immense state.

Alaska Railroad’s Glacier Discovery route

The Glacier Discovery drops off and picks up passengers at fascinating destinations once omitted. Girdwood and Whittier have always been regular stops, but now you can spend time at Portage, the Spencer Glacier, and Grandview, and count on a ride back.

Are there any other trains in Alaska?

 Train and scenery on the White Pass & Yukon Route

Photo: White Pass & Yukon Route/Facebook

The historic White Pass & Yukon Route Railway was built during the gold rush in 1898 and is based in Skagway on the southeast coast. Now a tourist attraction owned by Carnival Cruises, narrow-gauge steam engines haul visitors up the mountain behind Skagway along the historic Klondike Trail.

Peering out as the train weaves around rocky cliffs, you can’t help thinking of the men and horses that struggled and died there trying to reach the gold fields. The trip, crossing deep gorges and hanging onto cliffs, is sensational.

Alaska Railroad schedules

  • The Costal Classic: Runs from May until September. The train leaves Anchorage at 6 AM and arrives in Seward at around 11:20 AM. The train leaves Seward at 6 PM and arrives back in Anchorage at 10:15 PM. There is a stop in Girdwood on both journeys.
  • The Denali Star: Runs from May until September. The train leaves Anchorage at 8:20 AM and arrives in Fairbanks at 8 PM. The train leaves Fairbanks at 8:20 AM and arrives back in Anchorage at 8:00 PM. There are stops in Wasilla, Talkeetna, and Denali on both journeys.
  • The Glacier Discovery: The full route, which includes stops in Girdwood, Whittier, Portage, Spencer, and Grandview runs from June until September. This route is a loop and leaves Anchorage at 9:45 AM and arrives back at 9 PM.
  • The Hurricane Turn (summer): The summer schedule runs from May until September from Taltkeena (1 PM) to Hurricane (4:30 PM), and from Hurricane (4:30 PM) to Talkeetna (7:15 PM). In summer, the train may stop in Chase, Curry, Sherman, Gold Creek, Twin Bridges, and Chulitna. Times may vary as this is a flagstop train.
  • The Hurricane Turn (winter): The winter schedule runs from October to February and April to May from Anchorage (8:30 AM) to Hurricane (1:20 PM), and from Hurricane (2:45 PM) to Anchorage (8 PM). In winter, the train may stop in Wasilla and Talkeetna. Times may vary as this is a flagstop train.
  • The Aurora Winter: Runs from Anchorage to Fairbanks, stopping in every little town and village along the way. The weekend service runs between September and May; the midweek service runs in February and March on specific days. Please consult the official schedule for days and times. Times may vary as this is a flagstop train.
  • Does the Alaska Railroad run in the winter?

    Alaska in the winter is a sight to see! Two routes of the Alaska Railroad run in the winter: The Hurricane Turn route and the Aurora Winter route, both of which are flagstop trains. See the schedule for these two routes in the “Alaska Railroad schedules” section above.

    Do you sleep on the Alaska Railroad?

    All of the Alaska Railroad routes operate during the day and there are no sleeper cars on their trains. Nobody will stop you from taking a little nap on the trains’ reclining seats, however.

    Can you bring your own food on Alaska Railroad trains?

    You can bring your own food on all of Alaska railroad’s routes.

    Note that there is a dining and bar service in the Coastal Classic, the Denali Star, and the Aurora Winter trains, however it is only included in the price of the tickets for Goldstar Service passengers. The Coastal Classic, the Denali Star, and the Glacier Discovery trains have a café/snack bar on board. Passengers are encourage to bring their own food and drinks on the Hurricane Turn routes since it they have no such facilities.

What did you think of this story?
Meh
Good
Awesome

More on

Alaska, United States

A Guide To Extreme Adventure in the Alaska Arctic Circle, From Someone Who Did It

Explore McCarthy, Alaska: the Quirky, Former 'Sin City' Inside a National Park

11 Airbnbs in Alaska for a Gorgeous Summer Vacation

See 26 Glaciers in Five Hours: the Alaskan Fjord Near Anchorage You Need To Visit

11 Unforgettable Moments You'll Experience in Alaska

7 Cold-Weather Spring Break Destinations Even Better Than the Beach

The 17 Most Underrated Honeymoon Destinations in the US

Patagonia's New Alpine Climbing Film Gives Us Hope About Climate Change (and Life)

This Alaska Cruise Will Convert You To the Cruising Lifestyle With Animal Watching, Quality Food, and Music

The Mendenhall Glacier Ice Caves Are a Magical Frozen World

More on

Train Travel

Celebrate National Train Day by Learning Everything About US Train Travel

Ride This Train for 994 Miles Across South Africa's Mountains, Deserts, and Biggest Cities

Ride Through California's Most Celebrated Wine Region on This Vintage Luxury Train

These Trains Will Take You From Rome To Venice for the Ultimate Trip Across Italy

There's a Train in Florida That Will Get You From the Beach To Disney in Only Three Hours

These Trains Will Take You From Rome To Florence at 190 Miles Per Hour

There's a Train in Colorado That Runs at the Bottom of a 1,200-Foot-Deep Gorge

These Trains Will Take You From Rome To Naples for the Trip of Your Life in Southern Italy

You Can Ride This Train for 1,851 Miles Across Australia's Hills, Plains, Red Centre, and Topical Top End

Save Bookmark

We use cookies for analytics tracking and advertising from our partners. For more information read our privacy policy.