Coldfoot Cabin

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Coldfoot Cabin
Top 4% in AKWinter

Quick Facts

Price

$42/night

Booking

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Sites

1 campsites

Season

Available in fall, w...

Cell

Unknown

Pets

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Campground Map

Coldfoot Cabin

Coldfoot Cabin

67.2537, -150.1829

Nearby places
Fairbanks — 84 miles

Weather at Coldfoot Cabin



About Coldfoot Cabin





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Coldfoot Cabin
$42.00 - $42.00 / night
Campsite Fees
Cabin Rental Fee: $42.00. Plus Recreation.gov reservation transaction fee ($8 online / $9 phone / $3 in person).
No paid fee categories listed.

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Recreation Dot Gov
Provider
(907) 474-2200centralyukon@blm.gov

Go if

Winter campers who ski, snowshoe, or want a realistic shot at the northern lights without a lodge price tag. The woodstove and propane cookstove make sub-zero nights survivable, but you must haul in your own water, firewood, and supplies from Coldfoot Camp up the road.

Skip if

Casual or spontaneous travelers will get caught out fast: no electricity, no running water, no staff on site, and a driveway plowed only every three weeks. One heavy snowfall between maintenance windows can strand access entirely.


Campgrounds
Dalton Highway
Coldfoot Cabin

From official sources

Reference information about Coldfoot Cabin compiled from official sources. Every claim links to its source. View official page →

Seasons & access
Available during fall, winter, and spring. source
Reservations
Reserve in advance up to 45 days on recreation.gov; $42 per night plus $8 fee. source
Walk-up availability
No walk-up availability; must be reserved prior to use. source
Campfires
Firewood not provided; no cutting nearby; bring own firewood for woodstove. source
Site layout
Single primitive cabin with wooden bunks, table, chairs, woodstove, propane cookstove, outhouse. source
Fees
$42 per night plus $8 recreation.gov fee. source

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From Recreation.gov

Official information for Coldfoot Cabin from the federal Recreation.gov facility record. View official page →

Overview

Recreation: The Coldfoot Cabin offers visitors a road-accessible getaway during fall, winter and spring. This cabin is a great way to experience the far north outside of summer months. This is a primitive cabin with no electricity or running water.

Popular activities include cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, wildlife viewing, and aurora viewing throughout the winter months. Hiking is possible in the fall, before the snow is too deep. Commercial dogsled and backcountry ski tours are available in the area. 

Firewood is not provided, and there is no cutting in the nearby area. The cabin driveway is plowed and shoveled approximately every three weeks throughout the winter, so access could be difficult after heavy snowfall.

Directions: From the city of Fairbanks, Alaska, travel north a total of 84 miles on the Steese (AK-6) and Elliott (AK-2) Highways to the Dalton Highway Junction. Turn right onto the Dalton (AK-11) and continue to milepost 175. Turn left (west of the highway) into the parking area. The Coldfoot Cabin is located on Airport road in Coldfoot.

Facilities

Coldfoot Camp offers food, gas station and limited vehicle repair services.

Nearby Attractions

The cabins are surrounded by vast amounts of public land you can venture on to and view the scenery around the area. The Coldfoot Contact Station is open on a limited basis in the winter and provides brochures, information and programs on northern Alaska. 

Contact Info

This location is unstaffed. To speak with our main office for general information, please call: (907) 474-2200.

Directions

<p>Directions: From the city of Fairbanks, Alaska, travel north a total of 84 miles on the Steese (AK-6) and Elliott (AK-2) Highways to the Dalton Highway Junction. Turn right onto the Dalton (AK-11) and continue to milepost 175. Turn left (west of the highway) onto Airport Road. The Coldfoot Cabin is the first driveway is on the left (south) side of Airport road in Coldfoot.</p>

About Dalton Highway

Context for the broader area surrounding Coldfoot Cabin, sourced from the federal Recreation.gov rec-area record.

<p>The Dalton Highway stretches 414 miles across northern Alaska from Livengood (84 miles north of Fairbanks) to Deadhorse and the oilfields of Prudhoe Bay. Built to allow for construction of the trans-Alaska oil pipeline in the 1970s, this mostly gravel highway travels through rolling, forested hills, across the Yukon River and Arctic Circle, through the rugged Brooks Range, and over the North Slope to the Arctic Ocean. </p> <p>The BLM manages a swath of public lands along the highway from the Yukon River to the north side of the Brooks Range. Within the Dalton corridor, the BLM maintains campgrounds, rest areas, interpretive panels and the Arctic Interagency Visitor Center in Coldfoot. </p> <p>Visit the Arctic Interagency Visitor Center website at <a href="https://www.blm.gov/learn/interpretive-centers/arctic-interagency-visitor-center" rel="nofollow">https://www.blm.gov/learn/interpretive-centers/arctic-interagency-visitor-center</a></p> <h4>Know Before You Go</h4> <p>This is no ordinary road -- it pays to be prepared. The road is narrow, rough, steep, and mostly gravel -- prone to clouds of dust, slick mud, and sudden potholes. It’s still primarily an industrial corridor, with heavy truck traffic, though drivers also need to keep an eye out for motorcycles, bicyclists, and wildlife crossings. North of Coldfoot, you may encounter snow and ice any month of the year. Lightning-caused wildfires are increasingly common. Cell phone service is extremely limited. Currently, only GCI and AT&T are available in Coldfoot and scattered locations along the highway. There are no medical facilities or grocery stores. </p> <p>Before you embark on this incredible journey, be sure to check your vehicles tires and fluids, carry extra motor oil and a spare tire(s), and if possible utilize a CB radio tuned to channel 19. Check travel conditions and alerts at <a href="https://511.alaska.gov/" rel="nofollow">511.alaska.gov</a>.</p> <h4>Recreational Activities</h4> <p>From hiking to boating, gold panning to wildlife-watching, there are numerous opportunities for recreation alongside the Dalton Hwy. The BLM maintains 4 developed campgrounds, each open late May through early September. Visit <a href="https://www.blm.gov/central-yukon-fo/public-room/fact-sheet/dalton-highway-campgrounds" rel="nofollow">https://www.blm.gov/central-yukon-fo/public-room/fact-sheet/dalton-highway-campgrounds</a> for more information. Note that Alaska State statutes prohibits use of off road vehicles, including snowmachines, for 5 miles on either side of the Dalton Hwy, north of the Yukon River. Alaska Department of Fish and Game allows only bow hunting within 5 miles either side of the Dalton Hwy north of the Dalton Hwy as well. </p> <h4><strong>Pack it In, Pack it Out</strong></h4> <p>The BLM hauls approximately 20 tons of litter from the Dalton Highway back to Fairbanks (the nearest landfill) each year. Please help reduce waste and litter by packing out everything you pack in.  </p> <p> </p> <p> </p>

Directions

<p>From Fairbanks, drive north  on the Steese (AK-6) and Elliott (AK-2) Highways. At Elliott Highway mile 73.1, stay right to get onto the Dalton Highway (AK-11). </p>

Fees

<p>No fee</p>

Download area map (PDF)

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