Galbraith Lake Campground sits at 2,779 feet on Alaska's north slope tundra, where the Brooks Range forms a dramatic southern backdrop. Twelve pull-through RV sites occupy open ground with spectacular mountain views, basic amenities (vault toilets, bear lockers, fire rings, picnic tables), and no water, power, or dump station. It's free, quiet, and remote. Roughly halfway between Coldfoot and Deadhorse on the Dalton Highway.
Galbraith Lake Campground has 12 designated, pull-through campsites along the Dalton Highway in an open tundra setting. Sites are first-come, first-served and the location is remote.
Weather and SeasonsBest season: summer. Summer offers the most reliable access, the warmest daytime highs (typically 45–65°F / 7–18°C) and nearly continuous daylight for long hikes, boating on Galbraith Lake, fishing, and sustained wildlife viewing. Trails and the Dalton Highway are most likely to be passable from June through August, and facilities (vault toilets, bear‑proof lockers) meet basic needs for remote camping. Expect peak solitude compared with lower‑48 campgrounds but moderately higher local traffic in July; be ready for T
Peak months: July, August, June, September
Avoid: November, December, January, February
Elevation2779 ft above sea level
Natural Features and SceneryThe campground occupies treeless tundra shaped by permafrost and thousands of years of freeze-thaw cycles. The Brooks Range rises to the south in jagged peaks. Galbraith Lake sits just over a mile east, and a clear stream traces the southern edge of the campground, flowing north toward the Arctic Ocean. The ground is sedge, moss, and lichen. Caribou migrate through, Dall sheep navigate the cliffs, and brown bears, Arctic foxes, ground squirrels, and marmots move across the landscape. Ravens and ptarmigan overhead. Wildflowers in summer. Reviewers call the views picturesque and panoramic, with proximity to Gates of the Arctic National Park and the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge adding to the wilderness character.