| Alaska Destinations at a Glance | |
|---|---|
| Best Wildlife | Denali (bears, caribou), Kenai Fjords (whales, puffins) |
| Best Glaciers | Kenai Fjords (Seward) and Prince William Sound (Whittier) |
| Best Northern Lights | Fairbanks (200+ viewable nights per year) |
| Best Fishing | Homer (halibut capital) and Kenai River (salmon) |
| Main Gateway | Anchorage (ANC) with connecting flights statewide |
Alaska is enormous. At 663,000 square miles, it is more than twice the size of Texas. Most visitors start in Anchorage and branch out from there. This guide covers the major Alaska destinations accessible by road or short flight from Anchorage, with practical route suggestions.
For a broader trip planning framework, see our how to plan a trip guide.
Kenai Peninsula (South of Anchorage)
Seward and Kenai Fjords
The signature Alaska day trip. A full-day glacier cruise from Seward takes you past tidewater glaciers, humpback whales, orcas, sea otters, and puffin colonies. Exit Glacier is the most accessible glacier in Alaska. The drive from Anchorage (2.5 hours) along the Seward Highway is itself one of the most scenic drives in North America. Allow 2 days minimum.
Must-do: Kenai Fjords glacier cruise ($180 to $250), Exit Glacier hike, the Seward Highway drive.
Homer
At the end of the road on the Kenai Peninsula, Homer sits on Kachemak Bay with views of glaciers and volcanoes across the water. The Homer Spit, a narrow 4.5-mile sand bar extending into the bay, has restaurants, shops, and charter fishing offices. Homer is the Halibut Fishing Capital of the World. Water taxi to Kachemak Bay State Park for wilderness hiking and kayaking. About 4.5 hours from Anchorage.
Must-do: Halibut fishing charter ($250 to $350), walk the Spit, water taxi to Kachemak Bay.
Kenai and Soldotna
The Kenai River is Alaska’s most famous salmon fishing river. King salmon (June to July) and sockeye salmon (July to August) runs draw anglers from around the world. Soldotna is the main service town. The Russian River confluence is the most popular (and crowded) fishing spot. About 3 hours from Anchorage.
Must-do: Salmon fishing on the Kenai River, the Russian River walk, the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge visitor center.
Interior Alaska (North of Anchorage)
Denali National Park
North America’s highest peak (20,310 feet) and 6 million acres of wilderness. The park bus takes you deep into the backcountry for grizzly bears, caribou, Dall sheep, and wolves. The mountain is only visible about 30% of the time. Allow 2 to 3 days. About 4.5 hours north of Anchorage by car or 8 hours by scenic Alaska Railroad.
Must-do: Bus to Eielson Visitor Center or Wonder Lake, flightseeing from Talkeetna, sled dog demonstration.
Talkeetna
A small town 2.5 hours north of Anchorage that serves as the staging area for Denali climbing expeditions. Non-climbers come for flightseeing tours around Denali’s summit ($250 to $400, some land on glaciers). The town has a quirky, independent spirit, good restaurants, and views of the Alaska Range on clear days.
Must-do: Flightseeing around Denali (weather-dependent), the Talkeetna Roadhouse for breakfast, jet boat tours on the Susitna River.
Fairbanks
The best place in the world for Northern Lights viewing, with aurora visible 200+ nights per year. In summer, the midnight sun barely sets. Chena Hot Springs (60 miles east) offers soaking under the aurora or midnight sun. Gold panning, the University of Alaska Museum, and the start of the Dalton Highway to the Arctic. About 6 hours north of Anchorage or 2 hours north of Denali.
Must-do: Northern Lights viewing (September to March), Chena Hot Springs, Gold Dredge No. 8.
Suggested Routes
The Classic Alaska Road Trip (7-10 days)
Anchorage to Seward (2 days: glacier cruise + Exit Glacier) to Homer (2 days: fishing + Spit) to Anchorage to Denali (2 to 3 days: bus tour deep into park) to Fairbanks or back to Anchorage. Total driving: approximately 1,200 miles.
Kenai Peninsula Focus (5-7 days)
Anchorage to Seward (2 days) to Soldotna/Kenai (1 to 2 days for fishing) to Homer (2 days) and back to Anchorage. Best for fishing and wildlife without the long Interior drive.
Aurora Trip (4-5 days, winter)
Fly Anchorage to Fairbanks. 3 nights chasing Northern Lights from Fairbanks-area lodges. Day at Chena Hot Springs. Fly back to Anchorage. Best September through March.
Budget Tips
Alaska is expensive. Budget strategy: Camping (many free sites on public land), cooking your own meals (groceries are pricier but cheaper than restaurants), and prioritizing one big-ticket activity (glacier cruise OR flightseeing OR fishing charter). The landscapes and wildlife are free to enjoy.
Typical daily costs: Budget $80 to $140 (camping, cooking), mid-range $200 to $400 (hotels, one daily activity, restaurants), luxury $400+ (lodges, guided experiences, flightseeing).
Planning Tools
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