Denali to Fairbanks

Alaska Railroad Denali Park to Fairbanks


Most hotels in Denali Park offer transfers to the rail depot, although some do charge for the service. Check with the front desk for timing as well as luggage instructions as many hotels transfer people and luggage in separate vehicles. The Denali train depot is located just over a mile inside the park entrance. Dress for a moderate wait outdoors after you check in for your train from Denali Park to Fairbanks, although there are some covered shelters for rainy waits.

Immediately after departing the Denali depot, you’ll cross the Denali Park Road, which runs 90 miles to the historic mining district of Kantishna. During the summer months private vehicles aren’t allowed after mile 15, so most visitors take guided wildlife tours or shuttle buses down this road to explore the park. Look to your right after crossing the road and you’ll see Horseshoe Lake, and shortly after that begin to follow the Nenana River.

Many of the lodges located in the Denali Canyon area (one mile north of the park entrance) come into view here. If you look high up on the hillside across the river and highway, you’ll see the large green roofed Grande Denali Lodge, with its sister property, the Denali Bluffs Hotel, lower and to the right. The Denali Princess Wilderness Lodge, the largest hotel in Alaska, is in the foreground on the banks of the Nenana River with red roofs.

You are now entering the Nenana River Gorge, one of the most scenic portions of the train trip from Denali to Fairbanks. The 150-mile-long Nenana River is a tributary of the Tanana River, and also serves as the eastern boundary for Denali National Park. Rafters from Denali Park who choose the whitewater option travel down this exciting canyon section with class III and class IV rapids. As you leave the gorge and Denali National Park behind, you’ll cross under the Parks Highway at Windy Bridge. This 215-foot-long highway bridge is the highest in Alaska and gets its name from the notoriously blustery conditions in this natural bottleneck. About 10 miles after leaving the Denali train depot, you’ll arrive at the small Alaska mining community of Healy.

Healy has just under 1000 residents, and the main employer is the Usibelli Coal Mine, the only active coal mining operation in Alaska, producing over two million tons of coal annually. About half of this is shipped to Seward via the Alaska Railroad for export, while the rest is used in state.

You’ll continue to follow the Nenana River for the next 30 miles, crossing to the east side of the river near Ferry. During the next section of track, you’ll see what might be described as large outdoor movie theater screens. These are actually part of the Ballistic Missile Early Warning System at Clear Air Force Base, one of only three in the world. From Clear it is less than 20 miles to the town of Nenana, located on the confluence of the Nenana and Tanana Rivers.

Nenana was originally an Athabascan village, later an Alaska Railroad construction camp, and today remains an important hub for delivering goods up and down the region’s waterways, including the Yukon River. As you roll through town, you can see the black and white striped tripod that is used in the Nenana Ice Classic, a popular contest to guess when the river ice will break free in the spring. In recent years winners have split a pot of over $200,000. As you head out of town you’ll cross over the Tanana River on a 700-foot-long steel bridge, one of the longest single span bridges in the world, as well as the site where President Warren G Harding drove in the final ceremonial gold spike in 1923 commemorating the completion of the Alaska Railroad.

Fairbanks is just over 50 miles away, and along the way you’ll roll through historic gold mining districts that surround Fairbanks. Much of this area was served by the original Tanana Valley Railroad, a narrow gauge railroad that operated from 1905 to 1917.

As you arrive at the Fairbanks depot, you’ve reached the northern end of the mainline of the Alaska Railroad and the northernmost railway in North America. Many hotels like the Springhill Suites, Pike’s Waterfront Lodge, and the River’s Edge Resort offer shuttles from the depot, and there is typically a line of taxis waiting as the train arrives.

Enjoy your stay in the Golden Heart City: Cruise on a sternwheeler down the Chena River, try your hand panning for gold, take a city tour, or visit the excellent museum at the University of Alaska. If you are looking to head further north, local tour operators will take you to the Arctic Circle (120 miles to the north), or all the way to the Arctic Ocean in Uqtiavik or Prudhoe Bay. You can read more about Fairbanks, and let us know if we can help with booking Fairbanks hotels, tours, or trips to the Alaska Arctic and beyond.