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The snow-capped volcanic summit of Mount Rainier rising above forested ridgelines, seen from the open alpine meadows of Grand Park in Mount Rainier National Park, Washington, under a clear summer sky.

City guide

Best national parks near Portland

Portland sits within reach of some of the most varied national parks in the country: a glaciered volcano, a rainforest-and-coast giant, an alpine spire field, the deepest lake in America, and the world's tallest trees just over the California line. This guide ranks them by drive time and payoff.

Short answer

Mount Rainier is closest at about 4 hours, followed by Crater Lake at about 5 hours, North Cascades at about 5 to 5.5 hours, and Olympic at about 5.5 to 6 hours. Redwood is the long haul at roughly 9 to 10 hours south. Crater Lake is the most natural Oregon overnight, while the Washington parks reward pairing on one northbound loop.

How these parks were ranked for a Portland trip

  • Drive time from Portland, since distance shapes whether each park is an overnight or a multi-day trip.
  • Whether the park works on its own or pairs naturally with a neighbor.
  • Scenic payoff relative to the miles covered.
  • Season, since the high country and a few key roads are summer-only.

Recommended parks

Each pick links to the full park guide with season tables, logistics, packing, and route context.

Browse all parks
The snow-capped volcanic summit of Mount Rainier rising above forested ridgelines, seen from the open alpine meadows of Grand Park in Mount Rainier National Park, Washington, under a clear summer sky.Closest big peak

Mount Rainier

Best for
Paradise wildflower meadows and the Skyline Trail
Watch
Paradise and Sunrise roads are seasonal and the meadows peak only in mid to late summer. Timed-entry reservations have applied in recent summers, so check the current rule.

Mount Rainier is the closest national park to Portland at about 4 hours north, with the Paradise meadows, the Skyline loop under the glaciers, and the Sunrise area on the northeast side.

Open the Mount Rainier guide
The deep blue water of Crater Lake under a clear sky, with the forested cinder cone of Wizard Island rising from the caldera and steep rim cliffs in the background, Crater Lake National Park, OregonThe Oregon headline

Crater Lake

Best for
The Rim Drive, the bluest water in the country, and a southern Oregon overnight
Watch
The Rim Drive and many viewpoints are buried in snow into early summer, so the full loop is reliably open only from roughly July through October.

Crater Lake is about 5 hours south of Portland and is the obvious in-state overnight, with the Rim Drive circling the caldera and short trails to the deepest, bluest lake in the United States.

Open the Crater Lake guide
Jagged glacier-capped peaks of The Triplets, Cascade Peak, and Johannesburg Mountain rising above forested ridges along the Cascade Pass Trail in North Cascades National Park, Washington.The alpine wild card

North Cascades

Best for
Diablo Lake, jagged peaks, and quiet trails
Watch
The North Cascades Highway (State Route 20) through the heart of the park closes in winter, so plan a summer-to-fall visit.

North Cascades is about 5 to 5.5 hours north and one of the least crowded parks in the lower 48, with the turquoise Diablo Lake overlook and a wall of glaciated spires along the North Cascades Highway.

Open the North Cascades guide
Cedar Creek winding across Ruby Beach toward the sea stack of Abbey Island under a soft Pacific Northwest sky, the rugged Olympic National Park coastline in WashingtonThe variety park

Olympic

Best for
The Hoh Rain Forest, Hurricane Ridge, and wild Pacific beaches
Watch
The coast, rainforest, and ridge are far apart, so plan the loop on US 101 rather than backtracking, and expect it to need two or three days.

Olympic is about 5.5 to 6 hours from Portland and packs rainforest, alpine ridges, and wild coastline into one park circled by US 101, so it earns more than a single night.

Open the Olympic guide

Planning notes

Pair the two Washington parks on one northbound loop

Mount Rainier, North Cascades, and Olympic all sit north of Portland past Seattle, so the efficient move is to combine them on a single Washington loop rather than driving up for each separately.

Keep Crater Lake as the in-state overnight

Crater Lake is the only national park inside Oregon and the most natural standalone trip from Portland, best from midsummer through fall once the Rim Drive is fully open.

Save Redwood for a coastal trip

At 9 to 10 hours, Redwood is too far for a quick getaway. Build it into a longer Oregon-to-California coast road trip so the trees are the reward, not the whole drive.

Frequently asked questions

What national parks are close to Portland, Oregon?

Mount Rainier is closest at about 4 hours north, followed by Crater Lake at about 5 hours south. North Cascades and Olympic are both around 5 to 6 hours, and Redwood is a longer haul at roughly 9 to 10 hours into northern California.

What is the closest national park to Portland?

Mount Rainier National Park is the closest at about 4 hours north of Portland. Crater Lake, the only national park inside Oregon, is the nearest in-state option at about 5 hours south.

Can you visit Crater Lake as a day trip from Portland?

Crater Lake is about 5 hours each way, so a day trip is a very long day. It is better as an overnight, ideally from July through October when the Rim Drive and viewpoints are clear of snow.

Pack and plan this trip

Gear keyed to what these parks are for, the tools to size your days and budget, and explainers worth a read before you go.

More trip planning paths