Bear Mountain Inn
Details- Booking
- Book directly as a hotel.
- Season
- Open year-round.
- Sites
- Historic lodge rooms and on-site dining.
- The only in-park overnight option, ideal for an early summit start without a long drive.

State Park · New York
A Hudson River landmark an hour from the city: a stone-stepped summit trail, Perkins Tower views, Hessian Lake, a zoo on the Appalachian Trail, and a grand 1915 inn.

Field briefing
Bear Mountain State Park starts with access, not mileage.
Before you go
The summit loop is short but genuinely steep and rocky, so treat it as real hiking. The practical friction is parking and traffic on fall weekends, plus ongoing trail detours near the inn during construction expected through summer 2027.
The landmarks worth the trip. Tap any photo to enlarge.
Weather, crowds, and what the season changes about the trip.
Cool and green, with mud on the steeper trails and rising river views.
Pack Grippy footwear, a rain shell, and a layer for the breezy summit.
Warm and humid, with crowded lots, paddleboats on Hessian Lake, and a busy zoo.
Pack Sun protection, water, and an early start to beat the parking crush.
Prime hiking weather and famous Hudson Highlands color, peaking in October.
Pack Warm layer, cash for parking, and patience for weekend traffic on the access roads.
Cold and quiet, with ice on the granite steps and a frozen lakeside.
Pack Insulation, microspikes for the icy summit trail, and short daylight planning.
Bear Mountain summit loop
The classic loop climbs the Major Welch Trail up the west face, then descends the famous granite-stair section of the Appalachian Trail. Steep and rocky, with big river views the whole way.
Perkins Memorial Tower
A 1934 stone tower at the summit with displays and an observation level. On clear days you can see across New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Pennsylvania. You can also drive up the seasonal Perkins Memorial Drive.
Hessian Lake and the Trailside Zoo
A flat, family-friendly lakeside loop near the inn, plus the Trailside Museums and Zoo, the lowest point on the entire Appalachian Trail.
Put the access rule first: shuttle, parking, timed-entry, or reservation windows should decide the order of the day. For one day in Bear Mountain State Park, make Bear Mountain summit loop the non-negotiable, add Perkins Memorial Tower only if the first stop runs clean, and keep Hessian Lake and the Trailside Zoo as the flexible finish.
Turn Bear Mountain's conditions into water, pack, and sleep-system decisions.

Build around access
Plan the transfer before the trail list.
Plan your trip
3 quick tools, already seeded for Bear Mountain State Park. Tune the route, pack weight, weather margin, and overnight setup after the access plan is real.
Start with the gear decisions this park changes: footing, weather, camping, and water.
Kit Authority
Bear Mountain State Park packing list
0 of 15 packed. Check items as you pack, then take this list to the store, trailhead, or campsite.
Pack planning
Use this as a constraint check while you are still shaping the trip. The active checklist becomes useful once your route, dates, and sleep plan are set.
Checklist mode
15 items, grouped for the trip you are actually taking.
The buying guides that match what Bear Mountain asks of your kit, with our current top picks across budget and use case.
There is no public campground at Bear Mountain itself, so most people visit as a day trip from the Hudson Valley or New York City. The historic Bear Mountain Inn offers rooms and dining right in the park for an overnight base. For camping, the Beaver Pond campground in neighboring Harriman State Park is the nearest developed option.
Camping reservations
Bear Mountain is a day-use and lodging park rather than a camping park. For an overnight near the trails, stay at the Bear Mountain Inn or reserve a site at the Beaver Pond campground in adjacent Harriman State Park.
Reviewed June 11, 2026
Booking window
Harriman's Beaver Pond campground reserves through New York State Parks up to nine months in advance. The Bear Mountain Inn books directly as a hotel.
Where to book or verify
Official park page with hours, parking, Perkins Drive status, and alerts.
Reserve nearby Beaver Pond camping, or call 1-800-456-2267.
Check for federal campground, backcountry, tour, and permit inventory tied to this park.
Campgrounds to know

Plan the handoff from arrival to shuttle.
Parking, pedestrian entrances, and shuttle timing decide how calmly the first morning starts.
Getting there
Arrival note
Bear Mountain sits on the west bank of the Hudson River, about an hour north of New York City near the junction of the Palisades Interstate Parkway, Route 9W, and the Bear Mountain Bridge.
Car strategy
Many visitors arrive by car, and weekend lots fill early, but it is also reachable by seasonal bus and by train to nearby stations with a short connection.
Local movement
Note that trail detours near the inn are in effect during construction expected through summer 2027.
Pair this with lodging: sleep where the park transfer is simple, especially if your route needs an early start.
There is no general entrance fee, but a parking fee of about $10 per vehicle applies in peak season, and it is often cash only. The Trailside Zoo and Perkins Tower are free; the seasonal Perkins Memorial Drive lets you drive to the summit.
The summit loop is roughly 4 miles but steep and rocky, including a long stretch of granite stone steps on the Appalachian Trail. It is a real climb with big river views, not a casual stroll, so wear grippy footwear and carry water.
Not in the park itself. Bear Mountain has no public campground. Stay at the Bear Mountain Inn for an in-park room, or reserve a site at the Beaver Pond campground in adjacent Harriman State Park.
Yes, in season. Perkins Memorial Drive is a seasonal road to the summit and Perkins Tower, which is a good option for visitors who cannot manage the steep hike. Check current road status before relying on it.