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By Bucket List Ideas Team

Glacier in 2026: The New Shuttle Rules Explained


Most trip planning guides for Glacier National Park haven’t been updated. They still walk through vehicle reservations: how to book the timed-entry permit, when the release windows open, what to do if you miss your slot. That advice is useless for 2026.

The NPS announced Glacier’s 2026 summer operations in February: vehicle reservations eliminated. Not adjusted or modified. Gone entirely. What replaced them is a ticketed shuttle pilot launching July 1, requiring advance booking through Recreation.gov. Then in April 2026, the park issued a public reminder specifically because visitor confusion is widespread — enough people are showing up with 2024 expectations that NPS felt compelled to say it again.

The first shuttle ticket release is May 2, 2026 at 8 a.m. MDT. That’s eight days from now. Here’s what changed and exactly how to book.

Quick Facts

AspectDetails
Vehicle ReservationsEliminated for 2026 — no timed-entry permits required
Shuttle Pilot LaunchJuly 1, 2026 (weather permitting)
Advance Ticket ReleaseMay 2 at 8 a.m. MDT via Recreation.gov (60-day rolling window)
Next-Day ReleaseDaily at 7 p.m. MDT starting June 30
Shuttle CostFree — $1 processing fee per ticket
Logan Pass Parking Cap3 hours maximum starting July 1
Primary Bucket List HikeHidden Lake Overlook — 1.5 miles, 500 ft gain, mountain goats and grizzlies
Planning Lead TimeBook May 2 for July dates; rolling 60 days forward from there

In one sentence: Glacier’s vehicle reservation system is gone for 2026 — replaced by advance shuttle tickets through Recreation.gov, with the first release window opening May 2.

What Actually Changed for 2026

This is worth understanding precisely, because partial information is driving most of the confusion.

What’s gone: The timed-entry vehicle reservation system from recent years, where driving Going-to-the-Sun Road during peak hours required an advance permit. Discontinued for 2026. You can now drive the road without any permit.

What’s new: A ticketed shuttle pilot program launching July 1. This is separate from Glacier’s existing free Red Bus transit shuttles. The new ticketed express routes run directly to Logan Pass — the most visited point in the park — on a reservation basis. Getting a confirmed seat requires booking ahead through Recreation.gov.

What didn’t change: Free transit shuttles between Apgar, Lake McDonald Lodge, and non-Logan Pass stops continue running without tickets.

The practical effect: driving to Logan Pass in your own vehicle remains possible, but parking there is now capped at three hours from July 1. On busy summer days that lot — roughly 270 vehicle capacity — fills before 9 a.m. and stays full through the afternoon. The shuttle is the reliable path.

How to Get Logan Pass Shuttle Tickets

Booking through Recreation.gov follows the same structure as other federal reservation systems: timed releases, limited slots, small processing fee.

  1. Create a Recreation.gov account if you don’t already have one. The system requires login before any reservation can be completed.
  2. On May 2 at 8 a.m. MDT, the 60-day advance window opens. Tickets for July 1 become available that morning. The window rolls forward daily — May 3 opens July 2 tickets, May 4 opens July 3, and so on through the summer.
  3. Choose your route. West side express departs from Apgar Transit Center and Lake McDonald Lodge, with an afternoon stop at the Loop, ending at Logan Pass. East side express departs from St. Mary Visitor Center and Rising Sun. Both routes terminate at Logan Pass, where riders can transfer.
  4. Pick your departure time. Early morning slots fill fastest. If your goal is sunrise at Hidden Lake Overlook, book the first available window.
  5. Pay the $1 processing fee per ticket. The shuttle ride itself is free. The fee covers the reservation infrastructure.
  6. Download your confirmation before you leave. Cell service at Logan Pass is unreliable. Screenshot or save your ticket offline.

Starting June 30, a separate batch of next-day tickets releases every evening at 7 p.m. MDT. These serve visitors who didn’t book in advance or whose plans changed last-minute. They move fast.

The Actual Reason Logan Pass Matters

Logan Pass sits at 6,646 feet at the Continental Divide. It’s the highest point on Going-to-the-Sun Road — a 50-mile trans-park route that took 11 years to build and still closes for months each winter under deep snow. There’s nothing else like it in the lower 48.

The pass is the trailhead for Hidden Lake Overlook, Glacier’s most-visited hike. It’s 1.5 miles each way, roughly 500 feet of gain, starting directly from the Logan Pass Visitor Center and crossing open subalpine meadow above treeline. Mountain goats graze the plateau year-round. Grizzly bears work the slopes in summer regularly enough that rangers manage visitor proximity to wildlife on the trail itself — not a theoretical concern, an actual one.

At the overlook, Hidden Lake sits 755 feet below in a glacially-carved cirque. On clear days the surrounding peaks — Garden Wall, Reynolds Mountain, Clements Mountain — form a complete alpine panorama. The NPS rates the trail moderate difficulty. The elevation is the challenge; the altitude starts at 6,646 feet and not everyone feels great immediately on that plateau.

A few practical notes:

  • Snow: The trail often stays snow-covered through late June, sometimes later at higher elevations. Check current conditions on the NPS Glacier planyourvisit page before you go.
  • Time on trail: Most hikers budget 2–3 hours round-trip for the overlook. Add time for wildlife stops.
  • Bear spray: Carry it. Required on all backcountry trails; strongly advised here.
  • Crowds: The trail fills quickly after 9 a.m. An early shuttle is the most reliable way to get the first hour.

The Highline Trail is the other Logan Pass option — 7.6 miles one-way north along the Garden Wall, connecting back to Going-to-the-Sun Road at the Loop. More demanding, requires either a return shuttle or a car shuttle arrangement, but it delivers a full day above treeline with far fewer people than the overlook route sees.

For context on how Glacier compares to other major US national park experiences, the Grand Canyon rim-to-rim runs on a similar pattern — advance permits, limited trailhead access, park-managed capacity — and the mountain bucket list destinations guide covers how Glacier fits among North America’s alpine highlights.

What It Costs

The shuttle is free, so the cost structure here is different from parks with paid transit.

ItemCost
Park entrance (7-day, private vehicle)$35
Park entrance (motorcycle, 7-day)$30
Park entrance (per person, hike/bike/bus)$20
America the Beautiful Annual Pass (all federal lands)$80
Logan Pass shuttle ticketFree + $1 processing fee
Standard free transit shuttlesFree
Frontcountry camping (Apgar, Fish Creek, others)$10–23/night
Many Glacier and backcountry camping$10–15/night

The America the Beautiful Pass at $80 covers unlimited entry to every national park and federal recreation area for 12 months. If you’re visiting more than two NPS sites this year, it’s cheaper than buying individual entrance fees. Glacier alone at $35 for a week makes a reasonable case for it.

Budget-conscious trip planning is covered in more depth in the affordable bucket list guide — including how to stack park visits without inflating the total cost.

When to Go

Going-to-the-Sun Road typically opens fully in mid-June at the earliest, depending on snowpack. The road can be partially open before then, with restrictions on upper sections.

Early July: Snowfields still visible on high slopes. Wildflowers at peak in the valleys. The shuttle pilot launches July 1, so this is the first window where advance tickets matter. Crowds are building.

July–August: Maximum visitation, maximum daylight. Wildlife most active in early mornings and evenings. Logan Pass parking fills fast. This is when the shuttle system faces peak demand — book shuttle tickets as early as your May 2 window allows.

September: Best window for most visitors. Crowds thin sharply after Labor Day. Larches turn in late September. Wildlife remains active. Temperatures drop evenings, trails are typically dry and clear. The shuttle pilot runs through its season — verify end dates at the NPS site before planning a late-September visit.

Planning Timeline

May 2 at 8 a.m. MDT: First shuttle ticket release. Covers dates from July 1 on a 60-day rolling basis. Set a calendar reminder for this.

Rolling through the season: If your trip is August 20, tickets for that date become available on June 21. The 60-day window rolls forward daily.

Starting June 30 at 7 p.m. MDT nightly: Next-day tickets release. Last-resort path for unplanned visits or schedule changes.

Campground booking: Glacier campgrounds book separately through Recreation.gov. Many Glacier — the most requested — opens reservations in advance and fills fast. Treat campsite booking as a separate priority from shuttle tickets.

Is This For You?

Probably yes if:

  • Glacier is already on your list and this is your year
  • You want guaranteed Logan Pass access during peak summer without gambling on a parking spot
  • You’re willing to book shuttle tickets on May 2 at 8 a.m. MDT — that’s the moment
  • The free shuttle actually simplifies your trip: park at a trailhead below, ride up, hike, ride back, no parking management required

Probably no if:

  • Your trip is before July 1, when the ticketed shuttle pilot hasn’t started — Logan Pass parking is unmanaged until then, which means the old-style 7 a.m. arrival gamble applies
  • You prefer fully spontaneous travel and advance booking feels like over-planning — this system rewards exactly the opposite
  • Peak summer crowds are a dealbreaker — September solves most of this, with fewer logistics and a different park entirely

The Bottom Line

Glacier National Park confuses enough 2026 visitors that the NPS put out a public reminder in April just to clarify the basics: vehicle reservations are gone, shuttle tickets are the new system, book through Recreation.gov.

The first tickets go on sale May 2 at 8 a.m. MDT. For any July or August date, that’s the window that matters. Sixty days forward on a rolling basis — May 2 opens July 1, May 3 opens July 2, and so on through the season. Set the reminder now if you haven’t.

The reward is 1.5 miles of open subalpine meadow, mountain goats at close range, a grizzly possibility on every hike, and a glacial lake that looks like something edited into the landscape. It’s one of the best places in the continental US. The access rules changed. The place didn’t.

Full shuttle details and booking at nps.gov/glac/planyourvisit/shuttle-service-2026.htm.


Information current as of April 2026 per NPS announcements. Confirm shuttle schedules, ticket availability, and current trail conditions directly at nps.gov/glac before visiting.