Colorado Trail Conditions at a Glance

Real-time trail condition data aggregated from five authoritative sources. Updated every 30 minutes throughout the hiking season.

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High Alpine Access
Seasonal
12,000+ ft routes, check individual peak pages
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Snowpack
Active
SNOTEL data per trail zone
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Active Closures
0
Checking closure data…
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Avy Danger
Per Zone
CAIC ratings by mountain zone

Top Colorado Peaks — Current Conditions

Real-time condition windows from NOAA weather + SNOTEL snowpack. Click any peak for a full briefing.

View all 60+ peak condition pages →

Popular Colorado Hiking Trails

Colorado's most-hiked trails — from Rocky Mountain NP to the San Juans. Check individual peak pages for real-time conditions on 14er and 13er routes.

Active Colorado Trail Closures & Restrictions

Trail closures and fire restrictions from USFS ArcGIS layers, updated daily. Always verify with the local ranger district before your hike.

No critical closures in our ArcGIS data right now.
Always check the US Forest Service and Colorado Parks & Wildlife for current restrictions before hiking.

Colorado Parks with Trail Systems

Major Colorado parks with managed trail networks. PeakScout tracks NPS alerts for 63 national parks — check individual park alerts on the NPS Alerts page.

Rocky Mountain National Park
Estes Park
355 trails
Official Site →
Great Sand Dunes NP
Alamosa
12 trails
Official Site →
Black Canyon of the Gunnison
Montrose
15 trails
Official Site →
Mesa Verde NP
Cortez
10 trails
Official Site →
Roxborough State Park
Littleton
12 trails
Official Site →
Eldorado Canyon State Park
Boulder
12 trails
Official Site →

Colorado Trail Conditions by Season

Colorado trail accessibility changes dramatically with elevation and season. Here's what to expect by month.

Mar–Apr
Low Elevation
Foothills and plains trails thaw. Mud season at mid elevations. Snow lingers above 9,000 ft.
May–Jun
Mid Elevation
Mid-range trails (8,000–10,000 ft) opening. High routes still snow-packed. Peak runoff — check USGS stream gauges before creek crossings.
Jul–Aug
Alpine Prime
Peak hiking season. All 14er routes accessible. Daily afternoon thunderstorms — summit by noon. Watch CAIC for residual snow.
Sep–Oct
Fall Window
Aspen color peaks mid-September. Shoulder season for high routes. First snowfall typically October. Best crowds of the year.
Nov–Feb
Winter
Snowshoe and ski mountaineering season. High avalanche risk — always check CAIC. Lower trails accessible with traction devices.

Colorado Trail Conditions — Common Questions

PeakScout aggregates real-time trail conditions from NOAA weather, CAIC avalanche forecasts, SNOTEL snowpack sensors, and USGS stream gauges. Check any individual peak page for trail-specific conditions updated every 30 minutes.
Trail closures change frequently due to fire restrictions, wildlife protection, and hazardous conditions. PeakScout tracks USFS and CPW closure data from ArcGIS layers updated daily. Check the Closures section above or individual peak briefings for current status.
Lower elevation trails (under 8,000 ft) typically open in March–April. Mid-elevation trails (8,000–11,000 ft) open May–June. High alpine routes and 14er approaches (11,000+ ft) are usually accessible July–September. Conditions vary by snowpack — check PeakScout's SNOTEL data for real-time snowpack by trail zone.
The Colorado Avalanche Information Center (CAIC) issues daily danger ratings by zone. PeakScout embeds current CAIC ratings directly on every 13er and 14er peak page, showing the specific avalanche band (Alpine, Treeline, Below Treeline) relevant to each route.
Snowpack on Colorado trails varies significantly by elevation and aspect. PeakScout pulls live SNOTEL station readings to show inches of snow water equivalent on routes near each 13er and 14er. Most high alpine trails (12,000+ ft) still have significant snowpack in May and June.
Most Colorado 14ers are on public land and require no permit. However, some popular trailheads (Maroon Bells, Mt. Elbert, Longs Peak) require timed-entry reservations or parking reservations during peak season. Check each peak's page on PeakScout for current access requirements.

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