Monti Bay and the Yakutat waterfront
Click on image above for a larger version with labels
Kite flying at Ocean Cape
Fireworks on the Forth of July
Welcome to the community of Yakutat, gateway to the Hubbard Glacier and home of the St. Elias Dancers, a Tlingit dance group.

Located on the scenic Gulf Coast of Alaska, and surrounded by Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Tongass National Forest, Yakutat attracts a wide variety of outdoor enthusiasts to hike beaches, float rivers, explore bays and passages, climb mountains, view glaciers, and surf remote breaks. Yakutat Bay provides the finest saltwater sport fishing in Alaska.

Click for Yakutat, Alaska Forecast
A variety of visitor services are available in Yakutat, and Alaska Airlines provides daily jet service from Seattle, Juneau, and Anchorage. Additionally, the Alaska State Ferry Kennicott now stops in Yakutat several times each month during the spring, summer, and early fall seasons.
Mount Saint Elias and the Wrangell/Saint Elias Range

Mount St. Elias stands like a perfect pyramid soaring 18,008 feet into the heavens on the Yakutat skyline, the second tallest peak in the United States. The Tlingit name is Was-eiti-shaa, meaning "Mountain in Icy Bay". Danish explorer Vitus Bering watched the mountain emerge as the mist cleared following days of fog-bound drifting while exploring for the Czar of Russia in 1741. The discovery was made on, and named in honor of a Danish holiday, St. Elias Day. Mount St. Elias rests at the head of Malaspina Glacier, the largest piedmont glacier in North America.

Hubbard Glacier from the Air

Hubbard Glacier is the largest tidewater glacier in North America and is located just 30 miles by air or water from Yakutat. During the spring of 2002, as in 1986, the glacier advanced across the mouth of Russell Fiord, creating the world's largest glacial lake.

Many marine mammals were temporarily trapped within this newly formed impoundment. Fortunately, the ice dam broke prior to overflowing the Situk River system, freeing the stranded wildlife. As a result, the community of Yakutat continues to enjoy the beauty of our land and resources.

Each spring and fall, major migrations of waterfowl, raptors, and shorebirds pass along the Yakutat Coast providing outstanding viewing and photography opportunities. Hundreds of thousands of salmon spawn in area rivers and streams each fall, attracting concentrations of foraging eagles and brown bears
American Bald Eagle
The goal of the Greater Yakutat Chamber of Commerce is to provide visitors with a rewarding experience. Enjoy, and help us protect our treasured resources during your stay.
Gillnetter Hanging Net