Mount Saint Helens Crater
Peer into the steaming crater of an active volcano that reshaped an entire landscape in a single catastrophic eruption in 1980.
About this spectacle
Standing at the rim of Mount Saint Helens, visitors peer into one of the most dramatic volcanic craters in North America — a raw, steaming bowl carved by the catastrophic 1980 eruption. The inner crater reveals a lava dome still slowly growing, surrounded by sheer grey walls dusted with ash and snow. The silence is punctuated by the hiss of fumaroles and the occasional rumble from deep below. In clear conditions, the view across the blasted North Fork Toutle River valley stretches for miles, showing a landscape still in recovery — silver snags, pioneer wildflowers, and slowly returning elk herds. The summit rim sits above the treeline, swept by cold winds even in summer, and the sense of geological raw power is immediate and visceral. This is a volcano that erupted in living memory, and the landscape makes that impossible to forget.
When to go
Jun — Oct, peak Jul — Sep
Getting there
Nearest airport: PDX. Nearest city: Portland.
Booking options
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